Sculptors
(The numbers indicate the other works by the same sculptors to be seen in the Fine Arts Palace.)
Adams, Herbert (3)
Aitken, Robert (9)
Bateman, John
Beach, Chester (1)
Borglum, Solon H. (1)
Boutier, E. L.
Bufano, B.
Burroughs, Edith Woodman (4)
Calder, A. Stirling (5)
Cummings, Earle
Ellerhusen, Ulric H. (2)
Elwell, Frank Edwin
Flanagan, John (3)
Fraser, James Earle (7)
French, Daniel Chester (4)
Fry, Sherry (2)
Gerlach, Gustave
Gruppe, Carl
Harley, C. R.
Humphries, C. H. (1)
Jaegers, Albert (1)
Jaegers, August
Konti, Isadore (6)
Laessle, Albert (21)
Lentelli, Leo
Longman, Evelyn Beatrice (4)
MacNeil, Herman A. (2)
Manship, Paul (10)
Newman, Allen
Niehaus, Charles
Patigian, Haig (7)
Peters, C.
Piccirilli, Furio (2)
Putnam, Arthur
Roth, Frederick G. R. (12)
Rumsey, Charles Carey (8)
Stackpole, Ralph W. (4)
Stea, Cesare
Tonetti, F. M. L.
Walters, Edgar (1)
Weinert, Albert
Weinman, Adolph A. (9)
Whitney, Gertrude Vanderbilt (1)
Young, Mahonri (9)
Zimm, Bruno L.
MURAL PAINTERS
(The numbers indicate the other works by the same artists to be seen in the Fine Arts Palace.)
Bancroft, Milton
Brangwyn, Frank
Dodge, William de Leftwich
Du Mond, Frank Vincent (6)
Hassam, Childe (37)
Holloway, Charles
Matthews, Arthur F. (14)
Reid, Robert (3)
Simmons, Edward
Materials of the Palaces
The buildings, as well as all of the statuary, are made of artificial travertine, of a smoked-ivory tone.
Real travertine is found in and around Rome, especially at Tivoli.
It is a pure carbonate of lime, a creamy white deposit formed from dripping water, in stratified form, with cavities and fissures lined with crystals.