The Moods of Time: Evening

Paul Manship American, 1885-1966

Not On View

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About the Artwork

In 1936 Paul Manship was commissioned to execute four fountains, The Moods of Time, for the 1939–40 New York World's Fair. The works were Intended to stand in front of the Trylon and Perisphere, the tower and spherical exhibition hall that were the visual and symbolic center of the fair. The scale model of each of the fountains was cast in bronze. In Manship's own view, The Moods of Time "particularize man's earthly concept of time in relationship to the movement of the sun." Evening, for the artist, was a time of inertia, halfway between wakefulness and sleep. The figure is relaxed and fluid, falling asleep, surrounded by owls—the birds of the night—and by cloud forms, the shadows of evening.

The Moods of Time: Evening

1938

Paul Manship

1885-1966

American

Unknown

Bronze

Overall: 44 × 67 inches (111.8 × 170.2 cm)

Sculpture

American Art before 1950

Founders Society Purchase, Mr. and Mrs. Allan Shelden III Fund

82.3

Copyright not assessed, please contact [email protected].

Markings

Signed and dated, on top of cloud at right: Evening Paul Manship Sculp 1938

Inscribed, on top of cloud at right: Evening Paul Manship Sculp 1938

Provenance

Acquired from the artist

Private collection (New York, USA)

H. Shickman Gallery (New York, New York, USA)

1982-present, purchase by the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)

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Exhibition History

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Published References

Murtha, Edwin. Paul Manship. New York, 1957, p. 180, no. 379.

Sculpture by Paul Manship. Exh. cat., Smithsonian Institution. Washington, D.C., 1958, no. 20.

Bulletin of the DIA 60, 1-2 (1981-1982): p. 17 (ill.).

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Catalogue Raisoneé

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Credit Line for Reproduction

Paul Manship, The Moods of Time: Evening, 1938, bronze. Detroit Institute of Arts, Founders Society Purchase, Mr. and Mrs. Allan Shelden III Fund, 82.3.

The Moods of Time: Evening
The Moods of Time: Evening