Sitting Bull - 1890

Posted in * Death Masks, 1800's

Location West Point Museum

Sitting Bull Death Mask

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Sitting Bull Death Mask

Wikipedia Entry for Sitting Bull

Phineas Gage 1823 – 1860

Posted in * Life Masks, 1800's, Gage, Phineas

Phineas Gage Life Mask and Skull

Photo taken by Graham Gordon Ramsay from the 

Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Warren Anatomical Museum

Wikipedia entry for Phineas Gage

Phineas was railroad construction foreman now remembered for his incredible survival of an accident which drove a large iron rod through his head, destroying one or both of his fontal lobes…

Life Mask

Alfred Nobel 1833-1896

Posted in * Death Masks, 1800's, Nobel, Alfred

Alfred Nobel Death Mask

Death Mask

Image From Wikimedia Commons

Info: Wikipedia entry for Nobel

Location: Bjorkborn, Nobel’s residence in Karlskoga, Sweden

Vice-Admiral Horatio Nelson 1758-1805

Posted in * Life Masks, 1800's, Nelson, Horatio

Vice-Admiral Horatio Nelson Death Mask

Life Mask

Link: National Maritime Museum, England

Vice-Admiral Horatio Nelson Death Mask

William Wordsworth 1770-1850

Posted in * Life Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Wordsworth, William

William Wordsworth Death Mask

Learn: Wikipedia entry for William Wordsworth

More Info:  Life mask, from the original by B. R. Haydon. See below - Hutton, Portraits…, pp. 100-5; Moore, Talks…, pp. 176-7.

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Notes on mask from “Talks in a Library…”:

The “trying- to-look-pleasant” expression is peculiarly noticeable in the life masks of Wordsworth and of Keats; although the former did not altogether succeed, which was not the fault, by the way, of Charles Lamb. Haydon describes the operation in his Journal, under date of 1815, and says: “Wordsworth sat in my dressing-gown with his hands folded, sedate, solemn, and still, bearing it like a philosopher.” But elsewhere we read that the poet was placed flat on his back on the studio floor, while Lamb capered about him in glee at the undignified absurdity of the proceedings, trying to make the subject grin at his fantastic criticisms and remarks.

Sir Henry Taylor in his Autobiography spoke of attending Wordsworth’s funeral and of being shown then ”a cast of a mask of his face in which was a certain rough grandeur,” but he does not say when it was taken; nowhere did I find any reference to a death mask, and what Sir Henry saw and examined in 1850 was no doubt the work of Haydon, done thirty-five years before. It is more like the portraits of Wordsworth in his ripe middle-age than in his declining years.

Notes on mask from “Portraits in Plaster”:

Carlyle said that “Wordsworth’s face bore marks of much, not always peaceful, meditation; the look of it not bland or benevolent so much as close, impregnable, and hard.” S. C. Hall wrote that ” his eyes were mild and up-looking ; his mouth coarse rather than refined ; his forehead high rather than broad;” while Greville put it more tersely when he described him as “hard-featured, brown, wrinkled, with prominent teeth, and a few scattered gray hairs.” Leigh Hunt said, in his Autobiography: “Certainly I never beheld eyes that looked so inspired or supernatural [as Wordsworth’s]. They were like fires half burning, half smouldering, with a sort of acrid fixture of regard, and seated at the further end of two caverns. One might imagine Ezekiel or Isaiah to have had such eyes.”

Wordsworth reminded Hazlitt “of some of Holbein’s heads grave, saturnine, with a slight indication of sly humor, a peculiar sweetness in his smile.” Elsewhere Hazlitt spoke of his “intense high, narrow forehead, Eoman nose, cheeks furrowed by strong purpose, and a convulsive inclination to laughter about his mouth, which was a good deal at variance with the solemn and stately expression of the rest of his face.” And Sir Humphry and Lady Davy, who were at Wordsworth’s funeral, were both struck by the likeness of his face, in the deep repose of death, to that of Dante. The expression, they thought, was much more feminine than it had been in life, and it suggested strongly the face of his devoted sister, with whom so many of his years had been spent.

Haydon, in his Journal, April 13, 1815, wrote ” I had a cast made yesterday of Wordsworth’s 104 PORTRAITS IN PLASTER face. He bore it like a philosopher. He sat in my dressing - gown with his hands folded; sedate, solemn, and still.” And then Haydon de- scribed how, through the open door, he exhibited the unconscious poet, undergoing this unbecoming operation, to curious but disrespectful friends of them both.

Another account of this performance shows us Wordsworth flat on his back on the studio floor, with Charles Lamb dancing about him, and making absurd remarks in order to force the poet to smile, and so spoil the mask. All of which was very characteristic of that “dear delightful,” “poor creature” who was despised by Carlyle, and who was naturally loved by every- body else. “What would we not give now for a mask of Lamb himself, dead or alive?

All this happened when Wordsworth was forty-two years of age, and thirty-five years before he died. Sir Henry Taylor in his Autobiography, spoke, shortly after the poet’s death, of “a cast taken of a mask of Wordsworth.” He considered it admirable as a likeness, and added that it was so regarded by Mrs. Wordsworth. He saw “a rough grandeur in it, with which, if it was to be converted into marble, posterity might be contented.” But he does not say whether it was a life -mask or a death-mask, and he does not refer to the Haydon mask as such. In no other work, in no biography of Wordsworth, and in no account of his last hours, is any allusion to the mask to be found. The face here reproduced is, without question, that of Wordsworth. It suggests the Wordsworth of middle age; it strongly resembles the portraits painted by Haydon; it is much too young in form and expression for the senile Wordsworth of the well-known Fraser Gallery; and there is little doubt of its being the work of Haydon alluded to above. Haydon is known to have painted several portraits of Wordsworth, one of which exhibits him in a Byron collar and another shows him with eyes rolling in fine frenzy over the composition of a sonnet on one of Hay don’s own pictures. Haydon also introduced Wordsworth as a devout disciple in his large work called “Christ’s Entry into Jerusalem,” painted in 1818.

Walt Whitman 1819-1892

Posted in * Death Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Whitman, Walt

Walt Whitman Death Mask

original death mask by Samuel Murray, assisted by Eakins. See Moore, Talks…, pp. 214-15, 223-4. [Scribner Room]

Daniel Webster 1782-1852

Posted in * Life Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Webster, Daniel

Daniel Webster Life Mask - Death Mask

life mask, from the original by Clark Mills. See Hutton, Portraits…, pp. 253, 254; Moore, Talks…, pp. 167, 169-70 [Box 54]

Celia Thaxter 1835-1894

Posted in * Death Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Thaxter, Celia

Celia Thaxter Death Mask

death mask, from the original by Olaf Brenner. See Moore, Talks…, pp. 209-10

Henry Warner Slocum 1827-1894

Posted in * Death Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Slocum, Henry Warner

Henry Warner Slocum Death Mask

Death Mask

William T. Sherman 1820-1891

Posted in * Death Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Sherman, William T., Uncategorized

William T. Sherman Death Mask

Death Mask

Elihu Spencer Sergeant 1797-1824

Posted in * Death Masks, 1800's, Sergeant, Elihu Spencer

Elihu Spencer Sergeant Death Mask

Alois Senefelder 1771-1834

Posted in * Death Masks, 1800's, Senefelder, Alois

Alois Senefelder Death Mask

Dante Gabriel Rossetti 1828-1882

Posted in * Death Masks, 1800's, Rossetti, Dante Gabriel

Dante Gabriel Rossetti Death Mask

Pope Pius IX 1792-1878

Posted in * Death Masks, 1800's, Pius IX Pope

Pope Pius IX Death Mask

Napoleon III, Emperor of the French, 1808-1873

Posted in * Death Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Napoleon III

Death Mask

Abraham Lincoln 1809-1865

Posted in * Life Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Lincoln, Abraham

The above 3 images from the National Portrait Gallery - Washington DC

http://www.npg.si.edu/exh/travpres/lincs.htm

Giacomo Leopardi 1798-1837

Posted in * Death Masks, 1800's, Leopardi, Giacomo

Death Mask

Henry George 1839-1897

Posted in * Death Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, George, Henry

Samuel Taylor Coleridge 1772-1834

Posted in * Death Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, - Undying Faces Book - Ernst Benkard, 1800's, Coleridge, Samuel Taylor

Learn: Wikipedia entry for Samuel Coleridge

Learn: Notes on mask from “Portraits in Plaster” at Google Books

Learn: Notes on mask from “Talks in a Library…” at Google Books

More Info: Life Mask - Laurence Hutton Collection

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SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE “was born on October 20 . 1772, at Ottery St. Mary in Devonshire, and died on July 25 1834. As a poet and a brilliant critic he influenced Scott Shelley’ and Byron. He translated Schiller and made German philosophy known amongst his fellow-countrymen. The death mask came into the possession of the Princeton University library from the Hutton Collection, and Mr. Ernest Hartley Coleridge, a grandson of the poet, personally vouched to Laurence Hutton for its genuineness. (L. Hutton:’.4 Collection of Death Masks, Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, 1892, p. 783)”

Black & White Photos and quotations from: Benkard, Ernst, & Green, Margaret (1927). Undying Faces, A Collection of Death Masks. New York, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.

Henry Clay 1777-1852

Posted in * Life Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Clay, Henry

Learn: Wikipedia entry for Henry Clay

Learn: Notes on mask from “Talks in a Library…”:

Learn: Notes on mask from “Portraits in Plaster”:

More Info:  Life mask by Clark Mills. See Hutton, Portraits…, pp. 253-4; Moore, Talks…, p. 166. [Box 15]

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Charles Carroll, 1737-1832

Posted in * Death Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Carroll, Charles

Learn: Wikipedia entry for Charles Carroll

More Info: Life Mask - Laurence Hutton Collection

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John C. Calhoun 1782-1850

Posted in * Life Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Calhoun, John C.

Learn: Wikipedia entry for John C. Calhoun

More Info: Life Mask - Laurence Hutton Collection

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Sir Marc Isambard Brunel 1769-1849

Posted in * Death Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Brunel, Mark Isambard

Learn: Wikipedia entry for Marc Isambard Brunel

More Info: Life Mask - Laurence Hutton Collection

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Baron Henry Peter Brougham 1778-1868

Posted in * Life Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Brougham, Henry Peter

Learn: Wikipedia entry for Henry Peter Brougham

More Info: Life Mask - Laurence Hutton Collection

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Jeremy Bentham 1748-1832

Posted in * Death Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Bentham, Jeremy

Learn: Wikipedia entry for Jeremy Bentham

More Info: Life Mask - Laurence Hutton Collection

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Aaron Burr 1756-1836

Posted in * Death Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Burr, Aaron

Wikipedia entry for Aaron Burr

This mask is located in the The Henry Luce III Center for the Study of American Culture, upstairs from The New-York Historical Society. 

This mask is also located in the Laurence Hutton Collection


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John James Audubon 1785-1851

Posted in * Life Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Audubon, John James

Learn: Wikipedia entry for John James Audubon

More Info: Life Mask - Laurence Hutton Collection

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Louis Agassiz 1807-1873

Posted in * Death Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, 1800's, Agassiz, Louis

Learn: Wikipedia entry for Louis Agassiz

More Info: Life Mask - Laurence Hutton Collection

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Leo Tolstoy 1828-1910

Posted in * Death Masks, - Laurence Hutton Collection, - Undying Faces Book - Ernst Benkard, 1800's, 1900's, Tolstoy, Leo

Learn: Wikipedia entry for Leo Tolstoy

LEO TOLSTOY.–Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy was born on September 9, 1828, at Yasnaya-Polyana, in the Gubernya of Tula, and died at Astapovo on November 20, 1910.

There the death mask was moulded by S. D. Merkurov on the second day after his death and presented by M. A. Stakhovich to the Tolstoy Museum in Leningrad. This is the first occasion on which a reproduction has been published, for which I have the kind permission of the Academy of Science in Leningrad.

Photos and quotations from: Benkard, Ernst, & Green, Margaret (1927). Undying Faces, A Collection of Death Masks. New York, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.
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Black & White Photos and quotations from: Benkard, Ernst, & Green, Margaret (1927). Undying Faces, A Collection of Death Masks. New York, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.

Guido Gezelle 1830-1899

Posted in * Death Masks, - Undying Faces Book - Ernst Benkard, 1800's, Gezelle, Guido

GUIDO GEZELLE.–By profession a priest, by vocation a lyrical poet, the memory of Gezelle’s fruitful labours and of his tender and delicate poetry still lives in his Flemish home. He was born near Bruges on May i, 1830, and died there on November 27, 1899.The death mask was presented by the poet’s nephew Mr. Stijn Streuvels to Professor A. Kippenberg; it is still in his collection at Leipzig. To his kindness we owe the photographic reproduction.Black & White Photos and quotations from: Benkard, Ernst, & Green, Margaret (1927). Undying Faces, A Collection of Death Masks. New York, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.