
By 1921, Savage had saved enough money from selling her work to move to New York City and attend classes at Cooper Union. It was during this time she married once more and changed her last name to Savage, which she would keep even though the marriage did not last. By the 1930's, Savage's family fled a hurricane-ravaged Florida to live with Augusta in Harlem on West 137th Street. In these years, Savage would provide for her family and start a free school for artists in Harlem that would have over 1,500 students. While her two galleries were popular, low sales prompted Savage to close up shop eventually and spend her last days on a farm in upstate New York. Today, only a few prominent pieces of her work can be found because few of the original collectors have come forth. Her most famous bust, Gamin, is on display at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in the nation's capital.
Photo courtesy the Archives of American Art at the Smithsonian
I met her once when she was living on Central Park West. Every now and then her "Paperboy" statue pops up on the Antique Road Show.
ReplyDeleteThanks for an enlightening article, until today I knew nothing of this artist, Sankofa, the paperboy statue is remarkable.
ReplyDeleteI think you refer to her most recognized sculpture "Gamin"(1929). The young man with a hat tilted to the side? "Gamin" won her a Julius Rosenwald Award that allowed her to study in Paris,in 1930, for a year. She used her nephew Ellis Ford as the model.
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