Lucy J. Brown

Ithaca, NY
2024
bronze
51” x 60” x 39”
Commissioned by Ithaca Neighborhood Housing Services

An outspoken fighter for social justice and co-found of Ithaca Neighborhood Housing Services, Lucy Brown was born in Ithaca in 1933. Here, Kate De La Garza, the current Executive Director of INHS, enjoys Miss Lucy’s energy.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg: Site & Design Drawing


The “Million-Dollar Staircase”, New York State Capitol, Albany, NY before installation of RBG portrait.

Design drawing for RBG portrait to be carved in sandstone from the original quarry in Scotland. Justice Ginsburg is wearing her massive Dissent Collar instead of the wreaths worn by Clara Barton, Susan B. Anthony, etc. in their 19th c. portraits carved at the bottom of the staircase.

Lexington Women’s Monument (detail: Caroline Wellington)


2024
bronze

Caroline Wellington was a champion of women’s suffrage for more than 60 years. In 1887 she and her sisters made a banner for the Boston Suffrage Bazaar that quoted Abigail Harrington’s famous call to wake her son to join the battle of Lexington on April 19, 1775. In 1912, 92-year-old Caroline passed the banner to younger suffragists to carry in their march on Washington, D.C. Here, she is dressed as if for that march.

“Something Is Being Done:” The Lexington Women’s Monument

Lexington, MA
2024
bronze
12’ x 16’ x 4”
granite plaza 28’ diameter

Commissioned by LexSeeHer, Inc.
Donated to the Town of Lexington, MA

Celebrating the contributions made by bold Lexington women from the 18th century to the 21st, who when faced with injustice or seemingly insurmountable obstacles determined that “Something Must Be Done.” 

FDR Hope Memorial (detail)

2021
bronze and granite
figures 1.15 times life size

FDR’s body is sculpted to accurately depict his paralysis from polio, and seated in a wheelchair of his own design. In a joyful moment, he greets a similarly disabled young girl who represents the many children treated at Warm Springs, the facility FDR founded, where he returned often for treatment, refreshment and hope.

FDR Hope Memorial

2021
bronze and granite,
oval pavement 36’ x 29′
figures 1.15 times life size

The first memorial to focus both on FDR’s disability and his heroism.  The transformation of Roosevelt Island from a place of quarantine, penal servitude and hopelessness to a center for treatment and research in polio and then to one of the first communities to “mainstream” disabled patients is chronicled in an inscribed timeline. The statues stand on a white granite oval the size of the Oval Office, and the paths and benches are designed to accommodate a range of abilities.

Women’s Rights Pioneers Monument

Literary Walk, Central Park, New York City
Bronze and granite
14′ x 12′ x 6′
figures 1.65 times life size

Portraying:
Sojourner Truth
Susan B. Anthony
Elizabeth Cady Stanton


Commissioned by Monumental Women
Donated to New York City
Unveiled on August 26, 2020


Boston Women’s Memorial

2003, Commonwealth Ave. & Fairfield St. Boston, MA
bronze and granite, pavement 30’ diameter, figures 1.2 times life size

Commissioned for Boston’s historic Back Bay, commemorating Abigail Adams, Phillis Wheatley & Lucy Stone for their writing and their impact on society.  The women have come down off their pedestals (as in this century women have, symbolically) and have deconstructed their traditional orientation in order to use their pedestals as work surfaces.

photo © Ricardo Barros.com

Abigail Adams 3

Boston Women’s Memorial
2003
bronze
75” x 33” x 21”

“Remember that all men would be tyrants if they could. If particular care and attention is not paid to the ladies we are determined to foment a Rebellion, and will not hold ourselves bound be any Laws in which we have no voice, or Representation.”
Letter to John Adams, Mar. 31, 1776

Phillis Wheatley 2

Boston Women’s Memorial
2003
bronze
59” x 50” x 32

Here, Wheatley represents youth and Imagination. A stanza from her poem On Imagination is inscribed on her pedestal, ending with visionary imaginative power and freedom:
There in one view we grasp the mighty whole,
Or with new worlds amaze the unbounded soul.

Phillis Wheatley 3

Boston Women’s Memorial
2003
bronze
59” x 50” x 32

On her pedestal:
I, young in life, by seeming cruel fate

Was snatched from Afric’s fancy’d happy seat:
What pangs excruciating must molest,
What sorrows labour in my parent’s breast?
Steel’d was that soul and by no misery moved
That from a father seized his babe belov’d:
Such, such my case. And can I then but pray
Others may never feel tyrannic sway?

Alma Mater

Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind, Talladega, AL
bonded marble, bonded bronze, concrete 1997
90” x 96” x 96”

A commission from AIDB for their Helen Keller School for multi-handicapped children. The figure is signing the word “Sight” and reading in Braille the word “Hearing”. On her pedestal, which has steps in the back, are 5 bas-reliefs depicting the 5 senses. The monument is designed to be touched and climbed on.

Alma Mater (detail: Touch)

Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind, Talladega, AL
bonded bronze, unique cast, 1996
24” x 36” x 3”

From a series of the Five Senses for the pedestal of Alma Mater: designed to be touched and “read” by touch, the sculpted hands are life size and almost full-round, and the background texture is made with thumbprints.