Victory

Skip to main content
TitleVictory
Artist (1874 - 1954)
Date1908
MediumBronze
DimensionsOverall: 29 1/2 × 8 1/4 × 8 in. Other (Sculpture): 27 3/4 × 8 1/4 × 7 1/4 in. Other (Base): 1 3/4 × 6 1/2 × 6 1/2 in.
SignedSigned on reverse of ball, incised: "EVELYN B. LONGMAN / 1908"
SubmissionNA diploma presentation, May 29, 1919
Credit LineNational Academy of Design, New York, NY
Object number73-S
Label TextThis figure of a young male wearing a classical garment and holding aloft a laurel wreath is a replica of the plaster model for Longman's Victory, which was designed in 1903 for the St. Louis World's Fair of the following year. The sculpture was Longman’s first to receive major attention. Contemporary critics noted the unusual use of a male model to represent an allegory that was traditionally shown in the female form.

According to art writer Jonathan A. Rawson in an article in International Studio in 1912, upon receiving the commission to furnish a statue of Victory for the Varied Industries Building at the fair, Longman consciously “proclaimed herself an insurgent, and proceeded to make Victory according to her own ideas. Men, she reasoned, have occasionally had something to do with victories. Why should not at least one statue of a victory be a male figure?”
Dryad
Paul Manship
1913
Diana of the Chase
Anna Hyatt Huntington
1922
Diana
Frederick William MacMonnies
1888-1889 (cast 1890)
The Young Mother
Bessie Potter Vonnoh
1896
The Freedman
John Quincy Adams Ward
1862 (cast 1891)
Salome
Boris Lovet-Lorski
1927 [from original of 1926]
The Sower
Lee Oskar Lawrie
1928
Gad
Michael Lantz
1956
A Chief of the Multnomah Tribe
Hermon Atkins MacNeil
1905
Stretching Girl
Alexander Stirling Calder
c. 1911
Fluted Head
Elizabeth Catlett
1991