Nancy Cox-McCormack

Nancy Cox-McCormack

Nannie M. McCormack, ca.1912
Born Nancy Mal Cox
(1885-08-15)August 15, 1885
Nashville, Tennessee, U.S.
Died February 17, 1967(1967-02-17) (aged 81)
Ithaca, New York, U.S.
Occupation
Spouse(s)
  • Mark McCormack
  • Charles Thomas Cushman
Parent(s)
  • Herschel McCullough Cox
  • Nancy Morgan Cox

Nancy Cox-McCormack, later Cushman (August 15, 1885 – February 17, 1967), was an American sculptor, writer and socialite. Between 1910 and 1953 she sculpted bronze and terra cotta busts and bas reliefs of more than seventy sitters, including such notables as social reformer Jane Addams, lawyer Clarence Darrow, poet Ezra Pound, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini, Spanish dictator Miguel Primo de Rivera and Indian politician Mohandas K. Gandhi.[1][2] Of the works she is known to have created, the location of only half is currently known.[2]

Early life

Nancy "Nannie" Mal[1] (or Mai)[3] Cox was born in Nashville, Tennessee, on August 15, 1885, the second of three children of Herschel McCullough Cox and Nancy Morgan Cox, a well-off Virginia couple.[4] Nancy and her siblings contracted polio when Nancy was about three, and her sister and brother died of the disease in May 1888. Nancy's mother died of tuberculosis on December 13, 1888.[3]

Herschel McCullough Cox remarried and had a son, Henry Herschel Cox, with his second wife, Lena Lillian Warren. Herschel died in an accident when Nancy was a teenager, December 31, 1899.[3] Nancy lived at a boarding school in Arkansas, then briefly with her stepmother in Nashville, Tennessee where she attended Ward Seminary. There she studied with artist Willie Betty Newman, working in pastels and watercolors.[1] Unhappy in her home life, Nancy married Mark McCormack in 1903, but separated from him in 1909 and divorced as of 1911.[3] In 1909, Nancy enrolled briefly in the St. Louis School of Fine Arts at Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri[3] where she worked with Victor Holm.[5]

Chicago

In 1910 Nancy Cox-McCormack moved to Chicago, and enrolled at the Art Institute of Chicago,[3] where she studied sculpture with Charles Mulligan.[1] She opened a studio in the Tree Studio Building in Chicago.[3] For the next ten years, she lived and worked primarily in Chicago. The first sculpture that she sold, entitled "Harmony", was shown at the January 1913 Chicago Artists Exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago. She also entered and won the Edward Ward Carmack Memorial Competition, Nashville.[3] She was chosen to create panels on the themes "Woman in the Home" and "Woman in Civics" for the Rockford Women's Club in Rockford, Illinois.[6] She also created altar panels of "The Annunciation" and "The Birth of Christ" for Trinity Episcopal Church in Chicago.[7] She created a number of portrait sculptures during this period, including George and Frederick Woodruff of the First National Bank,[8] and at least one death mask.[3]

Her entry in the Chicago social and club register of 1921 reads:

"McCORMACK, Nancy Mai (Cox). Educated Ward Seminary, Nashville, Tenn.; Clubs Member of Art Institute; Activities Sculptor, principal works "Harmony", McCormack Memorial on capitol grounds, Nashville, Tenn., bust of W. H. Mitchell, also various statues, portraits of children, etc. Residence 19 E. Pearson St."[9]

Europe

During the 1920s, Nancy Cox-McCormack traveled extensively in Europe. She visited France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and England, and established studios at Via Margutta 48 in Rome, Italy (19221924). She sculpted figures of a number of important people including Benito Mussolini, U. S. Ambassador Henry P. Fletcher, archaeologist Giacomo Boni, and political saloniste Lydia Rismondo.[3]

In Paris in July 1921, Cox-McCormack met Ezra Pound. In December 1921, she cast a life-mask of him, and modeled a small portrait-bust. In 1922 and 1923 she met Ezra Pound and his wife Dorothy again in Siena and in Rome.[10]

Through a chain of friendships, Cox-McCormack was able to meet and model Benito Mussolini, who had just risen to power in Italy, evoking widespread excitement among Cox-McCormack and her friends. Cox-McCormack had been in Rome during Mussolini's March on Rome, and had seen what was happening at first hand. "Every artist I knew... was enthusiastic about the 'stellone' (great star) who had appeared in the sky 'to save Italy from utter ruin.'"[10] She considered him "a creative force" and "the inspiration of the new epoch in Europe". She completed his bust in ten sittings during May and June 1923. It was the first bust made of the new ruler. (Years later, she became disenchanted with Mussolini's regime).[10]

During the 1920s, Cox-McCormack exhibited in Rome, Paris, New York, and Chicago.[5] Her one-woman shows included:

In 1931, she traveled to England to model Mahatma Gandhi, who was then attending the Indian Conference in London.[3]

Other work

Her account of her travels in Spain, Pleasant Days in Spain, includes an account of modeling the Spanish dictator, Miguel Primo de Rivera.[2]

She also wrote a children’s book, Peeps: The Really Truly Sunshine Fairy, which was published in 1918.[2]

She appeared on the NBC Woman's Radio Review in 1936.[11]

Gallery

Later life

Nancy Cox-McCormack married Charles Thomas Cushman of Brooklyn Heights, New York City on December 21, 1939. The couple settled at 62 Montague Street, Brooklyn Heights, New York City. In the 1950s, they returned to Europe together, visiting Sicily, Rome and Florence. In December 1955, they moved to Ithaca, New York.[3]

Nancy Cox-McCormack died in Ithaca, New York, February 17, 1967.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Nancy Cox-McCormack Cushman Papers, 19062000". Five College Archives and Manuscript Collections. Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Weyant, Nancy S. "Nancy Cox-McCormack". Nancy S. Weyant. Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Owsley, Harriet Chappell. "Finding Aid, COX-McCORMACK, NANCY (18851967) PAPERS 19111965" (PDF). Tennessee State Library and Archives. Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  4. Cox, Henry Miller (1912). The Cox family in America: a history and genealogy of the older branches of the family from the appearance of its first representative in this country in 1610. New York: Printed for the author by the Unionist-Gazette Association. Retrieved 21 February 2015.
  5. 1 2 Special Exhibitions: Sculpture by Nancy Cox-McCormack... (PDF). Chicago: The Art Institute of Chicago. 1925.
  6. American Federation of Artists (1918). "Art in Chicago". Magazine of Art 9: 28. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  7. "Completes altar panels for church". American Stone Trade 16: 18. January 1, 1917. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  8. "Art in Chicago". Art and Progress 5 (12): 437–440. 1914. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  9. Chicago Social and Club Register. Chicago: Crest Publishers. 1921. p. 84.
  10. 1 2 3 Rainey, Lawrence (1998). Institutions of modernism : literary elites and public culture. New Haven, Conn.: Yale Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0300070507.
  11. "The Lowell Sun". August 24, 1936. p. 37.

External links

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