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Portrait bust of young woman resting on a squared base. Base painted black, bust metallic gold.
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Bust of woman with short hair adorned with scarf around top of head and tied at back. Head is turned slightly to the figure's left. Figure's right shoulder appears to be covered; right shoulder is bare.
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Tall, slender, robed figure holding bronze-colored orb. Upper body is turned to its right and orb is balanced against left hip. Figure is painted gold in its entirety. Base is painted black.
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Kneeling robed female embracing young nude standing child.
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Bust of young boy, from mid-chest up on rectangular base.
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Three figures standing against what looks like a tree that has a large hand at the top grasping each of their heads. Figures are very roughly sculpted. One is male and the other female. The third figure is female (Humanity) and has her arm on the shoulder of the male. Overall sculpture is abstract.
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Early Twentieth Century cookbook, illustrated and revised edition
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Late nineteenth century cookbook compiled by Ladies Aid Society of the Congregational Church of Stoughton, Massachusetts
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in Robert Thomas Kerlin (1866-1950), Negro Poets and their Poems. Washington, DC: Associated Publishers, 1923
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hand up
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hand down
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Full-length standing allegorical figure of a woman whose lower portion is in mummy wrappings, and top portion is draped in ancient Egyptian apparel. It is a reduced version of a sculpture designed for the America's Making pageant held in New York in October 1921. Incised at the back of the base: "MVW Fuller" and a copyright symbol
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Oval toned plaster plaque reproducing in low relief an engraved portrait of African American poet Phillis Wheatley used as the frontispiece of Wheatley's Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral (London: Printed for A. Bell, bookseller, Aldgate; and sold by Messrs. Cox and Berry, King-Street, Boston, 1773). The engraving was made after a portrait attributed to African American slave and artist Scipio Moorhead. As in the engraving, the words "Phillis Wheatley, Negro Servant to Mr. John Wheatley of Boston" appear around the perimeter of the plaque. It is not signed or dated; the attribution to Meta Warrick Fuller was made by Grace Nail Johnson, sister-in-law of the donor.
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A painted plaster sculpture bust of John the Baptist. The head is turned slightly to the left, with closely cropped hair. The face is alert, with raised chin and open eyes. There is a tall integrated mount and base extending from the bust. It features an oval roundel inscribed with the name "John." The sculpture is painted a light beige.
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Painted plaster sculpture of a female figure standing with her right hand over her heart, her left arm straight against her side with her hand extended out. Her head is turned over her left shoulder. From the hips down her legs are bound as if mummified. She wears a veil that is draped over her head and falls over her shoulders and down her back. The veil is shaped to resemble a pharaonic headdress. The figure stands on a rectangular, slightly wedge shaped pedestal. The sculpture is painted to look like copper complete with a simulated greenish patina.
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A standing female figure, with her right hand on her chest
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Sculpture of a horse pulling upward, away from humans seemingly in despair. Green in color.
Scratched on the bottom is the number 2884-1 three times; additional numbers are partially visible.
In the signature only the last name is legible. On the right foot of the horse are the letters MWF inside a rectangle.
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A standing boy holding a water canteen
#1/7
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A boy leaning forward carrying a water canteen. Another jar is on the ground near his right foot. The reccord indicates edition #1/7, it could be from the donation form, but it is does not appear on the piece. At the bottom on the back, after the signature, on the back right side of base, there is a faint signature, unclear by whom.
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Portrait bust of John the Baptist - engraved with "JOHN" on the front of the piece. Has a marble base.
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