Cecil de Blaquiere Howard

Cecil de Blaquiere Howard
Cecil de Blaquiere Howard - Torse de boxeur
Born2 April 1888
Died5 September 1956
New York
NationalityAmerican
EducationArt Students' League Buffalo - James Earle FraserAcadémie Julian, Paris
Known forSculpture
MovementArt deco
SpouseCéline Coupet
AwardsWidener Gold Medal
Herbert Adams Memorial Medal
National Academy of Design : E. N. Watrous Gold Medal
Patron(s)Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, Henry Luce, Lila Tyng

Cecil de Blaquiere Howard, sometimes Cecil Howard, (April 2, 1888 – September 5, 1956), born in Clifton, Welland County, Ontario, Canada (today Niagara Falls) was an American painter and sculptor.[1][2]

The sculptor devoted his work to the presentation of the human body in various circumstances and styles, in sports[3] or at rest, experimenting with figurative, polychrome sculptures, cubism, traditional African art, art deco, classicism or neoclassicism. Using different techniques, including modeling and direct carving, he worked with a range of materials, including clay, stone, marble, wood, plasticine, terracotta, plaster, wax, bronze and silver.