|
Evelyn Raymond was St. Louis Park’s
most recognized artist in residence. Born on March 20, 1908
in Duluth, she studied at the Minneapolis School of Art and
Design until she quit over a staff mandate to discontinue
doing abstract art. She and some fellow students pooled
their meager Depression resources and rented a studio in
downtown Minneapolis.
She really made her reputation as a WPA artist, teaching
sculpture for 25 cents an hour “to everyone from garagemen
to executives. It was like the Renaissance. Those days were
really fun, “she recalled in a 1991 article in the Sailor.
She was the head of the sculpture department at the Walker
from 1938 to 1951. During the 1940’s, she founded and served
as President of the Minnesota Sculpture Society.
In 1951 she created a studio and apartment at 4501 W. 38th
Street (3730 Monterey Drive) at the corner of Excelsior
Blvd. and Monterey. [She was an active member of the
community, contributing a recipe for salt pork potatoes to
the Dispatch in 1960.] Her students were primarily
women, which she attributed to the fact that her classes
were in the morning when usually women could attend. She did
feel that women had a better feel for sculpture than men.
Miss Raymond was best known for her bronze “Maria” which was
commissioned for Minnesota’s Centennial in 1958. It would be
displayed at Statuary Hall in the U.S. Capitol. She had won
the honor among 12 contestants who vied to create the statue
of Maria Sanford, “Minnesota’s First Lady of Pioneers.” It
was the first statue of a woman in the Capitol, and Raymond
was the first female sculptor represented at the Capitol.
Other pieces around Minnesota include:
“The Family,” a 3,200 pound copper sculpture, was created in
1959 for the front of the MSI Insurance Company at 1919
University. In 1979 the company moved, and donated the
sculpture to the College of St. Thomas. The bas-relief piece
is about 21 ft. wide and 18 ft. high. It was mounted on the
east wall of the college’s T. Merritt and Katherine Coughlan
Field House.
International Falls Stadium – cement bas-relief of athletes
– 1941-42
Farmer’s Exchange Building in South St. Paul – six walnut
figures – moved to Sanex Building
Sebeka High School
St. Joseph’s Church, Hopkins
Church of the Good Shepherd, 48th & France, Edina - 1949
Fairview Southdale Hospital – “Time for Love”
St. Olaf College – Busts of Mr. and Mrs. Skoglund
University of Minnesota Field House – sculpture of Bernie
Bierman – commissioned in 1976 by 276 of his former players.
Minneapolis Public Library – Alabaster pelican (lost?)
Church of St. Austin, Minneapolis – Hammered copper piece of
St. Austin
Walker Art Museum – “The Doors”
Minnesota Historical Society – “Erg”
Timothy Lutheran Church (7814 Minnetonka Blvd.)
St. George’s Episcopal Church (5224 Minnetonka Blvd.)
Victory cross was sold to a church in the Dominican
Republic. A small crucifix is in St. George’s lobby.
Raymond’s final legacy to St. Louis Park is the “Celebration
of Peace” sculpture that was dedicated at the Rec Center in
1997. Her desire was to create a piece that would represent
the birds that were displaced when Wolfe Park was developed.
Evelyn Raymond passed away on April 25, 1998.
|