Daniel Chester French | Mourning Victory from the Melvin Memorial | American | The Metropolitan Museum of Art (original) (raw)

[Daniel Chester French](/art/collection/search?q=Daniel Chester French&perPage=20&sortBy=Relevance&offset=0&pageSize=0) American
Carved by [Piccirilli Brothers Marble Carving Studio](/art/collection/search?q=Piccirilli Brothers Marble Carving Studio&perPage=20&sortBy=Relevance&offset=0&pageSize=0)

1906–8, carved 1912–15

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 700

By 1897, the Boston businessman James C. Melvin had commissioned a funerary monument from French to honor his three brothers who had died in the Civil War. The original marble memorial was erected in 1908 at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord, Massachusetts. Four years later, Melvin presented the Metropolitan with the funds to have this replica carved. The massive figure of Mourning Victory emerges from the block of stone projecting two moods: melancholy, in her downcast eyes and somber expression, and triumph, in the American flag and laurel she holds high. French captured the sense of calm after the storm of battle, which must have referred to the pride, after the sorrow of grieving, felt by the surviving brother.

#3808. Mourning Victory from the Melvin Memorial