Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy - Flight of Night

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Image of Flight of Night

Paul Manship , (Dec 24, 1885–Feb 1, 1966)

Flight of Night

1916
17 1/2 in. x 12 1/2 in. x 5 3/8 in. (44.45 cm x 31.75 cm x 13.65 cm)

Medium and Support: Bronze
Credit Line: Gift of anonymous donor
Accession Number: 1928.28

Commentary

From its earliest days, the Addison Gallery has held Paul Manship’s work in high regard. The young artist was a close friend and associate of Charles A. Platt, the architect of the museum. In 1928 the committee assembling the collection for the future museum purchased Manship’s Flight of Night. In 1930, when Platt was designing the Addison, he engaged Manship to create the Venus Anadyomene fountain to take pride of place in the museum’s central rotunda. That year the Art Committee also added three bronze sculptures, including the iconic pair of Diana and Actaeon. Later gifts of a larger version of Flight of Night and a number of bronze medallions bring the total number of Manship works in the collection to 10. In addition, Manship’s Armillary Sphere adorns the south side of the Great Lawn of Phillips Academy’s Platt-designed campus.

Laying the Foundation

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Paul Manship was one of American’s most prominent early twentieth-century sculptors. The Minnesota-born Manship won the coveted Prix de Rome at the American Academy in Rome in 1909 which led to three years of European study of archaic and classical sculpture. By his return to the United States his work was garnering attention for its careful navigation between abstraction and representation. Manship’s first show in New York at the end of 1912 sold out, and from then on his sculpture was in demand. With its polished surfaces, undulated forms, and controlled linear ornamentation, his work was the manifestation of what came to be known as Art Deco.

The Addison Gallery has held Paul Manship’s work in high regard from its earliest days. The young artist was a close friend and associate of Charles A. Platt, the architect of the museum. In 1928, the committee assembling the collection for the anticipated museum had purchased Manship’s, Flight of Night. When Platt was designing the Addison in 1930, he engaged Manship to create the fountain, Venus Anadyomene, to take place of pride in the museum’s central rotunda. That year the Art Committee also added three bronze sculptures, including the iconic pair of Diana and Actaeon. Later gifts of a larger version of Flight of Night and a number of bronze medallions bring the total number of Manship works in the collection to ten. In addition, Manship’s Armillary Sphere adorns the south side of the Great Lawn of Phillips Academy’s Charles Platt-designed campus.

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Bartlett H. Hayes Prize Recipients

2023:

Reggie Burrows Hodges

Exhibition | Residency | Publication | Acquisition

2025:

Tommy Kha

Exhibition | Residency | Publication | Acquisition