Earth as Life-Giver

Hildreth Meière

Marble Mosaic set into Inlaid Marble

Earth as Life Giver by Hildreth Meière

About this piece

Earth as Life-Giver depicts a woman sitting on a throne with her arms outstretched. She is flanked by two females one pouring liquid from a container and another holding bundles of grain. Earth as Life-Giver depicts all the earth provides us in terms of food, water, agricultural life and opportunity.

It is located at the center of the rotunda surrounded by the Genius Elements and all the animals.

The floor mosaics in the Nebraska State Capitol were painstakingly executed by Sunderland Brothers.

Large-scale mosaic was used, the tesserae being about ¾” square, of black marble and buff marble. Dr. Alexander determined the subjects for the panels and Miss Meière made the cartoons, the final ones being drawn at full-size, with a brush, on heavy paper. Some of the brush-drawn lines were thick in spots and thin in others—they were what the Japanese painter would call “living lines.” The patient workmen in de Paoli’s shop [in New York] chipped away at the little squares of marble until they could lay pieces on the lines and exactly reproduce them in the stone. The stones were pasted down onto…brown paper cartoons [which had been traced and reversed from Meière’s original designs] and then cut up for shipping to Lincoln. Out in the Capitol, they were laid [mosaic side] down in their grout, and—when the paper was removed—the pictures were there in their “living lines,” their buff and black squares exactly as they had been drawn with the brush on the heavy brown paper in Miss Meière’s studio.

Harry F. Cunningham, Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue Associates Architect

Source: International Hildreth Meière Association

About Hildreth Meière

Hildreth Meière

Hildreth Meière (me-AIR) was one of the greatest American muralists of the 20th century. She was a pioneer in her field and created a more modern approach to murals that differed from the academic traditions at the time. She blended several classic influences, including classic Greek vase painting, Byzantine Mosaics, and Native American beadwork into a style known as Art Deco.

Up until her death in 1961 she acknowledged the Nebraska State Capitol as her crowning achievement.

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