1943-1999 - A sculptor and stonecutter
in the classical style, Frederick Hart was an apprentice at the National
Cathedral in Washington DC and learned there about sculpting and stonecutting.
Then his big break came when he won a competition to design the facade of the
Cathedral, which incorporated his thirteen year masterpiece of the Creation, a
21 X 15 foot bas relief. He also designed "Three Soldiers," realistic in
style, for the Vietnam Veteran's Memorial to contrast with the abstraction of
Maya Lin's work. Born in Atlanta, Georgia and raised in South Carolina, he was
an opponent of most contemporary art, thinking it motivated by political
rather than aesthetic reasons. As a proponent of realism, he was made an
honorary member of The American Society of Classical Realism Guild of Artists.
Just before his premature death from lung cancer in 1999, he built his 17,000
square-foot dream home "Chesley," on 250 acres of land in Virginia. This
mansion was intended to be an artists' retreat to nourish traditional,
classical values and refute modernist trends that he said allowed anything to
be called art.