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hermetic

(8,324 posts)
Tue Feb 11, 2014, 10:00 AM Feb 2014

Find something to be happy about today (Tuesday February 11, 2014)

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And the gold medal goes to...
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Walter Winans for a small piece of bronze he had cast earlier that year, 1912: a 20-inch-tall horse pulling a small chariot. The first ever Olympic gold medal for sculpture.

Gosh. Who knew?
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For the first four decades of competition, the Olympics awarded official medals for painting, sculpture, architecture, literature and music, alongside those for the athletic competitions. From 1912 to 1952, juries awarded a total of 151 medals to original works in the fine arts inspired by athletic endeavors. Now, even Olympics fanatics are unaware that arts, along with athletics, were a part of the modern Games nearly from the start.

During the 1932 Games, nearly 400,000 people visited the Los Angeles Museum of History, Science and Art to see the works entered—and some big names did enter the competitions. John Russell Pope, the architect of the Jefferson Memorial, won a silver at the 1932 Los Angeles Games for his design of the Payne Whitney Gymnasium, constructed t Yale University. Italian sculptor Rembrandt Bugatti, American illustrator Percy Crosby, Irish author Oliver St. John Gogarty and Dutch painter Isaac Israëls were other prominent entrants.


http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/when-the-olympics-gave-out-medals-for-art-6878965/
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Meanwhile, in training for the hot tub competition....
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