At A Glance
Originally commissioned by the Washington newspaper publisher Stilson Hutchins
Dickens’s own will prohibited any “monument, memorial or testimonial, whatever”
Awarded two gold medals at the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893 in Chicago
In 1989, Friends of Clark Park raised funds to repair vandalism
Originally commissioned by the Washington newspaper publisher Stilson Hutchins, Dickens and Little Nell pays tribute to the ever-popular but tragic heroine of The Old Curiosity Shop.
When the publisher was unable to make the final payments for the work, the prolific portrait sculptor, Frank Edwin Elwell, returned the money already advanced and took the work to England with the hope of finding a buyer. Instead, he discovered that Dickens’s own will prohibited any “monument, memorial or testimonial, whatever. I rest my claims to remembrance on my published works and to the remembrance of my friends upon their experiences of me.”
Elwell returned to America and exhibited the work at the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893 in Chicago, where it was awarded two gold medals. After four years of negotiations, the Fairmount Park Art Association (now the Association for Public Art) purchased the sculpture in 1900 and installed it in Clark Park in 1901.
After vandals damaged the sculpture in 1989, the Friends of Clark Park raised funds for its repair.
Adapted from Public Art in Philadelphia by Penny Balkin Bach (Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 1992).
RESOURCES:
This artwork is part of the Around University City tour