Categories
Profiles in Stone

Isidore Konti’s Proposal

Isidore Konti's proposal
Letter of Proposal from Isidore Konti for Bishop Horatio Potter’s Tomb, March 29, 1920. Image Courtesy of Cathedral of St. John The Divine and Diocesan Archives.

Konti wrote the proposal above a little over 100 years ago. Primarily Isidore Konti’s proposal covered the task of modeling and carving the recumbent figure of Bishop Potter as well as the five saints in the niches. First came a sketch model, then a full size one. Lastly the limestone figure was carved. The combined sum of the work in 2021 dollars would be roughly $60,000. However with the small number of architectural sculptors around today as compared to 1920 New York, it would likely be considerably more. This document, this connection to the man is precious. Konti carved the sculpture 37 years after the death of the sixth bishop of New York, the Founder of the Cathedral. For that reason he used photographs like the one below.

Bishop Horatio Potter
Bishop Horatio Potter, Sixth Bishop of New York – Brady-Handy Photograph Collection, Library of Congress, Prints and Photograph Division.

In a letter to architect Thomas Nash, Potter’s daughter, Mary Chauncy, wrote,

I have been thinking a great deal of my visit to Mr. Konti’s studio, and the wonderful results that he has obtained from photographs.

– Mary Chauncy to Nash, August 31, 1920

Additionally. several of Konti’s Yonkers friends posed for the saints figures, specifically Edward the Confessor (extreme right) and St. Theodosius (far left). Thomas Nash, the architect, designed the sarcophagus. The saints figures and as well as the Potter’s recumbent figure are Konti’s work.

Isidore Konti's proposal completed
Bishop Horatio Potter’s Tomb – Photo Courtesy Cathedral St. John the Divine and Diocesan Archives

The Architect’s Proposed Drawing

Horatio Potters Tomb Proposed
Proposed Design by Architect Thomas Nash – Image Courtesy of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine and Diocesan Archives

Above is an early proposed design for the tomb. Above all you will notice that the five saints are missing. The richly carved canopy of American oak has also been modified. It is now supported on corbels springing from the granite columns on either side.

Thomas Nash died in 1926. Bishop William T. Manning, the tenth bishop of New York (1921-1946), paid tribute to the architect in the New York Times.

Manning tribute to Thomas Nash

“For many years he acted as architect for Trinity Parish, and he has left his impress upon some of the important monuments of the city, among them the fine tomb of Bishop Horatio Potter.

His interests and his gifts were many, but his highest trait was his genius for friendship.”

– William T. Manning, New York, Feb 2, 1926

When we look back, these three prominent men, whose lives connected in the 1920’s, keep us mindful of the multitude of stories and connections due to the Cathedral of St. John the Divine.

  • We are indebted to Wayne Kempton, Archivist of the Diocese of New York and the Cathedral of St. John the Divine for his many contributions to this post, especially. Isidore Konti’s proposal.
  • More on Bishop Potter’s Tomb in our previous post
  • The Sculpture of Isidore Konti, 1862-1938, Isidore Konti, Hudson River Museum.
  • The Late Thomas Nash, New York Times, Feb 4, 1926

Categories
Divine Stone

Bishop Potter’s Tomb

Bishop Potter's Tomb
Bishop Horatio Potter’s Tomb, Founder of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine

Bishop Horatio Potter (1802-1887) was the Cathedral’s Founder. Additionally he was the sixth Bishop of New York. In 1872 he secured the requisite permissions for the Cathedral. The architect for Bishop Potter’s tomb was Thomas Nash and the sculptor was Isidore Konti. The English Gothic style of the 15th century is apparent. Specifically, studies of the tomb of Edward the Confessor in Westminster Abbey influenced the design.

The sarcophagus, the recumbent figure of the Bishop and the figures of the five ornamental niches of the front are of Indiana limestone. The figures, from left to right are Edward the Confessor, St. Remigius, St. John the Divine, St. Isidore and St. Theodosius. Bishop Horatio Potter’s tomb is located in the Ambulatory between the fourth and fifth great pillars opposite the entrance to St. Saviors Chapel. Its position directly behind the High Altar is that traditionally reserved for the Founder of a cathedral. The Bishop’s remains were transferred here from Poughkeepsie on St. John’s Day in 1921.

Isidore Konti

Isidore Konti (July 9, 1862 – January 11, 1938) was a Vienna born sculptor. He entered the Imperial Academy in Vienna at age 16. In 1886 he won a scholarship to study in Rome for two years. Later upon returning to Austria, Konti worked as an architectural modeler. After moving to America and working on the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition, he eventually moved to New York City. In New York he began working as an assistant to fellow Austrian expatriate Karl Bitter. Like many sculptors of that epoch Konti created architectural sculpture. His skills as a modeler kept him in much demand. Accordingly in 1906 The National Academy of Design elected him an Associate member and he became a full Academician in 1909. Konti died in Yonkers, New York.

Isidore Konti

Another Bishop Potter’s Tomb

In September 1883, his failing health forced Bishop Horatio Potter to ask for an assistant to relieve him of administrative tasks. As a result the Diocesan Convention elected Henry Codman Potter. Henry C. Potter was the nephew of Bishop Horatio Potter and at the time was rector of Grace Church, New York.

After Horatio Potter obtained the charter for the cathedral, nothing more was done until the episcopate of his nephew. When Henry Potter became assistant bishop, he convened the Trustees to address the property issue. Earlier a board of trustees was convened to purchase property below Central Park. Several donors were secured but after the Panic of 1873, they could no longer contribute. This time, in 1887, they chose a site in Morningside Heights, the highest ground in Manhattan. On December 27, 1892 he laid the cornerstone. In the the winter of. 1896-1897 Bishop Henry Potter worked full time raising money for the Cathedral.

Bishop Potter's Tomb
The Tomb of Bishop Henry Codman Potter – Seventh Bishop of New York. Library of Congress, Bains News Service ca. 1915

This Bishop Potter’s tomb is located in the Chapel of St. James. The tomb is carved from Siena marble. On the tomb is a recumbent figure of the Bishop in Seravezza marble. The finely carved figure was sculpted by Mr. James E. Fraser.

James Earle Fraser

James Earle Fraser

James Earle Fraser (November 4, 1876 – October 11, 1953) was born in Winona, Minnesota. Fraser began carving figures early in life from pieces of limestone scavenged from a stone quarry close to his home. He attended classes at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago In 1890. He also studied at the Ecole Des Beaux Arts and the Academie Julian in Paris in the late 19th century.

His architectural sculpture and monuments adorn many locations in New York and Washington, D.C. As a result Fraser became one of the most prominent American sculptors of the first half of the 20th century. If you check your pocket change, you may be carrying around one of his sculptures. He designed the Indian Head Buffalo nickel.

Indian Head nickel designed by James Earle Fraser
1913 Indian Head nickel designed by James Earle Fraser
  • Among other sources we relied heavily of various editions of A Guide to the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine in the city of New York, by Edward Hagman Hall
Categories
Divine Stone

Tom Fedorek’s Guide to the Portal of Paradise

Tom Fedorek's Guide to the Portal of Paradise
29 Figures Carved between 1988 and 1999 at the Main Entrance to the Cathedral

Tom Fedorek became a docent at the Cathedral in 1984. He knew Alan Bird and several of the cutters and carvers. He is now the Senior Volunteer Guide. His video presentations on the Portal of Paradise are must see and hear. They cover the history of this 12 year endeavor, the design elements and the people who worked on it. Additionally, the biblical connections are defined. Each of the four episodes are important. If you don’t have time at one sitting for them all, please come back. Enjoy Tom Fedorek’s guide to the Portal of Paradise.

Episode 1 – 8 minutes, 12 seconds

Tom Fedorek's Guide to the Portal of Paradise

Episode 2 – 13 minutes, 53 seconds

Tom Fedorek's Guide to the Portal of Paradise

Episode 3 – 13 minutes, 39 seconds

Tom Fedorek's Guide to the Portal of Paradise

Episode 4 – 15 minutes, 58 seconds

Tom Fedorek's Guide to the Portal of Paradise

In this last video, there isn’t the usual discussion of the base for the final statue, that of John the Baptist. We asked Tom to tell us about the carver of that base and its symbolism. Here is what he told us.

John the Baptist Base stone
Base stone of John the Baptist statue

“The base stone was carved by Jean-Claude Marchionni. JC’s work tends to be busier and more roughly textured than Simon’s.

“As for the symbolism, Isaiah writes of the prophet called to announce the coming of the Lord and the deliverance of his people from exile: ‘A voice cries: In the wilderness prepare the way of the Lord, make straight in the desert a highway for our God’. (Isaiah 40:3) The Gospel writers understood John the Baptist, the immediate forerunner of Jesus, to be his prophet. All four Gospels refer to John as ‘the voice of one crying in the wilderness.’ “

I believe we are intended to interpret the ears on the base stone as the world waiting expectantly to at long last hear the voice prophesied by Isaiah

– Tom Fedorek

Lastly, of note is the small dog with the camera around its neck. The dog’s name is Cooper and celebrates both Martha Cooper, a photographer who documented the portal carving project for four years, as well as the thousands of camera-toting tourists who flock to the Cathedral each year. This concludes Tom Fedorek’s Guide to the Portal of Paradise.

Dog with camera next to the Statue of Ester
  • We are indebted to Tom Fedorek for his presentations and his knowledge of the Cathedral, and the overall work of the Department of Education and Visitor Services.
  • As well, our gratitude to Ruth Whaley, Manager, Community and Educational Initiatives for the work that they do.

Categories
Divine Stone

Mary Bloom: Photographer

Mary Bloom
Mary Bloom Image from the Stoneyard – Photo Courtesy of Pamela Morton

We are saddened to learn of the passing of Mary Bloom, photographer. Mary was a photographer-in-residence at the Cathedral for twenty years. Her many images documented the events and people who came and went during those times. Her time at the Cathedral coincided with the Dean Morton Era stoneyard and of course she photographed that as well.

Nelson Mandela was one of the distinguished people who came to the Cathedral. While she could have photographed him anywhere in that magnificent building, she led him to the stoneyard. There, she placed him by the carving of his likeness. She said she wanted the stone carver to know that Mandela had seen the carving.

Mary Bloom
Nelson Mandela with the Emmanuel Fourchet Carving. Image from the Recently Published Book A Cathedral for the 21st Century. Photo – Mary Bloom
Manu Fourchette
Manu Fourchet Carving the Mandela Portrait – Photo Robert F. Rodriguez

Feast of St. Francis, the Annual Blessing of the Animals

For 30 years, on the first Sunday in October, the Cathedral holds the Blessing of the Animals. It was this past Sunday. Mary was one of the c0-founders, an event that Dean Morton brought to life. Most years she organized the procession up the great aisle to the altar in the central crossing.

Mary Bloom Photographer
Blessing of the Animals – Cathedral of St. John the Divine

Additionally, Mary spent many years as the staff photographer for the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show.

Along with Robert F. Rodriguez, Martha Cooper and Deborah Doerflien, Mary Bloom – photographer preserved the visual story of the Cathedral and the stoneyard. For this we are grateful.

Mary corresponded with us a month ago saying that she was again starting to scan the images she wanted to share with us. In closing, she said “Sorry for the delay…life gets in the way.”

We hope she is now being greeted by the throngs of animals she adored.