1892 -1981
  • Print
BORN
December 26, 1892
Topeka, Kansas
DIED
October 30, 1981
Laguna Beach, California
EDUCATION
Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Paris, France
Washburn College
Topeka, Kansas
GENDER
RACE / ETHNICITY
OCCUPATION
Military Officer
Faculty

Robert Merrell Gage was a sculptor who captured historical figures through expressive statues, fountains, busts, and bas-reliefs.

Robert Merrell Gage was born on December 26, 1892, in Topeka, Kansas. Gage graduated from Topeka High School and worked as a rancher before deciding to study art. He attended Washburn College in Topeka, the Art Students League of New York, and the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris. Afterward, he was mentored by the American painter Robert Henri and Gutzon Borglum, the sculptor of the Mount Rushmore heads.

Gage returned to Topeka in 1916 and received his first commission: a memorial statue of Abraham Lincoln to be placed on the Kansas Capitol grounds. At the time, his studio was in a barn behind his parents' house, and material shortages caused by World War I delayed the sculpture's completion. Gage was serving as a sergeant in a field hospital when the sculpture was finally unveiled in 1918.

In 1919, Gage married Marian Morrow, a painter from Topeka who had just completed her studies in Chicago and New York. Gage began teaching sculpture at Washburn College and the Kansas City Art Institute. Gage completed several public works, including the Police Memorial, the Veterans' Fountain, and the Pioneer Women's Memorial. Robert and Marian Gage left Kansas City in 1923, resettling in Los Angeles, California.

Between 1924-1958, Gage taught at the Chouinard Art School, the University of California, Los Angeles, and the University of Southern California. Over the course of his career, he created public works across the state, and served as president of the California Art Club from 1931-1932.

Robert Merrell Gage's sculptural works gave life to historical figures by capturing subtle expressions and details of their biographies. He was inspired by the idea of freedom described by Abraham Lincoln and Walt Whitman. In 1956, Gage starred in a film produced by the University of Southern California titled The Face of Lincoln, in which he sculpted Lincoln's face in clay while telling the story of his life. The film won an Academy Award for best short documentary, and can be seen today on Youtube: https://youtu.be/kfanza845TY

Robert Merrell Gage died in 1981, leaving a legacy through his monumental public sculptures and countless smaller works. Today, the California Art Club presents the Robert Merrell Gage Award for Best Figure Sculpture in his honor.

References

Artist clippings file is available at:

Jannes Library, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri

Bibliography

Select Sources

"Robert Merrell Gage: American Sculptor," North Carolina Gallery of Fine Art, accessed February 11, 2022, https://ncgfa.com/about-the-artist-robert-merrell-gage/.

"The Police Memorial," KCPD Memorial, accessed February 11, 2022, https://www.kcpolicememorial.com/memorial/statue/.

"Robert Merrell Gage," Kansas Historical Society, accessed February 11, 2022, https://www.kshs.org/kansapedia/robert-merrell-gage/12061.

"Merrell Gage," Helfen Fine Arts, accessed February 11, 2022, https://helfenfinearts.com/merrell-gage/.

Finding Aid to the Merrell Gage Papers, 1911-1982, AAA.gagemerr, Merrell Gage Papers, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.

Simon Gonzalez, "The Lost Face of Lincoln," Wrightsville Beach Magazine, October 2019.

Edward Freed, The Face of Lincoln (1955; Los Angeles: University of Southern California, North Carolina Gallery of Fine Art, 2018), Youtube Video, 22:04, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kfanza845TY.

Heather Kerns, "What's So Special About Merrell Gage?," Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library, July 4, 2011, https://tscpl.org/art/52-for-150-whats-so-special-about-merrell-gage.

"Marrill Gage in the 1940 United States Federal Census," Ancestry, accessed February 11, 2022.

"Engagement Is Announced," Topeka Daily Capital, May 11, 1919.

"State of Lincoln For Kansas: Placed On Marble Base in State House Grounds Monday Under Direction of Robert Merrell Gage, the Sculptor," Mound City Republic, January 10, 1918.

"Robert M Gage in the 1900 United States Federal Census," Ancestry, accessed February 11, 2022.


Core Reference Sources

Kansas City Art Institute, "Midwestern Artists' Exhibition," https://archive.org/details/@jannes_library_kansas_city_art_institute?and[]=subject%3A%22Midwestern+Artists%27+Exhibition%22.

Mazee Bush Owens and Frances S. Bush, A History of Community Achievement: 1885-1964 (Kansas City: Kansas City Art Institute and School of Design, 1965),

https://archive.org/details/OwensMazeeBushCommunityAchievement/mode/2up

askART (database), askART, https://www.askart.com/.

Image Credits

Artwork

Robert Merrell Gage, Lincoln Statue, 1917

Bronze.

Included in "Kansas State Capitol - Online tour - Lincoln statue," Kansas Historical Society, accessed February 11, 2022, https://www.kshs.org/p/kansas-state-capitol-online-tour-lincoln-statue/16578.

Portrait of Artist

Unknown, Portrait of Robert Merrell Gage, 1911

Photograph.

Included in "Robert Merrell Gage: 2020 Hall of Fame Inductee," Topeka High Historical Society, accessed February 11, 2022, https://www.thshistoricalsociety.org/robert-merrell-gage/.

Contributors

Elinore Noyes, Kansas City Art Institute

Artist Record Published

Published on February 14, 2022

Learn more

References

Artist clippings file is available at:

Jannes Library, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri

Artist’s work in these institutions’ collections

Washburn University

Bibliography

Select Sources

"Robert Merrell Gage: American Sculptor," North Carolina Gallery of Fine Art, accessed February 11, 2022, https://ncgfa.com/about-the-artist-robert-merrell-gage/.

"The Police Memorial," KCPD Memorial, accessed February 11, 2022, https://www.kcpolicememorial.com/memorial/statue/.

"Robert Merrell Gage," Kansas Historical Society, accessed February 11, 2022, https://www.kshs.org/kansapedia/robert-merrell-gage/12061.

"Merrell Gage," Helfen Fine Arts, accessed February 11, 2022, https://helfenfinearts.com/merrell-gage/.

Finding Aid to the Merrell Gage Papers, 1911-1982, AAA.gagemerr, Merrell Gage Papers, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.

Simon Gonzalez, "The Lost Face of Lincoln," Wrightsville Beach Magazine, October 2019.

Edward Freed, The Face of Lincoln (1955; Los Angeles: University of Southern California, North Carolina Gallery of Fine Art, 2018), Youtube Video, 22:04, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kfanza845TY.

Heather Kerns, "What's So Special About Merrell Gage?," Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library, July 4, 2011, https://tscpl.org/art/52-for-150-whats-so-special-about-merrell-gage.

"Marrill Gage in the 1940 United States Federal Census," Ancestry, accessed February 11, 2022.

"Engagement Is Announced," Topeka Daily Capital, May 11, 1919.

"State of Lincoln For Kansas: Placed On Marble Base in State House Grounds Monday Under Direction of Robert Merrell Gage, the Sculptor," Mound City Republic, January 10, 1918.

"Robert M Gage in the 1900 United States Federal Census," Ancestry, accessed February 11, 2022.


Core Reference Sources

Kansas City Art Institute, "Midwestern Artists' Exhibition," https://archive.org/details/@jannes_library_kansas_city_art_institute?and[]=subject%3A%22Midwestern+Artists%27+Exhibition%22.

Mazee Bush Owens and Frances S. Bush, A History of Community Achievement: 1885-1964 (Kansas City: Kansas City Art Institute and School of Design, 1965),

https://archive.org/details/OwensMazeeBushCommunityAchievement/mode/2up

askART (database), askART, https://www.askart.com/.

Contributors

Elinore Noyes, Kansas City Art Institute

Artist Record Published

Published on February 14, 2022

Updated on None

Citation

Noyes, Elinore. "Robert Merrell Gage." In Missouri Remembers: Artists in Missouri through 1951. Kansas City: The Kansas City Art Institute and The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art; St. Louis: The St. Louis Public Library, 2022, https://doi.org/10.37764/5776.