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knight standing above a castle (English Common Law),
and the Declaration of Independence, right, with Thomas Jefferson
standing over a ship. The emphasis on clothing, which connects the
ensemble most closely to the classical style, identifies each legal
tradition.
Stewart prepared sketches, a maquette, and then a full-size model
to finalize the design. Gladding, McBean, the west's principal
manufacturer of architectural terra cotta, used the model to shape
the ceramic veneer sections of the Courthouse facade.
Gold-colored copies of Mosaic Law and Declaration of Independence
flank the southern entrance of the Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administration,
across the Mall.
Information provided courtesy of Michael Several, Los Angeles,
January 1998.
For further information see www.publicartinla.com
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See Albert Stewart, The Law Givers
and Albert Stewart, Fort Moore Pioneer Monument
About the Artist: Albert Stewart (1900 - 1965) was born in
London and emigrated to the U.S. as a child with his family. He
studied at the Beaux Arts Institute and the Art Student's League
in New York City, and served as an assistant to sculptors Frederick
MacMonnies and Paul Manship before he began sculpting in the 1930s.
Notable works include figures on the Scottish Rites Temple on
Wilshire Blvd and exterior of the Life Science Building at UCLA.
Stewart taught sculpture at Scripps College in Claremont for 25
years.
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