Adam and Eve with Apple (Mirror)
still image
photographs
1985
image/tif
reformatted digital
Source extent: 1 photograph : color print ; 6 x 4 in.
CHO
View of a bronze mirror by Elbert Weinberg representing a nude man and woman and a gigantic apple. The polished surface of the back of the apple could be used as a mirror. The photograph is inscribed in German “Adamo & Eva / mit Apple [sic]”. In the biblical Book of Genesis, Adam and Eve, the first man and woman, are tempted by a serpent to eat of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, resulting in their expulsion from the Garden of Eden. The exact date of the sculpture is unknown. It may date from the mid-1980s. However, Weinberg was making small figurative sculptures incorporating mirrors as early as the 1960s. The photograph may have been taken in the mid-1980s or in the early 1990s, following the death of the sculptor.
Sculptor Elbert Weinberg (1928-1991) was a Hartford native and Weaver High School graduate who maintained a studio in the Colt Building for many years. He worked in various mediums, including marble, bronze, and other metals. Twice awarded the prestigious Prix de Rome, Weinberg created sculptures that grace museums, public installations, and private collections throughout the United States and Europe.
Elbert Weinberg Collection
Hartford History Center, Hartford Public Library
hpl_hhc_weinberg_0413.tif
http://hdl.handle.net/11134/50002:1617
Sculpture
Mirrors
Weinberg, Elbert, 1928-1991
Eve (Biblical figure)
Adam (Biblical figure)
Copyright restrictions may apply to the use of this image. For more information or to obtain a photographic reproduction of this image, contact the Hartford History Center, Hartford Public Library.
Hartford History Center, Hartford Public
Library
2016-04-07-04:00
eng
This MODS record was created by the University of Connecticut Libraries from HHC HPL data