¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Sculptors
1. sculptor [n] - See also: sculptor
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sculptors
Literary usage of Sculptors
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The History of American Sculpture by Lorado Taft (1903)
"CHAPTER XXIV DECORATIVE sculptors AND MEN OK FOREIGN BIRTH IT is a curious fact
that the list of architectural sculptors in the United States is made up ..."
2. The American Year Book: A Record of Events and Progress by Francis Graham Wickware, (, Albert Bushnell Hart, (, Simon Newton Dexter North, William M. Schuyler (1913)
"OYD French Society of Painters and National Academy of Design derived sculptors
Loan Exhibition.—A re- no »mail advantage; and before the view of the year's ..."
3. The South in the Building of the Nation: A History of the Southern States by Walter Lynwood Fleming (1909)
"In the list of American sculptors who have won fame and recognition the South 's
quota is ... Among the sculptors of the South, whose work is well known, ..."
4. Book of the Artists: American Artist Life, Comprising Biographical and by Henry Theodore Tuckerman (1867)
"Plastic Art.—Foreign sculptors.— Rush.—frazee.—Augur.— Hart.— Brown. ... |AVING
sketched the experience of our pioneer and deceased sculptors somewhat ..."
5. The Monthly Review by Charles William Wason (1830)
"The Lives of the Most Eminent British Painters, sculptors, and Architects. ...
The earliest English sculptors flourished at no more remote a period than the ..."
6. A Handbook of Greek Sculpture by Ernest Arthur Gardner (1897)
"Doubtless sculptors from Argos as well as elsewhere were attracted to Athens by
the great artistic activity under Pericles and Phidias; and it is in the ..."
7. The Story of Siena and San Gimignano by Edmund Garratt Gardner (1902)
"Stimulated by their presence and example, there rose an independent school of
Sienese sculptors, which flourished from the end of the thirteenth to the ..."
8. The Story of Siena and San Gimignano by Edmund Garratt Gardner (1902)
"Stimulated by their presence and example, there rose an independent school of
Sienese sculptors, which flourished from the end of the thirteenth to the ..."