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  • Bennett, Bill,
     
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  • Roberts, Ben,
     
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  • Bronze Horse Foundry,
     
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  • Willis Granite Company,
     
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  • History -- United States
     
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  • History -- United States
     
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  • Figure group -- Family
     
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  • Portrait male -- Davis, Russell
     
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  • Portrait female -- Rupp, Stephanie
     
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  • Dress -- Historic
     
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  • Dress -- Accessory
     
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  • Architecture -- Vehicle
     
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  • Outdoor Sculpture -- Oklahoma -- Perry
     
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  • Sculpture
     
     
    Hopes and Dreams, (sculpture).
    Artist: 
    Bennett, Bill, sculptor.
    Roberts, Ben, sculptor.
    Bronze Horse Foundry, founder.
    Willis Granite Company, fabricator.
    Title: 
    Hopes and Dreams, (sculpture).
    Dates: 
    Commissioned April 28, 1993. Cast March 24, 1993-Sept. 8, 1993. Copyrighted May 5, 1993. Dedicated Sept. 16, 1993.
    Digital Reference: 
    Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image
    Medium: 
    Sculpture: bronze; Base: Oklahoma red granite.
    Dimensions: 
    Sculpture: approx. H. 7 ft. 7 in. x W. 6 ft. 6 in. x L. 10 ft.; Base: approx. H. 8 ft. 9 in. x W. 12 ft. x L. 18 ft.
    Inscription: 
    (On the lower right of the back of the wagon seat:) B. BENNETT (artist's monogram) (copyright symbol) 93 (On the lower left of the back of the wagon seat:) THE BRONZE HORSE (On back of lower base, right side:) GRANITE WORK BY/WILLIS GRANITE PRODUCTS INC/GRANITE OK 73547 (On plaque on front of lower base, left side, raised letters:) (left side) HOPES AND DREAMS/This sculpture and the plaza surrounding it are/dedicated to the honor of all the stalwart men and/women who took part in the greatest land rush of/all time - the celebrated Cherokee Strip run, held/on September 16th, 1893./Perry and Noble County are in the heartland of/that historic area, and this dedication is made/on the occasion of the centennial year of the/great run./In this plaza, the sculpture symbolizes all of/the hopes and dreams of our founders. It shows/us only a man and a woman, whose offspring we/are. The rest of the story is left to your own/imagination. Who are they; where were they from;/where were they going; what kind of wagon was it;/what were this couple's real hopes and dreams?/These details are left to your own fancy./This we know: Those hardy pioneers brought with/them a steadfast faith in God and because they did,
    (On plaque on front of lower base, right side, raised letters:) we have a spiritual legacy that makes this a better/place in which to live./ Engraved in this base are names of organizations,/businesses, individuals and good citizens whose/generous support made this sculpture possible./The entire plaza is an all-Oklahoma project./Bill Bennett, the artist, grew up in Perry; granite/from Oklahoma provides the base; a state foundry/did the bronze casting; & Oklahoma paving stones/cover the plaza area. The models were two young/Perry residents, Stephanie Rupp and Rusty Davis./Project committee members were Bill Haynes,/Fred Beers, Kaye Bond, Mickey Brown, Dewey Dailey,/Bill Gengler, Jim Lemon, Dr. Charles Martin, Duane/Palovik, Anna Lou Randall, Ken Schuermann and/Karen Wilcox./The statue concept began in the fall of 1991./A year later, the original 20-inch tall wax model/was shown; full scale heroic clay model was ready/in March 1993; and formal unveiling was exactly 100/years after the 1893 opening of the Cherokee Strip.
    (On centennial seal in the middle of the plaque:) 1893 CHEROKEE STRIP 1993/CENTENNIAL/PERRY/OK (On front of lower base, incised letters:) PIONEER/(List of names)/HOMESTEADER/(List of names) (On back of lower base, incised letters:) FRONTIERSMAN/(List of names)/CLAIM STAKER/(List of names)/BOOMER/(List of names) signed Founder's mark appears.
    Description: 
    A sculpture depicting a pioneer man and woman making the 1893 land run. The two figures sit on a wagon seat, their hair and clothing whipped back by the wind. Only the front seat of the wagon is depicted. The man, dressed in jeans, cowboy boots, cowboy hat, a long sleeved shirt, suspenders and a jacket, leans forward driving an unseen team of horses. He holds the horses' reins in his hands and his mouth open. The woman, seated next to him on his proper left, is dressed in a long-sleeved dress. She leans back with her proper right arm on the man's back and her proper left arm holding onto the side of the wagon seat. Her bonnet has blown off her head and rests on the back. The sculpture is placed atop a two-part base. The upper section of the base is made of rough granite and the lower section is made of polished granite which is heavily inscribed. The sculpture is placed within a plaza composed of over 8,000 red bricks, 2,100 of which are inscribed with the names of donors.
    Subject: 
    History -- United States -- Westward Expansion
    History -- United States -- Oklahoma
    Figure group -- Family -- Spouses
    Portrait male -- Davis, Russell -- Full length
    Portrait female -- Rupp, Stephanie -- Full length
    Dress -- Historic -- Pioneer Dress
    Dress -- Accessory -- Hat
    Architecture -- Vehicle -- Wagon
    Object Type: 
    Outdoor Sculpture -- Oklahoma -- Perry
    Sculpture
    Owner: 
    Administered by Noble County Commissioners, 301 6th Street, Noble County Courthouse, Perry, Oklahoma 73077
    Located Noble County Courthouse, 301 6th Street, Courtyard, Perry, Oklahoma
    Remarks: 
    The sculpture honors those men and women who took part in the greatest land rush of all time, the Cherokee Strip run, held on Sept. 16, 1893. Bill Bennett was assisted by Ben Roberts who helped make tools and who made the wooden and metal frames for the models of the wagon. Models for the man and woman depicted in the sculpture are Perry residents Stephanie Rupp and Rusty Davis. The sculpture cost $200,000 and was installed as part of the celebration of the Cherokee Strip Centennial. Funding for the sculpture was raised through donations and the sale of fifty replicas of the sculpture.
    IAS files contain a partial transcription of names on base. IAS files contain related articles from The Perry Daily Journal, Oct. 7, 1992; Feb. 15, 1993, pg. 1; Aug. 24, 1993, pg. 6; Sept. 9, 1993; Sept. 16, 1993, pg. 1.; Sept. 20, 1993; and an article from The Sunday Oklahoman, Feb. 7, 1993, Section A, pg. 23. IAS files also contain a copy of the fund raising brochure and the dedication program.
    References: 
    Save Outdoor Sculpture, Oklahoma survey, 1996.
    Illustration: 
    Image on file.
    The Perry Daily Journal, Sept. 16, 1993, pg. 1.
    Note: 
    The information provided about this artwork was compiled as part of the Smithsonian American Art Museum's Inventories of American Painting and Sculpture database, designed to provide descriptive and location information on artworks by American artists in public and private collections worldwide.
    Repository: 
    Inventories of American Painting and Sculpture, Smithsonian American Art Museum, P.O. Box 37012, MRC 970, Washington, D.C. 20013-7012
    Control Number: 
    IAS OK000169
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    Inventory of American SculptureOK000169Add Copy to MyList

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