Archimedes Giacomantonio

Archimedes Aristedes Michael Giacomantonio (January 17, 1906 โ€“ October 19, 1988) was an American sculptor. He was also known as Jock Manton, a corruption of his surname.[1] During his career he was commissioned to create works in Hudson County, New Jersey, Washington, D.C., and in other public and private spaces across the United States. He was known for his busts of noted figures and small-scale figures as well as medallions for the Franklin Mint.

Biography

Giacomantonio was born in Downtown Jersey City to Italian immigrant parents. He attended Dickinson High School. He took his initial art training at the Leonardo da Vinci Art School in New York and studied for five years in Italy at the Royal Academy of Art in Rome and apprenticed with Onorio Ruotolo and Vincenzo Gemito.[2][3]

During World War II, he was sergeant technician in the United States Army Medical Corps. His duties included molding artificial limbs, ears, and other parts of the human body for the Medical Corps.[4]

He moved to Sparta, New Jersey in 1936,[5] where he lived until his death. He is interred in Holy Cross Cemetery in North Arlington, New Jersey.[6]

Works

Jersey City Police Memorial

References

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