Posted on

Sculpture discovered in woods in Ridgewood is about to be restored

120714-l-sculpture70p1-300x187

MAY 4, 2015    LAST UPDATED: MONDAY, MAY 4, 2015, 1:21 AM

BY CHRIS HARRIS
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

RIDGEWOOD — Restoration work will soon begin on an 80-year-old Gaetano Federici sculpture that was discovered last year in the woods behind the village’s water treatment plant.

It will take about three weeks for a restorer to clean and refurbish the renowned Paterson artist’s cast stone statue, said Ridgewood Councilwoman Susan Knudsen.

“It is a rather stately piece that everyone can appreciate,” Knudsen said.

The sculpture depicts an earlier version of New Jersey’s state seal. The 1927 piece features two female figures — Liberty and Ceres — with three plows, representing agriculture’s importance to the state. As with the state seal, the head of a horse — New Jersey’s official animal — tops the statue.

Until last week, the statue had remained in the same spot it occupied for the four decades before it was unearthed: atop two old tires, covered with a tarp.

But last Friday, Ridgewood workers gingerly moved the sculpture onto a wooden pallet. A forklift was then brought in to transport it to a safer location, Knudsen said.

The statue now sits on a table specifically constructed for it, awaiting fine-art restorer and Ridgewood resident Ornella Muth’s magic touch, Knudsen said.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/education/restoration-to-begin-on-long-lost-sculpture-1.1324849

Posted on

Ridgewood to give new life to sculpture by Paterson artist Gaetano Federici

120714-l-sculpture70p

Ridgewood to give new life to sculpture by Paterson artist Gaetano Federici

DECEMBER 22, 2014    LAST UPDATED: MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2014, 9:08 AM
BY LAURA HERZOG
STAFF WRITER |
THE RIDGEWOOD NEWS

Seemingly recent attempts to preserve a priceless village carving of the state seal, by famed Paterson artist Gaetano Federici, actually began decades ago.

But let’s start more recently, when the beautiful sculpture, featuring the two serene ladies of “Liberty” and “Prosperity,” was thought to be forgotten.

More than five years ago, while doing work for the tree department in a wooded area on Prospect Street, formerly used as a police shooting range, village employee Pete Ward saw something made of concrete peaking from beneath the brush.

Ward, who grew up in Ridgewood, recognized the sculpture.

He remembered it had been attached to an entrance of the old municipal building on Hudson Street.

The building, which most recently served as the old firehouse, was demolished in 1993 to make way for parking, despite the contestations of resident Art Wrubel and the Historic Preservation Commission – “a real shame,” noted Ward, who collects historic architectural pieces for restoration.

“I knew it was from that building because of books that I have and photos,” Ward said.

https://www.northjersey.com/community-news/ridgewood-will-give-new-life-to-federici-sculpture-1.1174000

Posted on

Mysterious Statue Hidden for Decades Set to make Reappearance at Village Hall

Costelllo400

Who’s bust is that?

Mysterious Statue Hidden for Decades Set to make Reappearance at Village Hall
December 4,2014
the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Authorize Expenditure of Funds for and Placement of Federrici
Sculpture at  Village Hall ( $2,500.) plus.

Where did this come from?Where is this statue now? How long have we owned it?  What is the statue of? Where is it going to place in or on Village Hall grounds? Is Village Hall going to be the surrogate Arts Center that our Mayor
promised during his re election?

After several decades of being hidden from public view a Village owned Federrici Sculpture will be placed on front lawn near flag pole at Village Hall (secured in place there).

Sources tell the Ridgewood blog that the statue has been in storage at a location that is being kept under wraps to prevent item from being vandalized or stolen (reportedly it’s worth a fortune).

Sources also tell us that the Village has owned it for over 50 years and it was formerly installed at the old fire house on Hudson Street.  The statue was taken down when building was demolished in 1990’s and placed in storage.

We know a photo was held up at the Council meeting last night, but I was too far away to see it.

We also know that the Ridgewood News attempted to get a photo today but was unable to.

The council does not want anyone to know where it is because they think it will be vandalized or stolen to which  a tax payer has suggested it be moved inside somewhere, but so far the council has not heeded this lowly taxpayer.

Sources say the Library’s Ridgewood History room has a photo when it was mounted on the old Village Hall.

Federici, Gaetano

b. 1880
d. 1964

By Joseph D. McCaffrey

Star-Ledger Staff

March 14, 1997

In front of St. John’s Cathedral in Paterson stands a statue of Irish priest Dean William McNulty, comforting a barefoot orphan boy. The statue, completed in 1923, has come to symbolize nationally the pastoral role of priests in a working-class city like Paterson. It is also one of the best-known works of sculptor Gaetano Federici, whose outdoor sculptures abound in Paterson and other parts of North Jersey.

Federici died in 1964, at the age of 84, leaving a legacy of hundreds of public works.

Shortly after Federici died, his studio collection was sold by his family to an old friend and admirer, Clifton contractor John Saveriana. The studio collection includes models for some of Federici’s more famous statues, including Father McNulty, and for a World War I memorial in Paterson.

In 1978 Saveriana sold the items to Joseph Randazzo, a collector. Four years ago, Randazzo decided to sell all 215 pieces, and got in touch with an art auctioneer. A group of Paterson residents formed the Federici Collection Inc. in the hope of acquiring the collection. The Martini Foundation bought it on their behalf.

Federici, Paterson’s unofficial “sculptor laureate,” was one of New Jersey’s few native sculptors, according to one expert, and an extraordinarily prolific one. The Encyclopedia of American Biography in 1966 called Federici “an outstanding American sculptor . . . who won international acclaim for his work.”

According to Meredith Bzdak, New Jersey coordinator for a project called Save Outdoor Sculpture, Federici’s Collection is well worth saving. His works, she said, “are of great significance to us as a state in understanding our historical past.”

At least 40 of Federici’s major statues are within two miles of Paterson’s City Hall. Federici’s sculptures also are found in Cuba, New York, Hollywood, and in churches and cemeteries throughout the region. Bzdak said the studio collection represents the majority of Federici’s life work. “I feel the studio collection should remain intact – because it is one of the only collections of its kind. And because of the significance of Federici to us,” she said.

Fiorina said she remembered her grandfather as always at work in his studio. She has family snapshots of him, a short, sprightly man with a carefully trimmed goatee and a beret. The pictures are of a grandfatherly figure smiling warmly into the camera while working on huge figures in his studio.

Gaetano Federici was born in Castelgrande, Italy, in 1880. In 1887, he and his mother left their mountainous village to join his father, Antonio, in Paterson. Antonio Federici was a stone mason who had become a successful contractor in the booming industrial city.

Federici showed artistic promise as a Paterson High School student. By that time, his father could afford to allow the boy to get artistic training. As a young man Federici was apprenticed to some of the leading sculptors of his time. He studied in New York with the Art Students League.

According to Bzdak, Federici was trained in the academic tradition and would never stray far from it. Experts called him a conservative sculptor: While European sculptors were doing avant-garde work, Federici stayed with classical themes. He was painstaking in his attention to detail, yet always attempted to capture the personality of the subject.

https://www.patersonhistory.com/people/federici1.html

https://lambertcastle.org/federici.html