36 
HOUSE & GARDEN 
To see the real beauty of this Nereid fountain, 
visualize it and its companion opposite at either 
end of a garden pool with the greenery cropping 
up around its base. A. Sterling Calder, sculptor 
“The Star,” by A. Sterling Calder, 
originally shown in mammoth size 
at the Panama-Pacific Exposition, is 
now rendered smaller in bronze 
This and the figure shown opposite were tised as 
details of the “Fountain of Energy ” at the Exposi¬ 
tion. They now can be had in bronze in sizes 
required for gardens. A. Sterling Calder, sculptor 
Placed at the end of a 
path against a tall 
hedge, this Hermes by 
Sara Morris Greene 
makes a perfect ter¬ 
minal figure 
< w f: 
w 
Surely it’s a fay! Although the 
sculptor, Edward Berge, calls it 
“Wild Flower” fountain, because 
of the flower on her head 
Another fountain from Edward 
Berge shows a lad in a charac¬ 
teristic attitude holding a frog 
that spatters him with water 
Set this in a hedge so 
that only the face peeps 
above, and you've cap¬ 
tured a laughing fay. 
Sara Morris Greene, 
sculptor 
NYMPHS AND FAYS HAVE COME BACK AGAIN 
At Least One Would Judge So From These Examples 
of Recent Garden Statuary 
Courtesy of the Gorham Company 
