Joan of Arc (1890)
Emmanuel Frémiet (1824–1910)

  • Kelly Drive at 25th Street (relocated 1960)
  • Gilded bronze, on granite base
  • Height 15' (base 8'4")
  • Initiated by the City of Philadelphia, the Fairmount Park Art Association, and the French Centennial Committee
  • Owned by the City of Philadelphia

Amid the ruins of the Franco-Prussian War, the French government commissioned Emmanuel Frémiet in 1872 to design a monument to Joan of Arc for the Place des Pyramides in Paris. Frémiet had earned a reputation for his work incorporating human and animal motifs in the neo-realistic manner. To develop the memorial to the French heroine, Frémiet studied the design of fifteenth-century French armor and dress in order to convey the figure within her historical context.

In 1889 members of the French community in Philadelphia sought the aid of the Fairmount Park Art Association to commemorate their centennial by purchasing a statue of Joan of Arc from Frémiet. Frémiet submitted an "improved" model of his monument, though Thomas Hockley of the Art Association observed little change in it, save for the "figure, which is heightened about 4 or 5 inches." The contract with the sculptor stipulated that there would be only three editions of the statue: the one in the Place des Pyramides, one in Philadelphia, and one in Nancy. A site was selected on the eastern approach to the Girard Avenue Bridge, and on November 15, 1890, the work was unveiled in Philadelphia with extensive fanfare. In 1960 the Fairmount Park Art Association gilded the sculpture and relocated it to its present site near the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Adapted from Public Art in Philadelphia by Penny Balkin Bach (Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 1992).

Joan of Arc

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Voices heard in the program:

Suzanne Lindsay
 is an art historian who specializes in 19th century French sculpture.

Diana Regan is President of the Alliance Française de Philadelphia.

Judith Shea is an artist whose work explores issues related to monumentality. 

Segment Producer: Jonathan Mitchell

Vimeo Video

Voices heard in the program:

Suzanne Lindsay
 is an art historian who specializes in 19th century French sculpture.

Diana Regan is President of the Alliance Française de Philadelphia.

Judith Shea is an artist whose work explores issues related to monumentality. 

Segment Producer: Jonathan Mitchell