Famous Sculptors
Sculptors shape ideas in stone, metal, wood, and new media, leaving traces across temples, plazas, galleries, and everyday life. Among them are notable figures whose creative journeys intersect many callings: artists devoted to form, writers who reflect on making, philosophers probing meaning, and leaders who harness public monuments to inspire communities. Across eras and cultures, they innovate techniques, revive traditions, and translate stories into enduring form. Whether monumental or intimate, their works invite touch, thought, and wonder, and reveal how sculpture animates human histories.
| Author | Nationality | Year | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alberto Giacometti | Swiss | 1901 - 1966 | |
| Alexander Calder | American | 1898 - 1976 | |
| Anthony Caro | English | 1924 - 2013 | |
| Auguste Rodin | French | 1840 - 1917 | |
| Bruce Conner | American | 1933 - 2008 | |
| Bruce Nauman | American | 1941 | |
| Camille Claudel | French | 1864 - 1943 | |
| Claes Oldenburg | Swedish | 1929 | |
| Constantin Brancusi | Romanian | 1876 - 1957 | |
| Dan Flavin | American | 1933 - 1996 | |
| Eduardo Chillida | Spanish | 1924 - 2002 | |
| Felix de Weldon | American | 1907 - 2003 | |
| Henry Moore | English | 1898 - 1986 | |
| Isamu Noguchi | American | 1904 - 1988 | |
| Jacques Lipchitz | Polish | 1891 - 1973 | |
| James Sanborn | American | ||
| Jean Arp | German | 1886 - 1966 | |
| Jean Tinguely | Swiss | 1925 - 1991 | |
| John Fischer | American | ||
| Louise Berliawsky Nevelson | American | 1899 - 1988 | |
| Marino Marini | Italian | 1901 - 1980 | |
| Martin Puryear | American | 1941 | |
| Red Grooms | American | 1937 | |
| Richard MacDonald | American | ||
| Richard Serra | American | 1939 | |
| Robert Laurent | American | ||