- Albin Polasek (1879-1965)
Museum and sculpture garden devoted to Czech-American sculptor, Albin Polasek(1879-1965).
http://www.polasek.org/
- Antun Augustincic (1900-1979)
Biography of Croatian monumental sculptor Anton Augustincic(1900-1979) from the Augustincic Gallery.
http://www.mdc.hr/augustincic/eng/augustincic/index.html
- Aristide Maillol
An illustrated biography by Ryozo Himino of the French sculptor Maillol (1861-1941). This is an English translation by the author of a book in Japanese (Tokyo 2001).
http://www.geocities.co.jp/Milano-Cat/5888/
- Constantin Brancusi (1876-1957)
Biography of Romanian sculptor and pioneer of abstract sculpture, Constantin Brancusi, focusing on his association with Isamu Noguchi.
http://www.noguchi.org/brancusi.html
- Henghes, Heinz
The life and works of the sculptor Heinz Henghes(1906-1975)including a searchable on-line catalogue.
http://www.henghes.org
- Jean Arp (1886-1996)
Biography of the modernist sculptor Jean Arp from the Guggenheim Collection.
http://www.guggenheimcollection.org/site/artist_bio_8.html
- Marshall M. Fredericks Sculpture Museum
Houses works that span the career of Fredericks (1908-1998), known for his monumental figurative sculpture, public memorials, fountains, portraits and sculptures of animals.
http://www.svsu.edu/mfsm/
- Ossip Zadkine
Website dedicated to the French/Russian sculptor Ossip Zadkine (1890-1967), includes sculpture, works on paper, graphical works and a biography.
http://www.ossip-zadkine.com
- Stiftung Museum Schloß Moyland
This museum maintains the official archive of the sculptor Joseph Beuys.
http://www.bedburg-hau.de/moyland/
- Szukalski.com
The official website for the Polish-American sculptor/painter/writer Stanislav Szukalski. Read biographies, view sculptures and posters, and learn about available books.
http://szukalski.com/
- The Archipenko Foundation
This site both documents the life and work of the late cubist sculptor Alexander Archipenko, and provides news and information about the foundation and its resources.
http://www.archipenko.org
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