Eve (Davidson)
Eve is an outdoor sculpture of the biblical Eve created by Robert William Davidson in 1931. It is currently located in a fountain at Ball Nurses' Sunken Garden and Convalescent Park on the campus of Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis. The overall dimensions of this bronze sculpture are 5’ tall, 2’ long, and 1’ wide.
Description
Eve is a sculpture of a nude female figure standing on a circular bronze base which measures 17" in diameter and 2" tall. The figure is standing with her proper left foot pointed forward and her proper right foot is perpendicular to the left, pointing right. Her arms are crossed behind her head and she is looking down and to her left. Her hairstyle is such that all of her forehead and both of her ears are visible.“Robert Davidson" is visible on the proper left side of the top of the base.
Information
The statue was nicknamed "Flo" for Florence Nightingale by the Indiana University School of Nursing students. The graduating class often posed around the statue for a photo in the 1940s. In the 1950s and 1960s, it became a tradition to dress the sculpture in a nurse's pink training uniform at graduation time. Eve has also been decorated with women's undergarments, towels, and balloons over time.Acquisition
Eve was commissioned by the Indiana University Alumni Nurses Association in 1931. They wanted a statue to put in the newly created Ball Gardens just north of the nurses' Ball Residence. It was cast by the Priessmann, Breuer, and Co. Foundry in Munich, Germany.Artist
Robert William Davidson was born in Indianapolis, Indiana in 1904. He was an apprentice to his father, Oscar Davidson, also an artist. He studied sculpture at the John Herron Art Institute, the Art Institute of Chicago, the School of American Sculpture in New York City, and the Bavarian Fine Arts Academy in Munich, Germany.Davidson's wife, Maryetta, was an Indiana ceramics artist and they both graduated from the John Herron Art Institute in 1926. They moved to Saratoga Springs, New York where Davidson taught art at Skidmore College from 1934 to 1972.
Davidson is a nationally known artist whose work is in the collections of the Indianapolis Museum of Art and the Smithsonian. He has won many awards for his works including the Art Association Prize at the Herron Art Institute in 1925, the Harry Johnson Prize from Hoosier Salon in 1930, and two first prize wins at the Indiana State Fair in 1923 and 1924. He died in Schenectady, New York in 1982.