Louis Paul Jonas


Louis Paul Jonas was an American sculptor of wildlife, taxidermist, and natural history exhibit designer.
Born in Budapest, Hungary, Jonas moved to the United States at the age of 12 and went to work at his brothers' taxidermy studio, Jonas Brothers, in Denver, Co. Later he moved to New York City, where he studied under Carl Akeley, a noted field naturalist, taxidermist, and animal sculptor. There, they created the African elephant group in the center of Akeley Hall at the American Museum of Natural History, in New York.
Jonas opened Louis Paul Jonas Studios, Inc in Mahopac, NY, and eventually moved to Hudson, NY. The studio was known for its miniature and full size animal sculptures, taxidermy, and natural history exhibits featured in over 50 museums worldwide.
The company created the first full sized dinosaur sculptures for the 1964 New York World's Fair in the "Dinoland" area, which was sponsored by the Sinclair Oil Corporation. Jonas consulted with noted paleontologists Barnum Brown, Edwin H. Colbert and John Ostrom in order to create sculptures that were as accurate as possible according to the science of the day, including postures with dragging tails. After the Fair closed, the dinosaur models toured the country on special flatbed trailers as part of a company advertising campaign. Sinclair Oil donated the original statues to various museums and parks after the Smithsonian Institution declined to take them.

Sculptures on display

In 1932, Louis Paul Jonas and his brothers created the taxidermy model of the famous Australian race horse Phar Lap that is now on display at the Melbourne Museum.
The Jonas Studios also created the black rhinoceros model in 1966 that is on display at the Putnam Museum and Science Center in Davenport, Iowa.
In 1983, the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C. hosted an exhibition of 75 wildlife miniatures created by Jonas.

Dinosaurs

Life-sized fiberglass models of dinosaurs created by Jonas Studios for the Sinclair Oil stand at the 1964 New York World's Fair currently are on display at:
The original turkey-size Ornitholestes model created by Jonas Studios was broken off and stolen from the Dinoland exhibit at the World's Fair overnight on June 29, 1965, along with a model of Archaeopteryx. According to the New York Times, police later recovered both models and charged a 19-year-old with larceny. However, many current sources state that the stolen Ornitholestes model was never recovered.
The success of the original World's Fair dinosaur models, which were donated to different museums and parks by the Sinclair Oil Corporation after the Smithsonian Institution declined to take them, led other museums and institutions to purchase their own copies made from the original Jonas Studios molds.
In 1967, the Sinclair Oil Corporation gave a second Jonas model of a Triceratops to the Smithsonian Institution. The model, which appeared in The Enormous Egg television movie in 1968 as Uncle Beazley, is now on display at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C. From the 1970s to 1994, the statue was located on the National Mall in front of the National Museum of Natural History. The Enormous Egg television movie also featured five smaller Triceratops models that Louis Paul Jonas had created to represent the dinosaur during its youth. In 1979, George Heinemann, the producer of the television program, donated the models to Pittsfield's Berkshire Museum, a Smithsonian Affiliate organization in Western Massachusetts. In 2014, the five models, the largest of which also bears the name of Uncle Beazley, were moved to Pittsfield's public library, the Berkshire Athenaeum, and in 2018 the Uncle Beazley was moved to the EcoTarium in Worcester to be displayed alongside "Siegfried" the Stegosaurus, also created by Jonas Studios.
Jonas Stegosaurus model copies on public display outside museums include "Steggie II" at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, "Wally" at the Berkshire Museum in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, "Siegfried" or "Siggy" at the EcoTarium in Worcester, Massachusetts, "Steggy" at the Fernbank Museum of Natural History in Atlanta, Georgia, and "Steggy" at the Cranbrook Institute of Science in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. The Stegosaurus model at the Milwaukee Public Museum in Wisconsin is located inside as part of the Third Planet exhibit of prehistoric life that opened in 1983. Some of the models have been given different paint jobs over the years, and in some cases refurbished, repaired, and updated by the Jonas Studios.