Putnam Collection of Sculpture, Princeton University


The John B. Putnam, Jr. Memorial Collection of Sculpture is a group of outdoor sculptures distributed through the Princeton University campus in Princeton, New Jersey. The collection is made up of works from 20th and 21st century sculptors. In March 1968, President Robert Goheen announced that an anonymous donor gave a $1 million fund for the collection in honor of Princeton alumni John B. Putnam, Jr., Lieutenant U.S.A, who was killed in action during World War II. In 2025, this anonymous donor was revealed to be John's brother and fellow Princeton alum, the physicist, neuropsychologist and philosopher Peter Putnam. The works were selected based on a committee of alumni who are current or former directors of art museums, and the first 20 were purchased in 1969 and 1970.
The collection was first designed to have only 20 sculptures, but after receiving George Segal's Abraham and Issac, in 1979, the total catalogue increased to 21. The Princeton University Art Museum describes the collection as "not a static phenomenon" and that "work is underway to identify and purchase or commission works by artists."

List of sculptures

Original twenty

The following is the twenty original sculptures before later ones were added.
Name of PieceArtistExecutedInstalledMaterialLocationImageReferences
Atmosphere and Environment XLouise Nevelson1969–19701971Cor-Ten steelBetween Nassau Street and Firestone Library
Construction in the Third and Fourth DimensionAntoine Pevsner1961–19621972Cast bronzeCourtyard of Jadwin Hall
Cubi XIIIDavid Smith19631969Stainless steelBetween McCormick Hall and Whig Hall
Five Disks: One EmptyAlexander Calder1969–19701971Painted mild steelFine Hall Plaza
Floating FigureGaston Lachaise19271969Cast bronzeCompton Court, Graduate College
Head of a WomanDesigned by Pablo Picasso; executed by Carl Nesjar19711971Cast concrete, granite, and quartziteLocated on the lawn between Spelman Halls and New South Building
Marok-Marok-MiosaEduardo Paolozzi19651969Welded aluminumStairwell of the Architecture Building
Mastodon VIMichael Hall19681969Bronze and aluminumCourtyard of MacMillan Building
MosesTony Smith1967–19681969Painted mild steelLawn in front of Prospect House
Northwood IIKenneth Snelson19701973Stainless steelEast Dormitory Courtyard of the Graduate College
Oval with PointsHenry Moore1969–701971BronzeBetween Stanhope Hall and Morrison Hall
Professor Albert EinsteinSir Jacob Epstein19331970Cast bronzeFine Hall Library
Song of the VowelsJacques Lipchitz19691969Cast bronzeBetween Firestone Library and the University Chapel
Sphere VIArnaldo Pomodoro19661969Polished bronzeEntrance of Fine Hall Library
Spheric ThemeNaum Gabo1973–19741974Stainless steelCourtyard of the Engineering Quadrangle
Stone RiddleMasayuki Nagare19671972Black graniteCourtyard of Engineering Quadrangle
The BrideReg Butler1956–19611970Cast bronzeCourtyard of Rockefeller College
Two Planes Vertical Horizontal IIGeorge Rickey19701972Stainless steelBetween East Pyne Hall and the University Chapel
Upstart IIClement Meadmore19701973Cor-Ten steelEntrance to the Engineering Quadrangle
White SunIsamu Noguchi19661970Saravezza marbleLobby of Firestone Library

Official additions

Once the initial collection was finished, the university received George Segal's Abraham and Issac as a gift in 1979. The piece was commissioned for Kent State University in memorial of the 1970 Kent State shootings, but it was deemed too provocative. Segal subsequently donated it to Princeton as it was where he taught sculpture, and it was installed in 1979. The university would continue to receive additional sculptures through purchasing, continued support by the Putnam family through the Mildred Andrews Fund, or as gifts from artists; however, only Segal's work was included in the collection.
Name of PieceArtistExecutedInstalledMaterialLocationImageReferences
Abraham and Isaac: In Memory of May 4, 1970, Kent State UniversityGeorge Segal1978–19791979Cast bronzeBetween Firestone Library and the University Chapel

Unofficial additions

The Princeton University Art Museum classifies several other pieces of artwork as falling under either the collection, although no reference to them as official additions can be found. Additionally, while the art museum's map on the Putnam Collection labels Scott Burton's Public Table as part of the collection, no official publication nor the listing on the art museum's website considers it an official component.
Name of PieceArtistExecutedInstalledMaterialLocationImageReferences
Einstein's TableMaya Lin20192019Jet Mist GraniteLewis Arts Complex
The Princeton LineMaya Lin20182018Earth drawingLewis Arts Complex
URODAUrsula von Rydingsvard20152015Copper, steel, bronzeEntrance to the Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment

Putnam funding

Several works on campus, while not part of the collection, have received funding from either the Mildred Andrews Fund, like Scott Burton's Public Table, or the John B. Putnam Jr. Memorial Fund, like Doug and Mike Starn's Body Oddly Propped.

Works cited

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