Who he was
Chester Beach was born in San Francisco on May 23, 1881, and learned his trade close to the metal. Before he was a sculptor, he was a jewelry designer — first training at the California School of Mechanical Arts, then working for the San Francisco firm Shreve & Company around the turn of the century. Small, precise, three-dimensional work was in his hands from the start.
In 1903 he moved to New York, and the next year he sailed for Paris. There he studied at the Académie Julian under the sculptor Raoul Verlet and at the École des Beaux-Arts — the standard pilgrimage for an ambitious American artist of his generation. He came home in 1907 and opened a Manhattan studio he would keep for the next forty-five years.
The recognition followed. Beach was elected to the National Academy of Design — by one account the youngest member at the time — and he served as president of the National Sculpture Society in 1926 and 1927. In 1946 the American Numismatic Society awarded him its J. Sanford Saltus Medal, the field's highest honor for medallic art. He died in Brewster, New York, on August 6, 1956.
