Surrounded by
the swirling auto traffic of the Parkway, three bronze Native
Americans recline among soaring jets of water. The fountain
was created as a memorial to Dr. Wilson Cary Swann, the founder
and president of the Philadelphia Fountain Society, which
provided sources of fresh drinking water throughout the city.
Its figures represent Philadelphia's three main waterways:
the Delaware and Schuylkill Rivers and Wissahickon Creek.
The fountain was designed by architect Wilson Eyre, Jr.,
who collaborated with sculptor Alexander Stirling Calder.
Calder titled his sculptural ensemble The Fountain of
Three Rivers and adapted the time-honored allegorical
motif of a reclining nude river god to the region's geography
and Native American history.
The Wissahickon is represented by a Native American girl leaning
modestly on her side against an agitated, water-spouting swan.
There is a subordinate classical reference here—the
story of Leda and the swan—but the motif also resulted
from Calder's inability to resist a pun on Dr. Swann's name.
For the Schuylkill, a larger stream, Calder created the figure
of a mature woman holding the neck of another swan. The largest
river, the Delaware, became a powerful male—evidently
a member of the Lenni Lenape or Delaware tribe—who reaches
above his head to grasp his bow as a leaping fish sprays water
over him. To shoot water toward these figures from the surrounding
basin, Calder added bronze frogs and turtles. Overall, his
energetic animals—especially the ruffled, rather distempered
swans—contrast with the calm human figures.
For the fountain's center Eyre designed a geyser that shot
50 feet into the air, and he staggered or interlaced the other
jets and sprays for maximum visual effect. Fittingly, the
fountain opened to the public on a hot July day in 1924. To
the music of the police band, ten thousand people danced the
tango in the surrounding streets.
Adapted from Public Art in Philadelphia by Penny
Balkin Bach (Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 1992).
|