Clarence Dietsch

C. Percival Dietsch (23 May 1881 - 22 Feb 1961), full name Clarence Percival Dietsch, was an American born in New York City and raised in The Bronx, NY, as the youngest child of Morris Dietsch and New York-born Clara M. Dietsch (maiden name Henry). Morris and his twin brother Leonard were born in America to Frederick and Margaret Dietsch (maiden name unknown) after they emigrated with other children of theirs from Germany in 1836.

Dietsch was awarded the Rinehart Prize in Sculpture in 1905 from the Peabody Institute and received a scholarship to attend the American Academy in Rome. Correspondence from Dietsch is included in the papers of William Henry Rinehart. He was named a Fellow of the American Academy of Rome in 1909.

He lived in Rome from Nov. 1906–1910. He then lived in Paris for a short time and won the Prix de Rome. Continuing to travel, he sailed back to New York from Naples upon the RMS Saxonia (1899) on Oct. 6, 1912. He had a passport obtained from Berne, Switzerland on Aug. 1, 1914. He was awarded honorable mention for exhibitions at the Panama–Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco in 1915.

He registered for the draft for World War I in New York on September 12, 1918, with the registrar describing him as tall in height and slender of build, with brown eyes and dark brown hair. Shortly thereafter on Oct. 24, 1918, he embarked upon the SS Espagne (Provence, 1909) en route to France to assist Winifred Holt as an instructor for soldiers blinded in battle, with the passport clerk describing him as 6 feet tall with a small scar on the palm of his left hand.

In addition to New York City, Dietsch lived in Connecticut for a time (as his father had a home in Saybrook) and as of 1935 was living in Palm Beach, Florida, where he died in 1961.

Dietsch studied at the New York School of Art under William Merritt Chase and was also a student of Attilio Piccirilli. He was a member of the Architectural League of New York as well as such Palm Beach institutions as the Society of Four Arts and the Everglades Club.

Since 1968, The National Sculpture Society, of which he was also a member, has awarded the C. Percival Dietsch Prize for sculpture in the round in his honor at its annual exhibition. A piece by Dietsch entitled "Nude Female" was sold at Sotheby's on March 11, 2004.

C. Percival Dietsch Prize for Sculpture in the Round
Beginning in 1968, the National Sculpture Society has awarded this annually, with some exceptions. Below is the list of recipients.

1968       Vincent Glinsky

1969       Frances Lamont

1970       Clark T. Bailey

1971       Adolph Block

1972       Christopher Parks

1973       Joan Bugbee

1974       George Gach

1975       Edward Widstrom

1976       Cleo Hartwig

1977       Marilyn Newmark

1978       John Cavanaugh

1979       Kent Ullberg

1980       Albert Wein

1981       Marc Mellon

1982       Marion Roller

1983       Isidore Margulies

1984       Ruth Nickerson

1985       Harry Marinsky

1986       Jane Armstrong

1987       No prizes awarded

1988       Sidney Simon

1989       Jida Wang

1990       No prizes awarded

1991       Darlis Lamb

1992       Nathaniel Kaz

1993       Harvey Weiss

1994       Joseph Sheppard

1995       Ellen Kennelly

1996       Seiji Saito

1997       Vitaliy Patrov

1998       No prize awarded

1999       Bobbiegita Walker

2000       Chapel

2001       Tim Shinabarger

2002       Betty Branch

2003       Martin Eichinger

2004       Tim Cherry

2005       Joy Beckner

2006       Yuko Ueno

2007       Herb Mignery

2008       Jane DeDecker

2009       Victoria Parsons

2010       David Rogers

2011       Stanley Bleifeld

2012       Rosie Irwin Price

2013       Deon Duncan

2014       Walter Matia