Willard Dryden Paddock

Willard Dryden Paddock (October 23, 1873 – November 25, 1956), was an American painter and sculptor.

Born in Brooklyn, New York, he studied at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn under the tutelage of sculptor Herbert Adams, before traveling to Paris to study at the Académie Colarossi under the painters Gustave-Claude-Etienne Courtois and Louis Auguste Girardot.

Paddock is perhaps better known for his sculptural work, which garnered national attention, and included memorial structures, fountains, busts, figures, and sundials.

[1] Sundial, Boy With Spider, bronze sundial, 1916–1918; Owner: Indianapolis Museum of Art Certain other sculptures by Paddock were surveyed and documented by the "Save Outdoor Sculpture!"

This article about a painter from the United States born in the 1870s is a stub.

Noah Webster (1914), Amherst, Massachusetts
War Memorial (1931), Stratford, Connecticut