Mount Rushmore salutes top carver

KEYSTONE, S.D. — The chief carver of Mount Rushmore who was responsible for refining the expressions on the faces of the monument’s four presidents was honored Saturday with a plaque that recognizes his work.

Luigi Del Bianco was an Italian immigrant and stone carver whose job included the tasks of sculpting Jefferson’s lips and Lincoln’s lifelike eyes. With the help of Del Bianco’s descendants, the National Park Service unveiled a bronze plaque Saturday in his honor. It will be on display at the mountain’s Lincoln Borglum Visitor Center.

Del Bianco began working on the sculpture in 1933 and returned to it in 1935. When he was designated chief carver, Mount Rushmore designer Gutzon Borglum wrote, “He will have complete charge of the practical ways and means of dealing with the finesse of carving and instructing the other carvers.”

Park Superintendent Cheryl Schreier said in a statement that the park is proud to recognize Del Bianco’s contributions and “his story highlights the artistry embodied in this iconic tribute to our nation’s history.”

Del Bianco talked about carving Lincoln’s eyes in an interview with the Herald Statesman in Yonkers, N.Y., in 1966, three years before he died.

“I could only see from this far what I was doing, but the eye of Lincoln had to look just right from many miles distant,” he said.

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