Contacted in late 1935 by the Board of the
Woodrow Wilson Foundation, Manship was asked to provide an idea for a memorial to President of the United States
Woodrow Wilson as the founding father of the League of Nations. At that time the Palais des Nations was still under construction. '' in Philadelphia The first idea for Manship's contribution to the new buildings was to have him design two doors to the Assembly Hall from the Halle des Pas Perdus. Both the artist and the donor, the Woodrow Wilson Foundation, rejected this idea because doors would not be suitable for a memorial. Manship then proposed a large-scale version of the present celestial sphere, which he had developed after years of study. It is based upon several earlier versions, including the
Aero Memorial in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It differs from these in that the
Sphere is supported upon the backs of four tortoises, taken from his models for the gates to the New York Bronx Zoo, which in turn rest upon a stepped socle bearing a cast representation of the Chinese "celestial sea" (Hai Shui Jiang Ya). The tortoises may therefore be thought to represent the Chinese tortoise of immortality (Ao) - an auspicious symbol from Tang times on. Other
zodiac signs come from the world's major civilizations, both past and present. Manship described this sphere in the following words: In a letter written by Ham Armstrong to Arthus Sweetser dated 30 June 1935, we read that the building committee considered the
Celestial Sphere, which they had seen in Paris, superb, not only in originality of conception, but in delicacy of execution and in spirituality of meaning. However, two obstacles were foreseen; first, that it would cost more than the budget available and, second, that it would be difficult to obtain the approval of committee in New York and Geneva on anything so novel and non-utilitarian. Nonetheless, Manship's proposal for a monumental celestial sphere was accepted and a commission for the project was awarded to him in April 1936. ==Process==