Sir richard westmacott biography of martin

Public Statues and Sculpture Association

Sculptor. The son of Richard Westmacott I (/47–), he became one of the leading neoclassical sculptors of heroic monuments in England.

Sir richard westmacott biography of martin johnson In that year he was elected an associate and in a full member of the Royal Academy. Login to collaborate or comment , or ask our community of genealogists a question. Westmacott married Dorothy Margaret Wilkinson d. In the same year he was elected a member of the academy of Florence.

He studied under his father before going to Italy in , where he became a pupil of Canova. By he had been elected a Member of the Academy of Florence and had won the Gold Medal of the Academy of St Luke for his bas-relief, Joseph and his Brethren. He returned to England in and soon established his own studio, running a flourishing practice producing statues, busts, ideal works, chimney-pieces and funerary monuments.

He exhibited at the RA from to , was elected ARA in and RA in , and was appointed Professor of Sculpture in He won commissions for two of the national monuments in St Paul’s commemorating heroes of the Napoleonic Wars – to Lieutenant General Sir Ralph Abercromby (–09) and to Vice-Admiral Cuthbert, Lord Collingwood (–17) – and sculpted memorials for Westminster Abbey to William Pitt the Younger (–15), and to Charles James Fox (–23).

Westmacott also produced the first non-royal statues to be raised in the open-air; his London statues include those of Francis Russell, 5th Duke of Bedford (); Charles James Fox (–14); George Canning (–32); and Frederick Augustus, Duke of York and Albany (–34). For Birmingham and for Liverpool he made memorials to Lord Nelson, that in Liverpool an elaborate allegorical composition, created in collaboration with Matthew Cotes Wyatt.

Sir richard westmacott biography of martin lawrence Have you taken a test? Second Edition. In the catalogues of the academy exhibitions his address is given as 24 Mount Street till , when he had removed to 14 South Audley Street, where he resided during the remainder of his life. On 20 Feb.

The success of his practice was exceeded only by that of Chantrey. Like Chantrey he owned his own foundry, thus managing to secure many prestigious public commissions, including the colossal bronze Achilles (–22), erected in Hyde Park as a monument to the Duke of Wellington. Westmacott was knighted in His last major work was the multi-figure group, entitled the Progress of Civilisation, in the pediment of the British Museum (–51).

Bibliography (updated ): M.

Busco, Sir Richard Westmacott. Sculptor, Cambridge, ; T. Cavanagh, Public Sculpture of Kensington and Chelsea with Westminster South-West, Watford, , pp.

Sir richard westmacott biography of martin luther Profile last modified 19 Jan Created 29 Jun His father worked as a chimney piece sculptor and maker of church monuments. Within a year of his arrival in Rome he won first prize for sculpture offered by the Florentine Academy of Arts, and the next year he gained the papal gold medal awarded by the Academy of St Luke with his bas-relief of Joseph and his brothers. If so, login to add it.

xxviii–xxix, xxxii, –94; T. Cavanagh, Public Sculpture of Liverpool, Liverpool, , pp. 51–55, –05; E. Morris and E. Roberts, Public Sculpture of Cheshire and Merseyside, Liverpool, , p. ; G.T. Noszlopy, Public Sculpture of Birmingham (ed. J. Beach), Liverpool, , pp. –17; G.T. Noszlopy and F. Waterhouse, Public Sculpture of Staffordshire and the Black Country, Liverpool, , p.

Sir richard westmacott biography of martin He was also an active and respected member or the British artistic establishment. He received the honorary degree of D. By John Flaxman, Esq. Login to post a comment.

(sculptor here erroneously referred to as &#;Sir Richard Westmacott the Elder&#;); I. Roscoe et al, A Biographical Dictionary of Sculptors in Britain –, New Haven and London, ; J. Seddon et al, Public Sculpture of Sussex, Liverpool, , pp. 15, –56, , –69; P. Ward-Jackson, Public Sculpture of Historic Westminster.

Volume 1, Liverpool, , pp. 60, 61, 81–84, –66, –92, –

Philip Ward-Jackson