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Harry Bates (sculptor) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Harry Bates (sculptor)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bates's figure of Victoria above the Victoria Law Courts, Birmingham
Bates's figure of Victoria above the Victoria Law Courts, Birmingham

Harry Bates (April 26, 1850 - January 30, 1899) English sculptor, was born in Stevenage, Hertfordshire. Bates was elected to the Royal Academy in 1892 as A.R.A. and was an active, if intermittent, member of the Art Workers Guild. He was a central figure in the British movement known as the New Sculpture. He began his career as a carver's assistant, and before beginning the regular study of plastic art he passed through a long apprenticeship in architectural decoration working for the firm of Farmer & Brindley.

In 1879 he came to London and entered the Lambeth School of Art, studying under Jules Dalou and winning a silver medal in the national competition at South Kensington. In 1881 he was admitted to the Royal Academy schools, where in 1883 he won the gold medal and the travelling scholarship with his relief of Socrates teaching the People in the Agora, which showed grace of line and harmony of composition. He then went to Paris, where he took up an independent studio (on Dalou's suggestion). He was influenced by Rodin, who advised him on occasion about his work. A head and three small bronze panels (the Aeneid,) executed by Bates in Paris, were exhibited at the Royal Academy, and selected for purchase by the Chantrey trustees; but the selection had to be cancelled because they had not been modelled in England.

His Aeneas (1885), Homer (1886), three Psyche panels and Rhodope (1887), all showed marked advance in form and dignity. Bates's primary skill lay in the composition and sculpting of relief sculpture, and it is in this medium that he achieved his most technically and aesthetically refined work. The freestanding ideal sculpture remained the most important of sculptural genres, however, and Bates gradually turned to statues such as the 1889 Hounds in Leash, which is essentially a relief composition translated to three dimensions. In this work, Bates demonstrated his ability to convey muscular intensity and movement and led to his greater success and ambition. His next major statue, the 1890 Pandora, is more truly a figure in the round, and in this work Bates experimented with polychromy and mixed materials, making it self-consciously into a paradigmatic example of his artistic priorities. The box she holds is an actual decorative casket made of ivory and gilt bronze and elaborately carved with scenes from the Pandora legend. It was exhibited in 1890 at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition and purchased within the following year for the Chantrey Bequest. The portrait-busts of Harry Bates are good pieces of realism: strong, yet delicate in technique, and excellent in character. His statues have a picturesqueness in which the refinement of the sculptor is always felt. Among the chief of these are the fanciful Maharaja of Mysore, somewhat overladen with ornament, and the colossal equestrian statue of Lord Roberts (1896) upon its important pedestal, girdled with a frieze of figures, now set up in Calcutta, and a statue of Queen Victoria for Dundee. But perhaps his masterpiece -- in which his interest in polychromy and mixed materials in a format that fused decorative art and sculpture achieved its fullest realization -- was an allegorical presentment of Love and Life, a winged male figure in bronze, with a female figure in ivory being crowned by the male.

Bates died in London on January 30, 1899, his premature death robbing English plastic art of its most promising representative at the time. He is primarily remembered as one of the most important sculptors working with the traditions of the decorative arts within the New Sculpture movement. Both through his innovative use of polychromy and his allusive subject matter, he is often understood to be one of primary representatives of international Symbolism within British sculpture.

This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Beattie, Susan. The New Sculpture. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983.
  • Getsy, David. "Privileging the Object of Sculpture: Actuality and Harry Bates's Pandora of 1890." Art History 28.1 (February 2005): 74-95.
  • Read, Benedict. Victorian Sculpture. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1982.
  • Wilton, Andrew and Robert Upstone. The Age of Rossetti, Burne-Jones, and Watts: Symbolism in Britain. Exh. cat., Tate Gallery, 1997. Paris: Flammarion, 1997.

[edit] External links


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