John Bacon (sculptor, born 1740)
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John Bacon Template:Post-nominals (24 November 1740 – 7 August 1799) was a British sculptor who worked in the late 18th century. Bacon has been reckoned the founder of the British School of sculpture. He won numerous awards, held the esteem of George III, and examples of his works adorn St Paul's Cathedral and Westminster Abbey in London, Christ Church, Oxford, Pembroke College, Oxford, Bath Abbey and Bristol Cathedral.
Biography
John Bacon was born in Southwark on 24 November 1740, the son of Thomas Bacon, a clothworker whose family had formerly held a considerable estate in Somersetshire.Template:Sfnp[1] At the age of fourteen, he was apprenticed to Mr Crispe's porcelain manufactory at Lambeth, where he was at first employed in painting small ornamental pieces of china.Template:Sfnp He was swiftly promoted to modeller and used the additional income to support his parents, then in straitened circumstances.Template:Sfnp Observing the models sent by different eminent sculptors to be fired at the adjoining pottery kiln determined the direction of his genius:Template:Sfnp he began imitating them with such proficiency that a small figure of PeaceTemplate:Sfnp sent by him to the Society for the Encouragement of the Arts won a prize.Template:Sfnp Subsequently, its highest awards were given to him nine times between 1763 and 1776. During his apprenticeship, he also improved the method of working statues in stoneware, an art which he afterwards carried to perfection.Template:Sfnp
Bacon first attempted working in marble around 1763,Template:Sfnp when he resided in George Yard on Oxford Road near Soho Square. He exhibited a medallion of George III and a group of Bacchanalians that year and a bas relief of the Good Samaritan the next.[2] During this period, he was led to improve the method of transferring the form of the model to the marble ("getting out the points") by the invention of a more perfect instrument for the purpose. This instrument possessed many advantages: it was more exact, took a correct measurement in every direction, was contained in a small compass, and could be used on either the model or the marble.Template:Sfnp
By 1769, Bacon was working for Eleanor Coade's Artificial Stone Manufactory.[2] The same year he was awarded the first gold medal for sculpture awarded by the Royal Academy for a bas-relief representing the escape of Aeneas and Anchises from Troy. In 1770, he exhibited a figure of Mars,Template:Sfnp redone in marble the next year for Charles Pelhalm,[2] which gained him the gold medal from the Society of Arts and his election as an associate of the Royal Academy (ARA).Template:Sfnp In 1771, Eleanor Coade appointed him works supervisor at her manufactory: he directed both model-making and design there until his death.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". In 1774, he was gifted with a new establishment at 17 Newman St. by a Mr Johnson who was a great admirer of his work.[2] He executed a bust of George III for Christ Church, Oxford, and retained that king's favour throughout his life.Template:Sfnp Jealous competitors criticised him for ignorance of classic Greek sculpture, a charge he refuted with a bust of Jupiter Tonans.Template:Sfnp In 1795, he completed a statue of John Howard for St Paul's Cathedral.[1] That statue was the first to be erected on the floor of the cathedral, ending a century-long prohibition on monuments in the body of that church.[3] Bacon was considered the most successful public sculptor in England at the time and the church authorities awarded him the commissions for the next two statues erected in the cathedral, that of Samuel Johnson in 1795 and of the judge Sir William Jones in 1799.[3]
On 4 August 1799 Bacon suddenly developed an "inflammation" and died a little more than two days laterTemplate:Sfnp on the 7th.[2] He was buried in Whitefield's Tabernacle in London.Template:SfnpTemplate:Refn His estate was valued at £60,000, which was divided equally among his children.[4] His widow was his second wife; he left a family composed of six sons and three daughters.Template:Sfnp His sons Thomas BaconScript error: No such module "Unsubst". and John Bacon Jr. continued his work, and one of his daughters married a Mr Thornton.[2] His memoirs were edited by Rev. Cecil and published in 1801.[5]
Legacy
Bacon has been reckoned the founder of the British School of sculpture,Template:Sfnp although he himself considered Roubiliac's statue of Eloquence for Waterloo Bridge to be such a fine piece of sculpture that he was sure he could never equal it.[2] He won numerous awards, held the esteem of George III, and continued to be praised in the 19thTemplate:Sfnp and 20th centuries.Template:Sfnp His works adorn St Paul's Cathedral and Westminster Abbey in London, Christ Church, Oxford, Pembroke College, Oxford, Bath Abbey and Bristol Cathedral.Template:Sfnp
Selected public works
1770–1779
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1780–1789
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1790–1794
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1795–1799
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Other works
- Bust of Samuel Johnson, Pembroke College, Oxford[6]
- Bust of George III in Christ Church, Oxford (1770)
- Bust of John Guise in Christ Church, Oxford (1770)
- Seated statue of William Blackstone, the Codrington Library, All Souls, Oxford (1784)[7][8]
- Pediment, Guy's Hospital, London (c. 1774) [9]
- Chimneypiece for the Duke of Richmond at Goodwood House (1777)
- Bust of Samuel Foote exhibited at Royal Academy (1778)
- Monument to Mrs Draper, Bristol Cathedral (1780)[10]
- Bust of Sir Francis Dashwood for his mausoleum at West Wycombe, Buckinghamshire (1780)
- Bust of Inigo Jones for the Carpenters Hall, London (1780)
- Monument to James Harris in Salisbury Cathedral (1780)
- Monument to John Bentley Ashley and his wife, Church of St Leogidanius, Ashby St Ledgers, Northamptionshire (1784)[11][12]
- Statue of Henry VI for Eton College sited in the Upper Chapel (1786)
- Memorial to Admiral Samuel Graves in Dunkeswell, Devon (1787)
- Monument to Sir Walden Hanmer, 1st Baronet, at Simpson, Buckinghamshire (1789)
- Monument to James Dennis, 1st Baron Tracton in Cork, Ireland (1781)
- Ornate chimney-piece at Fonthill Abbey (1790)
- Ornate chimney-piece for Warren Hastings at Daylesford House (1793)
- Monument to John Milton in St Giles Cripplegate, London (1793)
- Bust of the 3rd Duke of Portland for the Rockingham Mausoleum at Wentworth Woodhouse (1793)
- Bust of John Howard for Shrewsbury Prison (1793)
- Pediment for the offices of the East India Company (1797–99)
- Monument to Samuel Whitbread at Cardington, Bedfordshire (1799)
References
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- ↑ The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge, Volume II, (1847) Charles Knight, London, p.646
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Attribution:
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External links
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- Pages with script errors
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- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica
- 1740 births
- 1799 deaths
- 18th-century Methodists
- 18th-century English sculptors
- 18th-century English male artists
- English male sculptors
- British Methodists
- People from Southwark
- Royal Academicians
- Sculptors from London