Browse all works in the PMSAWestminster Collection Search All Workgroups  
Alfred Gilbert

1854 - 1934

Sculptor and goldsmith. Born in London, he trained at Heatherley’s, the Royal Academy Schools and the École des Beaux Arts in Paris under various teachers including Joseph Edgar Boehm, to whom he acted as an assistant, Pierre-Jules Cavelier and Emmanuel Fremiet. During a visit to Italy in 1878 the sculpture of Donatello taught him to seek a more expressive approach to the figure, and the example of Cellini encouraged an experimental approach to casting and polychromy. Gilbert shares with another sculptor, George Simonds, the credit for having introduced lost wax casting into England. The works that followed, such as the statuette of Icarus (1884, National Museum, Cardiff) and the monuments to the Earl of Shaftesbury (Eros, 1885--93, Piccadilly Circus) and Queen Victoria (1887--1912, Winchester Great Hall) are notable for their combination of naturalism and decorative fantasy. They confirmed Gilbert’s position as leader of the moveement known as ‘The New Sculpture’. However, the expense of casting the ornate Eros plunged him into debt. A prestigious commission from the royal family for the Tomb of the Duke of Clarence for the Wolsey Chapel, Windsor, commenced in 1892, dragged on, and was not completed before Gilbert departed for a self-imposed exile in Bruges in Belgium. During the years he spent in Bruges, where he settled more or less permanently in 1903, he produced relatively little, but in 1926 he returned to England and completed the unfinished Clarence Tomb, as well as creating his swan-song, the Memorial to Queen Alxandra (1932). These late works are in a distinctive, generalising style, quite different from the precision of the earlier phase, but already foreshadowed in the reredos with The Resurrection for St Albans Cathedral, on which Gilbert worked from 1890 to around 1927. Gilbert was knighted in 1932.

PMSAWestminster Home Page