From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henry Weekes, RA (14 January 1807 – 1877) was an English sculptor, best known for his portraiture. He was among the
most successful British sculptors of the mid-Victorian
period.
Born in Canterbury,
he spent most of his career in London, where he worked for William Behnes
and Sir Francis Chantrey, before
taking over the latter's studio on his death in 1841. His works
include the first bust of Queen Victoria after her
accession, a monument to Percy Bysshe Shelley and Mary Shelley, statues
for the Martyrs' Memorial in Oxford, and the
Manufactures group of the Albert Memorial in London.
He was also the professor of sculpture of the Royal Academy
(1868–76). His lectures, published posthumously, were described by
art historian Benedict Read as "the most consistent and
intelligent exposition of sculptural thinking" of his era.[1]
Personal
life
Weekes was born at Canterbury, Kent, to Capon Weekes, a banker's clerk, and his
wife, Mary Pearson. He attended the King's School of his home
town.[2]
His younger brother was the artist, William Weekes
(1856–1909).[3]
Of his own five children, Henry Weekes (fl. 1850–1884) and Herbert William Weekes (fl.
1864–1904) were both genre painters known for their animal
studies,[4][5][6] and
Frederick Weekes (1833–1920) was an artist and expert on medieval
costume and design.[7] A
further son was John Ernest Weekes.[2]
Retiring in May 1877, Weekes died of heart disease soon
afterwards.[2][8]
His date and place of death are variously given as 28 May 1877 in
Pimlico, London[2]
and 28 June 1877 in Ramsgate, Kent.[1]
Career
Weekes was apprenticed to William Behnes in London (1822–7), entering the Royal Academy
Schools in 1823, where he won a silver medal for sculpture in
1826. He became an assistant to the well-known portrait sculptor,
Sir Francis Chantrey, in 1827,
remaining with him until Chantrey's death in 1841.[1][2]
His early commissions were from his home town of Canterbury, and included
busts of Stephen Lushington, MP for
Canterbury and governor of
Madras, and his father-in-law George Harris, Baron Harris
of Seringapatam and Mysore for the Canterbury Philosophical
Society. This led to a series of Indian commissions including works
for St George's Cathedral, Madras.[2] In
1838, he was the first sculptor to execute a bust of Queen Victoria, being
commissioned by the queen as a gift for her mother, Princess Victoria
of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld.[2][9]
His sensitive depiction of the young queen established a reputation
for portraiture.[2]
On Chantrey's death, Weekes took over his studio and, at
Chantrey's request, completed his unfinished works, most notably an
equestrian bronze of the Duke of
Wellington for the Royal
Exchange.[1][2][10]
His subsequent career flourished; one of the most successful
British sculptors of the mid-Victorian period, he left nearly
£30,000 at his death.[1][2]
Despite the considerable success he enjoyed during his lifetime,
his reputation was not long-lasting, and the rise of the New Sculpture
shortly after his death led to his works being neglected.[1]
An associate of the Royal Academy from 1851, he was elected a
Royal Academician in 1863.[2][8]
In 1851, he won a gold medal from the
Royal Society of Arts for an essay on the Great
Exhibition.[2] He
was the academy's professor of sculpture from 1868 until 1876.[8]
Key works
and style
Weekes exhibited 124 works at the Royal Academy between 1828 and his death,
with over a hundred being portraits. He wrote in 1852 that the
objective of portraiture was "to give the eye permanently that
which no history or biography will be able hereafter thoroughly to
convey to the imagination."[2][11]
His best works achieve this aim, combining emotional impact with
accurate portraiture and exemplary technique.[1][2] A
contemporary reviewer praised his work for its "truth of character
and delicacy of expression."[12]
Apart from the 1838 bust of Queen Victoria, his first major
works were statues of Thomas Cranmer, Hugh Latimer and Nicholas Ridley for George
Gilbert Scott's Martyrs' Memorial in Oxford, which he completed under
Chantrey's direction in
1841.[2][13]
Another early commission of an historical figure was a seated
statue of Francis
Bacon, which he executed for Trinity College, Cambridge in 1845.[2]
Originally strongly influenced by Chantrey, Weekes developed a
more individual style towards the end of the 1840s, introducing
naturalistic detailing into his neo-classical works.[2]
Mark Stocker, an expert on Victorian sculpture, considers that "His
sculpture and writings, more than any other contemporary
sculptor's, embodied current beliefs in fusing classicism and
realism."[1]
Weekes was, however, against what he considered excessive realism,
as exemplified by his contemporary Carlo Marochetti; he always opposed
the colouring of sculpture, instead applying, for example, deep
undercutting.[1]
Two funerary monuments exemplify Weekes' style
from this period, and are considered his finest works. That of 1849
to Samuel
Whitbread and Lady Elizabeth Whitbread, in Cardington, Bedfordshire, is
executed in high relief. It depicts the couple kneeling
in a pose that echoes Chantrey's monument of 1835 to Reginald Heber in
St
Paul's Cathedral, except that Lady Elizabeth leans against her
husband's shoulder with evident affection.[1][2]
His marble monument to Percy Bysshe Shelley and Mary Wollstonecraft
Shelley (1853/4) was commissioned by their son, Sir Percy
Shelley, and his wife after the death of Mary Shelley. Unlike the
later Shelley
memorial by Onslow Ford, Weekes has chosen to
include the figure of Mary Shelley. The pose echoes Michelangelo's Pietà, with the poet cradled
by an idealised figure of his mourning wife. Weekes, however,
depicts not a heroic nude in the neo-classical tradition but a
bloodless corpse, and realistic details, including seaweed wrapped
around his arm, recall the particulars of Shelley's death by
drowning in Italy.[1][2][14]
The monument was the subject of contemporary critical acclaim,[2]
but St Peter's Church,
Bournemouth, where Mary Shelley was buried, refused to take the
work, and it was installed instead in Christchurch Priory.[15]
Unlike Chantrey, Weekes executed a few ideal figures from 1850
onwards. The Suppliant (1850), his earliest work in this
genre, secured his election as an associate of the Royal Academy.
Resting after a Run, also known as Girl with the
Hoop (1850/1), depicts the daughter of Frederick J. Reed in an
idealised picture of childhood.[2]
Like the Shelley monument, his popular work The Young
Naturalist (1854), showing a young girl examining nature at
the seaside, juxtaposes realism with idealism, with a child in an
1850s bathing suit clutching a starfish in a pose reminiscent of
the crouching
Venus and Venus Pudica.[1][16]
Other works in this genre include Sardanapalus (1861),
from Lord Byron's verse
tragedy on the Assyrian king,[17]
and Luna (1866), depicting a girl with the moon as a
shield.[18]
He also continued his early success with realistic historical
figures, at that time very fashionable, with a series of works
including John Hunter, after a portrait by
Sir Joshua Reynolds, for the Royal College of
Surgeons in London (1864);[2][19]
William
Harvey, with a heart resting in his right hand, for the University
Museum of Natural History in Oxford (1864);[20]
Charles II, accompanied by a
spaniel, for the Palace of Westminster (1869; now
in the Old
Bailey);[2]
and Sir Joshua
Reynolds for a garden designed by James Knowles in London's Leicester
Square (1874).[21]
His most ambitious later work is the allegorical work Manufactures
(1864–70), one of four marble groups depicting the industrial arts,
for the London Albert Memorial by George Gilbert
Scott. Although Weekes was not on Queen Victoria's original list of
sculptors, being selected to work on the project only after John
Gibson declined to participate, his group occupies the
preferable south side of the finished monument. A central female
figure holds an hourglass, symbolising the critical nature of
time to industry, while an ironworker stands at his anvil and a
potter and weaver offer their wares.[2][22]
Lectures
and writings
In his role as professor of sculpture to the Academy, Weekes
delivered a series of eighteen lectures which were published
posthumously as Lectures on Art, with a biographical
introduction by his son, John Ernest Weekes.[1][2]
Art historian Benedict Read described the
Lectures as "the most consistent and intelligent
exposition of sculptural thinking in the Victorian era".[1]
In addition to conventional topics such as composition, beauty,
style, taste, idealism versus realism, portraiture and
Greek sculpture, Weekes devoted three lectures of the series to Sir Joshua
Reynolds, and one to John Gibson and his mentors, William Behnes
and Sir Francis Chantrey.[2][9][23]
He advised students to become "thinking men", but also advocated a
practical approach to learning, "with the modelling tool in hand,
and the clay to operate upon".[1][9]
His gold-medal-winning essay was also published in 1852.[2]
Described in a contemporary review as "thoroughly practical",[11]
it includes an exposition of the technical aspects of casting in
bronze and carving in marble.[2]
Works
Sculptures
Sculptures by Weekes include:
- Sundial base, Dane John Garden, Canterbury, Kent (1829)[2]
- Bust of George Harris, Baron Harris
of Seringapatam and Mysore (1834)[2]
- Bust of Stephen Rumbold Lushington
(1834)[2]
- Statue of James Lushington, St George's Cathedral, Madras (1836)[2]
- Monument to George Brodrick, 4th Viscount Midleton, with figure
and Perpendicular tracery, Church of St Nicholas, Peper Harow, Surrey (1836)[24]
- Bust of Queen Victoria
(1838)[2][9]
- Statues in Caen
stone of Thomas Cranmer, Hugh Latimer and Nicholas Ridley for the Martyrs'
Memorial, Oxford
(1841)[2][13]
- Equestrian bronze of the Duke of
Wellington, Royal
Exchange, London;
completed work by Francis Chantrey (1841–4)[2][9]
- Bust of John
Wordsworth, son of Christopher Wordsworth and
great-nephew of William Wordsworth, Trinity College Chapel, Cambridge (c. 1841)[25]
- Bust of Zachary Macaulay with medallion
depicting the kneeling figure of a slave, Westminster
Abbey, London (1842)[26]
- Bronze of Lord Auckland, originally in Calcutta, now in Municipal
Building, Auckland, New
Zealand (1844)[12][27]
- Statue of Richard
Wellesley, 1st Marquess Wellesley, Indian Office,
London (1845)[28]
- Seated Francis
Bacon, Trinity College, Cambridge (1845)[2]
- Monument to John
Dent, St George's Cathedral, Madras (c. 1845)[2]
- Memorial tablet with figure to Elizabeth Burnell, in marble and
slate, Church of St Thomas à Becket, Sheffield, South Yorkshire (1846)[29]
- Marble bust of an elderly lady, possibly the Countess of
Dunmore (1848)[30]
- Monument to Samuel Whitbread and Lady Elizabeth
Whitbread, Cardington, Bedfordshire
(1849)[2][31]
- Bust of Sir George
Gipps, Governor
of New South Wales, in Roman garb, Canterbury Cathedral (c. 1849)[18]
- The Suppliant (1850)[2]
- Charity (1850)[12]
- Memorial tablet to Prince Adolphus, Duke of
Cambridge with bust and portraits of two orphans, Beddington
Place, Wallington, Greater London
(1850)[32]
- Resting after a Run, also known as Girl with the
Hoop, marble figure (1850/1)[2][33]
- Monument to Robert Elwes, Church of St Andrew, Great Billing, Northamptonshire (1852)[34]
- Monument to Percy Bysshe Shelley and Mary Wollstonecraft
Shelley, Christchurch Priory, Dorset (1853/4)[2][35]
- The Young Naturalist, in various versions, one at the
Royal Society,
Dublin, Ireland (1854)[16][36]
- Master Beaufoy, marble (1855)[37]
- Marble bust of a gentleman (1855)[38]
- Marble bust of a young man (1856)[39]
- Bust of William Buckland, Westminster Abbey,
London (c. 1856)[40]
|
- The Mother's Kiss, 1858[12]
- Marble monument to Captain Thomas Pedder, who died at the Relief of
Lucknow, Church of St Andrew, Preston, Lancashire (c. 1858)[41]
- Bust of Mary
Seacole, Getty
Center, Los
Angeles, USA (1859)[42]
- Marble bust of William Buckland, Natural History Museum, London
(1860)[43]
- Sardanapalus, Egyptian Hall, Mansion
House, London (1861)[2][17][44]
- Bust of Dr Goodall, Eton
(before 1862)[12]
- Bust of Sir Robert
Peel (before 1862)[12]
- Bust of Sir Thomas Buxton, 1st
Baronet (before 1862)[12]
- Marble bust of Joseph Henry Green, President of the Royal College of
Surgeons (1863)[2][45]
- Statue of John Hunter, Royal College of
Surgeons, London (1864)[2][19]
- Statue in Caen
stone of William Harvey, University
Museum of Natural History, Oxford (1864)[2][20][46]
- Monument to William Whitmore, St Andrew's Church, Quatt, Shropshire (1864)[47]
- Manufactures, Albert Memorial, London (1864–70)[2][22]
- Stone sculpture of William Mulready, Tate (1866)[48]
- Luna, Royal Museum, Canterbury, Kent (1866)[49]
- Busts of Sir
Randolph Crewe and Nathaniel Crew, 3rd Baron
Crew, Crewe Hall,
Cheshire (c. 1866–70)[50]
- Stone sculpture of Thomas Stothard, Tate (1868)[48]
- Charles II, Central Criminal
Court, Old Bailey,
London (1869)[2]
- Marble bust of George Jones, RA, Royal Academy
(1870)[51]
- Marble bust of Sir Roderick Impey Murchison, Royal Society of Edinburgh
(1871)[52]
- Marble bust of Doctor Mead, St Thomas' Hospital, London
(1871)[53]
- Marble bust of John Flint South, St Thomas' Hospital, London
(1872)[54]
- Limestone bust of Sir Joshua Reynolds, Leicester
Square, London (1874)[21][55][56]
- Marble bust of Edmund Hammond, Foreign Office, London
(1874)[57][58]
- Statues of John
Flaxman and Raphael, Burlington
House, London (1874)[59]
- Statues of Thomas Linacre, William Harvey and Thomas
Sydenham, Royal College of
Physicians, London (1876)[60]
- Stone sculpture of John Flaxman, Tate (date unknown)[48]
- Marble bust of William Cheselden, St Thomas'
Hospital, London (date unknown)[61]
- Bust of John
Locke, Northwestern University, Evanston,
USA (date unknown)[62]
|
Writings
- The Prize Treatise on the Fine Arts Section of the Great
Exhibition of 1851 (1852)[2]
- Lectures on Art (1880)[2][9][23]
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