Sir Richard Westmacott, RA

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Sir Richard Westmacott

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Westminster, London, Middlesex, England (United Kingdom)
Death: September 01, 1856 (81)
14 South Audley Street, Mayfair, London, Middlesex, England (United Kingdom)
Place of Burial: Oxfordshire, England
Immediate Family:

Son of Richard Westmacott and Sarah Westmacott
Husband of Dorothy Margaret Westmacott
Father of Richard Westmacott RA; Dorothy Westmacott; Eliza Westmacott; Captain Robert Marsh Westmacott; Rev. Horatio Westmacott and 6 others
Brother of Thomas Westmacott and George Westmacott

Occupation: Royal Academy;
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Sir Richard Westmacott, RA

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Westmacott
http://www.speel.me.uk/sculptlondon/bmpediment.htm

Sir Richard Westmacott RA (15 July 1775 – 1 September 1856) was a British sculptor.

Westmacott lived and died at 14 South Audley Street, Mayfair, London where he is commemorated by a blue plaque. Two of his brothers, George, who was active between 1799 and 1827, and Henry, (1784–1861) were also sculptors. In 1798 Westmacott married Dorothy Margaret Wilkinson. Their son, also called Richard Westmacott, followed closely in his footsteps also becoming a notable sculptor, a Royal Academician and professor of sculpture at the academy.

Westmacott is buried in a tomb at St Mary's Church at Chastleton, Oxfordshire, where his third son Horatio was rector in 1878.

Obituary / The Spectator / Sep 6 1856

Sir Richard Westmacott died at his residence in South Audley Street on Monday. He was in his eighty-second year and had been ill for three weeks.

He was born in 1775 in London where his father was recognised as a sculptor of some eminence. The young Westmacott showed early a taste for sculpture; he went to Rome in 1793 and studied for some time under Canova. In 1794 he won a prize offered by the Academy of Florence and in 1795, a medal offered by the Pope. Shortly after his return from Italy he was elected as an Associate by the Royal Academy and an Academician in 1816. In 1827 he succeeded Flaxman as Professor of Sculpture, and died holding that post.


Wikipedia Biographical Summary

Sir Richard Westmacott, RA (15 July 1775 – 1 September 1856) was a British sculptor.

Life and career

Westmacott studied with his father, also named Richard Westmacott, at his studio in Mount Street, Grosvenor Square in London before going to Rome in 1793 to study under Antonio Canova. On returning to England in 1797, he set up a studio, where John Edward Carew and Musgrave Watson gained experience.

Westmacott had his own foundry at Pimlico, in London, where he cast both his own works, and those of other sculptors, including John Flaxman's statue of Sir John Moore (1810–18) for Glasgow. Late in life he was asked by the Office of Works for advice on the casting of the reliefs for Nelson’s Column. He also had an arrangement with the Trustees of the British Museum, which allowed him to make moulds and supply plaster casts of classical sculpture in the museum's collection to country house owners, academies and other institutions.

He exhibited at the Royal Academy between 1797 and 1839. His name is given in the catalogues as "R. Westmacott, Junr." until 1807, when the "Junr." was dropped. He was elected an associate of the Royal Academy in 1805, and a full academician in 1811; his diploma work, a marble relief of Jupiter and Ganymede, is still in the academy's collection. He was professor of sculpture at the academy from 1827 until his death. He received his knighthood on 19 July 1837.

Works

Among his works are the reliefs for the north side of Marble Arch, the sculptures of figures representing "The Rise of Civilisation" on the pediment of the British Museum, and the Waterloo Vase now in Buckingham Palace Gardens. This enormous urn was sculpted from chunks of marble earmarked by Napoleon for a trophy commemorating his anticipated victory in the Napoleonic Wars and then given to George IV as a gift from the Grand Duke of Tuscany.

His statue of Horatio Nelson, Birmingham was the first statue of Nelson in Britain. There are other monuments to the admiral by Westmacott at Bull Ring, Birmingham, and Barbados.[citation needed], while that at Liverpool was modelled and cast by Westmacott, to a design by Matthew Cotes Wyatt. He was responsible for the statue of the agriculturalist and developer Francis Russell, 5th Duke of Bedford in Russell Square, and the one of the Duke of York on top of the column in Waterloo place. His Achilles in Hyde Park, a bronze copy of an antique sculpture from Monte Cavallo in Rome, is a tribute to the Duke of Wellington, paid for by £10,000 raised by female subscribers.

His sculptures of poetical subjects were in a style similar to those of the contemporary Italian school: his works of this type included Psyche and Cupid for the Duke of Bedford; Euphrosyne for the Duke of Newcastle; A Nymph Unclasping her Zone; The Distressed Mother and The Houseless Traveller.

Westmacott also sculpted the memorials to Pitt the Younger, Spencer Perceval, Charles James Fox and Joseph Addison in Westminster Abbey; and those to Sir Ralph Abercromby, Lord Collingwood and Generals Pakenham and Gibbs in St Paul's Cathedral.

His other sepulchural monuments include those to Lt. General Christopher Jeaffreson (d.1824) in St.Mary's Church in Dullingham; to Commander Charles Cotton' (d.1828) at St. Mary's Church in Madingley; to William Pemberton (d.1828) at St Margaret's Church in Newton, South Cambridgeshire; to Sir George Warren (d.1801) at St. Mary's Church, Stockport, Greater Manchester, depicting a standing female figure by an urn on a pillar; and to Rev. Charles Prescott (d.1820), in St. Mary's Church, Stockport, showing a seated effigy.

Personal life

Westmacott lived and died at 14 South Audley Street, Mayfair, London where he is commemorated by a blue plaque. His son, also called Richard Westmacott, followed closely in his footsteps also becoming a notable sculptor, a Royal Academician and professor of sculpture at the academy.

Westmacott is buried in a tomb at St Mary's Church at Chastleton, Oxfordshire, where his third son Horatio was rector in 1878.

SOURCE: Wikipedia contributors, 'Richard Westmacott', Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 22 August 2013, 17:24 UTC, <http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Richard_Westmacott&oldid=...> [accessed 5 October 2013]

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Sir Richard Westmacott, RA's Timeline

1775
July 15, 1775
Westminster, London, Middlesex, England (United Kingdom)
1799
April 14, 1799
1801
1801
Grosvenor Sq., London, Middlesex, England (United Kingdom)
1802
April 6, 1802
London, Middlesex, England UK
1803
1803
London, Middlesex, England (United Kingdom)
1806
January 14, 1806
St. James, London, Middlesex, England (United Kingdom)
1811
March 9, 1811
St. George Hanover Square, London, Middlesex, England UK
1812
1812
London, Middlesex, England UK
1815
1815