George Gammon Adams

{{short description|English portrait sculptor and medallist}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

George Gammon Adams (21 April 1821 – 14 March 1898; sometimes spelled George Gamon Adams or George Gannon Adams[http://www.zmaf.co.uk/ms1844-1900.htm Morris Singer commissions 1844 to 1900] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110809201159/http://www.zmaf.co.uk/ms1844-1900.htm |date=2011-08-09 }}, Zahra Modern Art Foundries) was an English portrait sculptor and medallist,[http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp06598/george-gammon-adams George Gammon Adams], brief biography and list of works at the National Portrait Gallery (London) noted for his statue of General Charles Napier in Trafalgar Square.

Life

File:UK-2014-London-Statue of Charles James Napier.jpg

Adams was born on 21 April 1821, in Staines, Middlesex, the son of James Adams upholsterer and auctioneer.

{{cite web |url=https://sculpture.gla.ac.uk/mapping/public/view/person.php?id=msib7_1206710572 |title=George Gammon Adams', Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Britain and Ireland 1851–1951 |work=online database |publisher= University of Glasgow History of Art and HATII |access-date=24 August 2011}}

George entered the Royal Academy Schools in 1840 on the recommendation of the medallist William Wyon and trained as a sculptor and medallist. He won a silver medal at the academy in the same year. He was taught to model and cut medals and coin dies by Benedetto Pistrucci.

After a year in Rome studying under John Gibson in 1846, he returned to London and worked for Wyon at the Royal Mint on Tower Hill.

He exhibited several works at the Great Exhibition of 1851, and was one of the three artists whose designs were used on the medals awarded to exhibitors.{{cite book |title=The Crystal Palace and the Great Exhibition |last=Hobhouse |first=Hermione |year=2004 |publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group |isbn=0-8264-7841-7 |page=46 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HNb0wFCdhNMC |access-date=24 August 2011}} In the following year he was given the honour of making the death mask of the Duke of Wellington from which he made a marble bust of the Duke.

Over the next two decades he produced busts of notable people and other public monuments.

Adams exhibited at the Royal Academy from 1841 to 1885. He died at his home, Acton Green Lodge in Chiswick, on 14 March 1898.

Legacy

Adams' style has been judged as severe and unsentimental. His 1856 statue of Napier in Trafalgar Square was the subject of unusually wide critical condemnation. The Art Journal wrote, "the slightest attention to natural form and movement is all that is necessary for the condemnation of the statue of Gen Napier, in Trafalgar Sq, as perhaps the worst piece of sculpture in England. The moral and relative worthlessness of the work exceeds tenfold its formal imperfection."[http://www.drawpaintsculpt.com/artist-biographies/george-gammon-adams/ George Gammon Adams] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111006063954/http://www.drawpaintsculpt.com/artist-biographies/george-gammon-adams/ |date=2011-10-06 }}, London Atelier of Representational Art

Works

;Monuments

;Statues

File:Statue in St George's Hall, Liverpool.jpg

;Busts

;Medals

;Other sculpture

  • "The Contest between the Minstrel and the Nightingale", sculpture submitted for a competition for the new Palace of Westminster, 1845
  • "The Murder of the Innocents", winner of RA Gold Medal, 1847
  • "The Combat of Centaurs and Lapithae" and "Figure with a Torch", shown at the Great Exhibition

References

{{reflist}}