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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: WIL-YAK |
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WOOLNER, THOMAS (1825-1892) , British sculptor and poet, was born at Hadleigh, Suffolk, on- the 17th of December 1825. When a boy he showed talent for modelling, and when barely thirteen years old was taken as an assistant into the studio of William Behnes, and trained during four years. In December 1842 Woolner was admitted a student in the Royal Academy, and in 1843 exhibited his " Eleanor sucking Poison from the Wound of Prince Edward." In 1844, among the competitive works for decorating the Houses of Parliament was his life-size group of " The Death of Boadicea." In 1846 he had at the Royal Academy a graceful bas-relief of Shelley's " Alastor." Then came (1847) " Feeding the Hungry," a bas-relief, at the Academy; and at the British Institution a brilliant statuette of " Puck " perched upon a toadstool and with his toe rousing a frog. " Eros and Euphrosyne " and " The Rainbow " were seen at the Academy in 1848. Woolner became, in the autumn of 1848, one of the seven Pre-Raphaelite Brethren, and took a leading part in The Germ (185o), the opening poem in which, called " My Beautiful Lady," was written by him. He had already modelled and exhibited portraits of Carlyle, Browning and Tennyson. Unable to make his way in art as he wished, Woolner in 1852 tried his luck as a gold-digger in Australia. Failing in this, he returned to England in 18J7, where during his absence his reputation had been in-creased by means of a statue of "Love" as a damsel lost in a day-dream. Then came his second portraits of Carlyle, Tennyson and Browning, the figures of Moses, David, St John the Baptist and St Paul for the pulpit of Llandaff
Palgrave . The fine statue of Bacon in the New Museum at Oxford was succeeded by full-size statues of Prince Albert for Oxford, Macaulay for Cambridge , William III. for the Houses of Parliament, London, and Sir Bartle Frere for Bombay; busts of Tennyson, for Trinity College, Cambridge , Dr ZVhewell, and Archdeacon Hare; statues of Lord Lawrence for Calcutta, Queen Victoria for Birmingham, Field for the Law Courts, London, Palmerston for Palace Yard, the noble colossal standing
Chief
Gull , besides the repetition, with variations, of Gladstone for the Bodleian, Oxford, and Mansion House
original
In 1864 he married Alice Gertrude Waugh, by whom he had two sons and four daughters. He was elected an associate of the Royal Academy in 1871, and a full member in 1874. Woolner wrote and published two amended versions of " My Beautiful Lady " from The Germ, as well as " Pygmalion
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