Herbert Hampton Explained

Herbert Hampton (1862 – 11 February 1929)[1] was an English sculptor, artist, and creator of public memorials, who was active between 1888 and 1927.

Life

Hampton was born at Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire, and died in Great Bardfield, Essex in 1929. After education at Bishop's Stortford College, he studied art at the Cardiff School of Art, the Lambeth, the Westminster, the Slade and then the Académies Julien and Colarossi in Paris.[2] His legacy was a collection of public memorials across the United Kingdom and New Zealand.

Works

The Queen Victoria Monument in Lancaster, displays a sculpture of the queen guarded by four monumental lions, beneath them are four allegories to freedom, wisdom, truth and justice complete with a generous collection of putti; and four bas-relief friezes of fifty-three eminent Victorians, two of whom were women.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. https://sculpture.gla.ac.uk/view/person.php?id=msib2_1203104115 Mapping Sculpture
  2. Hampton, Herbert. Who's Who. 1916. 975.
  3. Web site: Queen Victoria Memorial Statue - Queens Gardens, Dunedin . Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga . 16 July 2020.
  4. Web site: STATUES – HITHER & THITHER . van der Krogt . René . 2014 . 1 April 2017 .