James Milo Griffith Explained

James Milo Griffiths
Birth Date:1843 6, df=y
Birth Place:Pont-seli, Wales
Death Place:London, England
Known For:Sculpture
Training:Royal Academy Schools

James Milo Griffith (11 June 1843 – 8 September 1897) was a Welsh sculptor who, after originally training as an artisan mason, became notable for his memorial statues.

Life

Griffith was born in Pont-seli, Pembrokeshire, in 1843. During the restoration of Llandaff Cathedral, undertaken by the Welsh architect John Prichard, Griffith was apprenticed by the Bishop of Llandaff as an artisan stonemason. At the age of twenty, Griffith was admitted to Royal Academy Schools in London.[1]

Griffith produced several works placed on public view, notably on the Holborn Viaduct and Bristol Cathedral. Among other notable works are the Statue of John Batchelor in Cardiff,[2] that of Sir Hugh Owen in Caernarfon, and the Sabrina fountain in the grounds of Bridgnorth Castle, Shropshire. In 1875 his work Summer Flowers was bought by Christopher Rice Mansel Talbot and displayed at Margam Castle. Griffith later moved the United States and became a professor of arts in San Francisco. He returned to London in 1896 and died there in 1897. He was buried in the suburb of Morden.[3]

Notes and References

  1. s-GRIF-MIL-1843 . Griffith, James Milo.
  2. Web site: James Milo Griffith. Aberystwyth University School of Art. 19 October 2023.
  3. Book: The Cambrian. 1898. T.J. Griffiths. 185.