Richard Gross (sculptor) explained
Richard Oliver Gross (10 January 1882 - 27 December 1964) was a New Zealand farmer and sculptor. He was born in Barrow-in-Furness, Lancashire, England, on 10 January 1882. He moved to New Zealand in 1914.
Gross sculpted the following works:
- The figure of Endeavour on the Auckland Grammar School war memorial, Auckland.
- The figure of Sacrifice on the Cambridge war memorial.
- The lion at the base of the Dunedin cenotaph.
- The fountain at the National War Memorial carillon, Wellington.
- The bronze frieze around the Havelock North memorial.
- The stone frieze on the Auckland War Memorial Museum, Auckland.
- Elements on the Wellington cenotaph including the two panels of a call-to-arms relief and the equestrian figure on top, the 'Will to Peace'. After the Second World War Gross added the bronze lions to the cenotaph.
- The Athlete and The Swan on the Domain gates, Auckland.
- The marble memorial to the Labour leader Harry Holland, in the Bolton Street cemetery, Wellington.
- Davis memorial fountain at Mission Bay, Auckland.
- The bronze Maori chief for the One Tree Hill memorial, Auckland.
- The figure of love and justice for the memorial to Michael Joseph Savage at Bastion Point, Auckland.
In the 1938 King's Birthday Honours, Gross was appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George, in recognition of his services as a sculptor. In 1953, he was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal.[1]
Notes and References
- Book: Taylor . Alister . Coddington . Deborah . Alister Taylor . Deborah Coddington . Honoured by the Queen – New Zealand . 1994 . New Zealand Who's Who Aotearoa . Auckland . 0-908578-34-2 . 413.