[This category comprises sculpture in (a) cemeteries and (b) inside churches but not public monuments, such as E. H. Baily's Horatio Lord Nelson in Trafalgar Square or Thomas Brock's Victoria Memorial in front of Buckingham Palace.
In addition to the works listed below, we currently have more than 300 examples of funerary sculpture. Interested? Take a tour by clicking here and then on "next" in each document that appears. — George P. Landow.]
“Man is a noble animal, splendid in ashes, pompous in the grave.” Really there should be colon after animal. — Clive James quoting Sir Thomas Browne
There are many contributory factors to the wide spread of funerary monuments across early nineteenth-century Britain, and their increasing export to India and the West Indies: the rapid growth in the number of churches, the hangover of medieval attitudes to death, the social influence of the church, the nation's readiness to go to war, the social obligation to believe in Christian resurrection, the primitive state of medicine, and thus the inability of the wealthy to buy more effective treatment. The natural consequence of the wealthy buying commissions for their sons in the army and navy was the timely appearance of church monuments when they were killed. Away from the heat of battle, sickness and death would also make their way, late or soon, through all classes. . . . Funerary sculptors' markets were aided by England's unique canal and river system, at the peak of utility in the 1820s and 1830s. To move a 10-ton monument from London to the Midlands, for example, meant a short wagon journey along hard city roads to the Paddington or Pimlico canal basins, followed by a frictionless passage as far as you liked. — James Hamilton
Sculpture in the round
- H. H. Armstead, Tomb of Samuel Wilberforce
- E. H. Baily
- Joseph Edward Boehm, Monument to Sir Charles Slingsby
- Sir Thomas Brock
- Albert Bruce-Joy, James Whiteside
- Sir Francis Chantrey
- Sir William Reid Dick, Harry Dwight Ripley Monument
- John Gibson, Monument to Margaret Sandbach
- Count Victor Gleichen, Monument to Sir Hamilton Seymour
- Frank Lynn Jenkins, Thomas Joseph Tate Memorial
- Sir William Goscombe John, The Tombs of Lord Leverhulme and his wife
- Eric Henri Kennington, T. E. Lawrence
- John Graham Lough
- Georgiana Clementson Memorial
- Monument to Charles Hanbury-Tracy, 1st Lord Sudeley of Toddington (d. 1858) and his wife
- Princess Louise's Boer War Monument to the Colonial Forces, St Paul's Cathedral
- P. MacDowell, J. M. W. Turner, St, Paul's Cathedral
- Samuel Manning, Monument to Robert Bourne
- Sydney March, The Angel of Death — George William Lancaster Memorial
- Baron Marochetti, William Makepeace Thackeray
- Joseph Nollekens, Colonel Alexander Champion
- George Blackall Simonds, John Collingwood Bruce
- John Ternouth, Memorial to Henry Davidson
- Sir W. Hamo Thornycroft, Monument to Archbishop Thompson
- Baron Henri de Triqueti
- Memorial to Frances Herbert, Vicountess Nelson, Duchess of Bronti [sic] by Peter Turnerelli
- Joseph Whitehead, Monument to John Rae
- Francis John Williamson
Bas reliefs
- H. H. Armstead, Monument to Charles Ashwell Boteler Pocock
- John Bacon the younger
- Monument to Lt. Col. James Achilles Kirkpatrick
- Monument to Harriet Winford (d. 1801)
- Monument to Sir Peter de Haviland, Knight
- Monument to Sarah Freeman (d. 1806)
- Monument to Col. Sir Henry Walton Ellis, K.G.B
- Monument to Mary Caroline Clayton, 1801-1812
- Monument to John Woollett d. 1819
- Monument to Osmond de Beauvoir (d. 1810)
- Monument to Sir George Smith (d. 1809)
- E. H. Baily
- Monument to the Very Reverend Daniel Francis Durand, A.M.
- Monument to General Sir Thomas Saumarez
- Monument to John and Charles Spearing
- William Behnes
- Sir Thomas Brock, Lord (Joseph) Lister
- William Kellock Brown, Monument to Dr. George Stewart Burns d. 1896
- Alfred Buxton, Markham Buxton Monument
- Sir Francis Chantrey
- Memorial to Christopher and Sarah D'Oyly, c. 1821
- Monument to Richard Bateman, c. 1821
- First Marquess of Hertford of Ragley Hall, 1828
- Monument to Other Archer, Sixth Earl of Plymouth, 1835
- Monument to William le Marchant and Marthe de Havilland [Marchant?]
- Baron Henri de Triqueti, Susan Durant
- Susan Durant, Memorial to Queen Victoria's uncle, King Leopold
- Aristide Fabrucci, George Robert and Caroline Broad Memorial
- John Flaxman, John Lyon Memorial
- Edwin Roscoe Mullins, [The artist's own monument]
- Matthew Noble, John Allen
- John Birnie Philip. Memorial to Lt. Col. Willoughby Moore
- William Pistell, Lt. Col. John Ludlow, CB
- Edward M. Richardson, Monument to James Jeremie
- Dorothy Anne Aldrich Rope
- Ellen Mary Rope
- Leiston War Memorial
- Monument to Marjorie Wilson
- Panel in the Children's Corner, St. Margaret's Church, Leiston, Suffolk
- Guiding Angel
- Monument to Alfred Aldrich Bates (d. 1904)
- Peter Rouw, Monument to General Joshua le Marchant
- John Steell, Monument to Major William Middleton
- Sir Richard Westmacott, Memorial to Commander Charles Cotton
- William Whitelaw, Monument to Rt. James Saumarez, Lord de Saumarez
- Francis John Williamson, Memorial to Prince Leopold and Princess Charlotte
- Thomas Woolner
- Unidentified sculptors
- Edward Bulwer-Lytton Memorial, St. Paul's Cathedral crypt
- Charles Reade Memorial, St. Paul's Cathedral crypt
- Sir William Howard Russell, LLD Memorial, St. Paul's Cathedral crypt
- Sextus Gisbert Van Os, Hammersmith Cemetery
Bibliography
Beattie, Susan. The New Sculpture. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983.
Hamilton, James. A Strange Business: Making Art and Money in Nineteenth-Century Great Britain. London: Atlantic Books, 2014. [Review” by George P. Landow]
Meller, Hugh, & Brian Parson. London Cemeteries: An Illustrated Guide and Gazetteer. 4th ed. Chalford, Gloucestershire: The History Press, 2008.
Morley, John. Death, Hevaen and the Victorians. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1971.
Rutherford, Sarah. The Victorian Cemetery. Botley, Oxford: Shire, 2008.
Weinreb, Ben, et al., eds. The London Encyclopaedia. 3rd ed. London: Macmillan, 2008.
Last modified 4 November 2020