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English sculptor, born 1777 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Bacon (1777–1859), also known as John Bacon the Younger, or Junior, to distinguish him from his equally famous father, was an English sculptor.
Bacon was the second son of the sculptor John Bacon and his wife Elizabeth Wade. He was born at his parents' home in Newman Street in the City of Westminster on 13 March 1777.[1] He entered the Royal Academy Schools at the age of twelve, one of the youngest pupils ever admitted.
At fifteen, Bacon exhibited his first work; at sixteen, he was awarded the silver medal of the Royal Academy; and in 1797 he won the gold medal for his statue of Cassandra. His brother Thomas Bacon also exhibited at the Royal Academy between 1793 and 1795. Their father died in 1799, and the younger John Bacon succeeded to his business. He finished such works as he found in progress, including the well-known statue of Lord Cornwallis, and managed to secure ample patronage for himself. He ceased to exhibit at the academy in 1824.
Building projects included the figure of Providence on Trinity House in 1796 and replacing the figures of "Madness" and "Melancholy" over the entrance to Bethlem Hospital (better known as Bedlam) in 1814.
There are six of Bacon's monuments in St Paul's Cathedral and at least eight in Westminster Abbey. There are also two in Windsor Castle.
From 1818 until 1843, Bacon worked in partnership with his former pupil Samuel Manning, but their work appears to be largely by Manning, taking advantage of Bacon's reputation but, in the view of the art historian Rupert Gunnis, lacking the quality of Bacon's work. Bacon himself went into virtual retirement from 1830.[1] He contributed articles on sculpture to Rees's Cyclopædia.
In 1801 he was married to Susanna Sophia Taylor (born 1782). He died in Bath, Somerset on 14 July 1859.
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Type | Material | Dimensions | Designation | Wikidata | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bishop John Thomas | Westminster Abbey, London | 1793 | Bust | Marble | Also attributed to John Bacon, Senior.[1][2] | ||||
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Captain Edward Cooke RN | Westminster Abbey, London | 1799 | Sculpture group on pedestal with background relief | Marble | [3] | |||
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Sir John Meredith | Brecon Cathedral, Powys | 1800 | Deep relief plaque | Stone | [1] | |||
Memorial to Rear Admiral Thomas Totty | Westminster Abbey, London | 1802 | Relief plaque | Marble | [4] | ||||
Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis | Victoria Memorial, Kolkata | 1803 | Statue | 1809 copy in Bombay[5] | |||||
Memorial to Benjamin & Richard Forbes | Westminster Abbey, London | 1803 | Relief plaque | Marble | [6] | ||||
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Captains John Harvey RN and John Hutt RN | Westminster Abbey, London | 1804 | Sculpture group | Marble | [7][8] | |||
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Memorial to Richard Solly | Worcester Cathedral | 1804 | Sculpture group | Marble | [1][9] | |||
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General Thomas Dundas | St Paul's Cathedral, London | 1805 | Bust & sculpture group on pedestal | Marble | [10] | |||
Monument to Lady Maria Micklethwaite | Church of SS Mary and Margaret, Sprowston, Norfolk | 1805 | |||||||
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Captain George Duff RN | St Paul's Cathedral, London | 1806 | Sculpture group on narrow pedestal | Marble | [11] | |||
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Lord Henniker | Rochester Cathedral, Kent | 1806 | Sculpture group & relief | |||||
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Christian Friedrich Schwarz | St. Mary's Church, Chennai. India | 1807 | Low relief sculpture | Marble | [5] | |||
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Statue of King William III | St James's Square, London | 1808 | Equestrian statue on pedestal | Bronze & stone | Grade I | Q17527231 | [12][13] | |
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Admiral Richard Kempenfelt, | Westminster Abbey, London | 1808 | Pillar with relief & inscriptions | Marble | [14] | |||
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George Nicholas Hardinge | St. Thomas Cathedral, Mumbai | 1808 | ||||||
Jane Amelia Russell (1789-1808) | St. Mary's Church, Chennai, India | c. 1808 | Relief & sculpture group | Marble | [5] | ||||
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Sir John Moore, | St Paul's Cathedral, London | 1809 | Sculpture group on pedestal | Marble | [15][16] | |||
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George Gilbert Keble | St. Mary's Church, Chennai, India | c. 1811 | Sculpture groups | Marble | [5] | |||
Memorial to the children of Richard Down | St James the Great, Friern Barnet | 1814 | |||||||
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Charles Agar, 1st Earl of Normanton | Westminster Abbey, London | 1815 | Sculpture group | Marble | [17] | |||
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Colonel Henry Walton Ellis | Worcester Cathedral | After 1815 | Sculpture group | Marble | [18] | |||
Charles Robert Ross | St. Mary's Church, Chennai, India | c. 1816 | Low relief sculpture | Marble | [5] | ||||
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Warren Hastings | Westminster Abbey, London | 1818 | Bust & plaque | Bronze | Designed by Bacon with a bust by Samuel Manning[19] |
Bacon's notable works include:[1]
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