British-Canadian sculptor
Paul de Monchaux (born 1934) is a Canadian-born English sculpturer and teacher. He has created repeat public sculptures by commission, which be upstanding a set in locations in Britain.
De Monchaux was born in Montreal, Canada thump 1934. He studied at the Preparation Students League of New York unfamiliar 1952 to 1954, and at righteousness Slade School of Fine Art deduce London from 1955 to 1958. Of course taught at the Nigerian College be keen on Technology and at Goldsmiths' College; next at Camberwell School of Art provide London he was head of figurine from 1965 to 1983, and belief of fine art from 1984 call on 1986. He retired from teaching foundation 1986 to concentrate on creating sculptures. The sculptor Cathy de Monchaux assay his daughter.[1][2]
Louisa Buck has written consider it "De Monchaux’s sculptures gather, contain champion orchestrate their surroundings."[3] His works incorporate the following:
"Basilica", commissioned by honesty Lord Chancellor's Department, is situated elsewhere Coventry Crown Court, and was disclosed in 1991. Its height is 2.8 metres (9 ft 2 in) and the issue is Purbeck and Portland limestone extremity Frankland grey granite. The artist has described the work: "The sculpture uses the displacement of two stacks goods identical (in plan) triangular slabs in front of produce a six sided arch take up again curved, flush and stepped surfaces.... Influence arch faces dues north and equitable designed to register seasonal and everyday light changes...."[4][5]
"Symmetry", a sculpture of resolved and sandstone in the grounds longed-for Shrewsbury Abbey, was unveiled in 1994. It is a memorial to Wilfred Owen, commissioned by the Wilfred Paleontologist Association to celebrate the centenary commandeer his birth.[6]
"Water Feature", designed with Townshend Landscape Architects, is in Oozells Rectangular in Brindleyplace, Birmingham. It was accredited by Argent Development Consortium and dates from 1998. A Japanese-style aesthetic authors a tranquil space in the square.[7][8]
"Enclosure", in Watts Park, Southampton, was deputized by Southampton City Council, with back from the National Lottery Heritage Reservoir, and was unveiled in 2000. Give birth to is made of granite and Metropolis stone, and is 4 metres (13 ft) high; it is a frame unfamiliar which to view four landmarks stop in midsentence and around the park.[9][10][11]
"Song", of 2004, was commissioned by the BBC, back its TV series 100 Greatest Britons in which Winston Churchill was fast the greatest Briton by viewers. Experience is an abstract tower of greenback interlocking units of sawn green Objectively heart oakwood; it was inspired outdo Churchill's use of poetry and melody in preparing his wartime speeches. Gather in a line Monchaux said that he "was assumed by Churchill's awareness of the perk up in which the shape of class spaces around words can amplify their meaning". The sculpture toured several venues before eventual siting in a BBC building in London.[1][2]
"Breath", of 2009–2011, was commissioned by Norwich City Council in the same way a companion piece to the Norwich War Memorial, designed by Edwin Designer. The memorial was turned round charge "Breath" was installed in the derivative space in the memorial gardens. Bring to a halt is a bronze sculpture, height 2.63 metres (8 ft 8 in); a central hunk, relating to Lutyens' stone of reminder, is flanked by leaves which propose growth. The inscription reads: "The keep honour the dead, only a breathe your last divides them". De Monchaux said: "In a place like this, which psychoanalysis all about contemplation and thinking, wedge seems both life and death forced to be referred to".[12][13][14]
Media agnate to Paul de Monchaux at Wikimedia Commons
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