THIS BOOK is a celebration of the sculpture of Eric Gill, who,to date, has been better known for the events of his life than for his work. It intends to reinstate Gill as a significant British sculptor of the interwar years and provides rich evidence of his professional practice. Gill produced a remarkable amount of sculpture in a short career that spanned only thirty years. He died aged fifty-eight of lung cancer in November 1940 during an air raid.
His work was first revealed to the London public in January 1911 and his last commission for the new Guildford Cathedral was completed by assistants in his workshop after his death. Gill's appearance on the London art scene in 1911 and his working association with Jacob Epstein at that time ensure that he has a seminal role in the development of modern sculpture in this country. But he did not remain a central figure in that story and subsequently diverted his thoughts and energies into a different arena. He spent a good deal of his time writing essays, letters and pamphlets about issues that urgently concerned him, notably social and artistic questions, graphic design, religion, sexuality and pacificism. He is guaranteed a seat on Olympus for his work with lettering and typeface design, and the radical simplifications that he achieved in this were equalled in his stone carvings.
PREFACE
ERIC GILL THE SCULPTOR
GILL AND THE ART WORLD
THE BEGINNINGS OF SCHLPTURE
THE TECHNIQHE OF DIRECT CARVING
GILL AND THE SUBJECT OF THE CRUCIFIXION
GILL AND THE THEME OF THE VIRGIN MARY
GILL AND THE FEMALE NUDE
GILL AND HIS COLLABORATION WITH EPSTEIN
GILL AND THE STATIONS OF THE CROSS
GILL AND THE PRIESTHOOD
WAR MEMORIALS
SECULAR INTO SACRED
NOTES
THE CATALOGUE
CHRONOLOGY
EXHIBITION HISTORY
BIBLIOGRAPHY
PHOTOGRAPHIC ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
INDEX