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Patrick MacDowell Template:Post-nominals (12 August 1799 – 9 December 1870) was a Belfast-born British sculptor operating through the 19th century.<ref>W G Strickland, Dictionary of Irish Artists, (1913); Rupert Gunnis, Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660–1851 (1953); Homan Potterton, Irish Church Monuments, 1570-1880 (Belfast 1975).</ref>
LifeEdit
MacDowell was born in Belfast in 1799. His father died whilst he was young and the family lived in relative poverty.
From 1807 to 1811 he boarded at a school in Belfast, run by an engraver named Gordon, who encouraged his attempts at drawing, and from 1811 to 1813 he was under the tuition of a clergyman in Hampshire. Template:Sfn
Around 1811 he moved with his mother to Hampshire in England, where they had relatives. In 1813, aged 14 (the then standard age to begin apprenticeships), he was apprenticed to a coach-builder in London. However, his master went bankrupt and his training as a coach-builder ended abruptly.<ref>Dictionary of British Sculptors, 1660-1851, Rupert Gunnis</ref> During this time he was lodging in the house of Pierre Francois Chenu, the sculptor. It is presumed that this engendered an interest in sculpture within the young MacDowell.
On the recommendation of John Constable the painter, he went to the Royal Academy Schools and he exhibited at the Academy from 1822 until his death.
He was elected a Member on 10 February 1846 and presented as his diploma work a "Nymph.".<ref>Royal Academy of Arts website</ref>
DeathEdit
MacDowell died at his home in Wood Lane, Highgate, London on 9 December 1870 and was buried on the eastern side of Highgate Cemetery. His gravestone incorrectly records the year of his death as 1871, not 1870.Template:Sfn
Other worksEdit
MacDowell's works include a statue of Sir William Brown in the Great Hall of St George's Hall, Liverpool.<ref>Sharples, Joseph; Pollard, Richard. Liverpool. In Template:Cite book</ref> His life-size memorial, in marble, to the young Earl of Belfast (died 1853) showing the deceased on his deathbed attended by his mother, was in Belfast Castle Chapel. It was moved to Belfast City Hall.
A statue of Sir Edward Pellew, 1st Viscount Exmouth by MacDowell stands in the centre of the Greenwich Maritime Museum.
His last major work was the Europe allegorical group at the Albert Memorial in London.
- Monument to Catherine Spurway at Milverton, Somerset (1845)
- Statue of the Earl of Warren in the House of Lords (1850)
- Statue of Almeric in the House of Lords (1850)
- Statue at the grave of William Turner in St Paul's Cathedral (1851)
- Monument to the Marchioness of Donegal in Belfast Castle Chapel (1855)
- Statue of the Earl of Belfast in Belfast Free Library (1855)
- Statue of William Pitt the Younger in the Palace of Westminster (1857)
- Statue of the Earl of Chatham in the Palace of Westminster (1857)
- Statue of Viscount Fitzgibbon in Limerick (1858) replaced in 1916 by a monument to the Easter Uprising<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Statue of Sir William Brown at St George's Hall, Liverpool (1858)
- Statue of Lord Plunket in the Four Courts, Dublin (1863)
- Statue of Earl of Eglinton for St Stephen's Green in Dublin (1866), blown up by the IRA in 1958<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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See alsoEdit
NotesEdit
- Attribution
External linksEdit
- Patrick MacDowell Info & Sculpture
- MACDOWELL, PATRICK In: Dictionary of National Biography, 1893, volume= 35 - pages=pages 66–67