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Collect Art - Modern Britist Artists

Dame Elizabeth Frink profile

Dame Elizabeth Frink
Name: Dame Elizabeth Frink
Year of Birth: 1930
Year of Death: 1993
Country: United Kingdom
View all current work by Dame Elizabeth Frink on Collect Art

Dame Elisabeth Frink made Dorset her home for the last sixteen years of her life. It was always her wish that her sculpture be displayed in a natural setting and preferably in the county she had adopted as her own.

Born in Suffolk in 1930, Dame Elisabeth's father, Ralph, was an officer in the 7th Dragoon Guards and late of the renowned Indian Army cavalry regiment, Skinner's Horse. She learned to ride before she was four, adored being outside with horses and dogs and learned to shoot before she was five. All very military and county, perhaps, except that same love of nature, of horses and dogs. . .of being at home in what was then seen as very much a man's world. . .and her uninhibited fascination for 'maleness' itself would later illuminate and inform her artistic life.

She attended Guildford School of Art, followed by Chelsea School of Art and had her first major exhibition at the Beaux Arts Gallery in London, when she was only twenty-two. The occasion was marked by the Tate Gallery purchasing 'Bird'. Thereafter Dame Elisabeth went from strength to strength. Some of her best known sculptural works are 'Eagle', installed at the JFK memorial, Dallas, Texas; 'Water Buffaloes', for the Hong Kong Land Company; the famous 'Goggle Head' series; a commission for Paternoster Square by the City of London, featuring a flock of sheep (which subsequently seems to have gone missing); 'Warhorse', on display at Chatsworth; and 'Risen Christ', for Liverpool Cathedral.

In later years Dame Elisabeth produced a series of stunning portraits, including those of Sir George Solti and Sir Alec Guinness. She also illustrated Homers' 'Odyssey' and 'Iliad' for the Folio Society; 'Aesop's Fables, published by Alastair McAlpine and Leslie Waddington; and a series of etchings taken from the Canterbury Tales, again published by Leslie Waddington. The latter caused some comment for their frank portrayal of the sex act. Dame Elisabeth was an artist who never lost her earthy appreciation of life.

She exhibited throughout the world and had honorary doctorates from the universities of Warwick; the Open University; Cambridge; Exeter; Oxford; Keele; Manchester and Bristol and a full doctorate from the Royal College of Art. Awarded the DBE in 1982, Dame Elisabeth was a Trustee of the British Museum; a member of the Royal Fine Art Commission; and Trustee of the Welsh Sculpture Trust.

Conventional yet controversial, Dame Elisabeth's art was groundbreaking. Her work was untouched by passing fashions and she was uncompromising in her pursuit of perfection. Soon after completing 'Risen Christ', Dame Elisabeth died of cancer at home on the 18th of April 1993.

Examples of work
  • Theodore Major
  • Adolphe Valette
  • Malcolm Croft
  • Blek Le Rat
  • James Lawrence Isherwood
  • Arthur Berry
  • Donald Mcintyre R.C.A
  • Adrian Johnson
  • Andrew Macara RBA, NEAC
  • Geoffrey Key
  • Sir Terry Frost R A
  • Peter Howson
  • Emmanuel Levy
  • Alan Lowndes
  • L S Lowry
  • Trevor Grimshaw
  • John McCombs NDD, ROI, RBA, FRSA, M
  • Keith Vaughan
  • Llewelyn Frederick Menzies-Jones
  • Dame Elizabeth Frink
  • Graham Sutherland, OM
  • Marc Grimshaw
  • Frances Lennon
  • Reginald Gardner
  • Robert Oscar Lenkiewicz
  • Sir Kyffin Williams OBERA
  • Fred Cuming
  • Derek Shapiro
  • Liam Spencer
  • Ken Howard RA NEAC
  • Sandra Blow RA
  • Ivan Taylor
  • Tom Brown
  • Maurice Cockrill RA
  • Tadeusz Was
  • Ken Moroney
  • Fred Yates
  • John Bratby RA
  • Rolf Harris
  • Harry Rutherford
  • Roger Hampson
  • Margaret chapman
  • Edgar Roley Smart
  • John Bellany RA
  • Helen Bradley
  • Brian Shields 'braaq'
  • Bernard MC Mullen
  • Mary Fedden OBE RA LG
  • William Turner
  • Harold Riley
  • Andre Derain
  • John Piper C.H
  • Peter Stanaway
  • Ian Grant
  • Peter Layton
  • Eileen Agar
  • Bryan Pearce
  • Arto Der Haroutunian
  • Russell Howarth
  • Charlie Sheils
  • Chris Swann
  • Nick Holly
  • Jack Vettriano
  • Alan Davie
  • Alfred Wallis
  • Paul Feiler
  • Ross Gee
  • Henry Cliffe
  • Peter Brook
  • Sir Robin Philipson, P.R.S.A., R.A., R.S.A
  • Olivia Pilling
  • Nicholas Horsfield
  • Alexander Millar
  • Simeon Stafford
  • Alan Knight
  • Wilf Roberts
  • Sue Atkinson
  • George Hodgkinson
  • Banksy
  • Roy Turner Durrant
  • Bruce McLean
  • John Bowes
  • Peter Blake
  • Edward Hartley Mooney
  • John Bainbridge Copnall
  • Goldie
  • Robert Dawson
  • Ifor Pritchard
  • David Farren
  • Helen Clapcott
  • Michael Quirke
  • Paul Horton
  • Mackenzie Thorpe
  • Peter Knox
  • Robert Jenkins
  • Judith Donaghy
  • Gill Watkiss
  • Albert Barlow
  • Brian Bradshaw
  • Charles Fredrick Tunnicliffe
  • Danny Cawley
  • Linda Weir
  • Dan Baldwin
  • Tom Dodson
  • David Wilde
  • Alan J Thompson
  • Julie Vernon
  • Lawrie Henery
  • Stacey Manton
  • Emma Williams
  • Harry Brioche