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Adams-Acton, John British sculptor in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Some of his notable colonial works include the statue of William Ewart Gladstone in Blackburn and two statues of Queen Victoria in Nassau, Bahamas and Kingston, Jamaica. Adams Acton also briefly lived in India for eight months in 1876, setting up a studio in Bombay (Mumbai), and carried out a number of commissions for the colony.
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Adams, George Gammon English sculptor in the nineteenth century. Some of his notable colonial works include two statues of Charles James Napier, one of which is in Trafalgar Square and the other in St. Paul's Cathedral, as well as the monument to Captain Henry Langhorne Thompson, which is also at St Paul's Cathedral.
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Annand, David Scottish sculptor
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Armstead, Henry Hugh English sculptor in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Some of his notable colonial works include architectural sculpture for the Colonial Office in Whitehall (today the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) and the statue of Thomas Waghorn in Chatham.
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Aumonier, William English sculptor in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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Bacon, Charles English sculptor in the nineteenth century.
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Bacon, John, the Elder English sculptor in the eighteenth century. Some of his notable colonial works include the statue of Admiral George Rodney in Spanish Town, Jamaica, and Charles Cornwallis on the Gurkha Staircase in the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office in London. Bacon also produced a number of memorials in Jamaica for individuals linked to slavery, such as the monument to Francis Rigby Brodbelt in St Catherine’s Parish Church, the monument to Malcom and Eleanor Laing in Kingston Parish Church, and the monument to Rosa Palmer in St James’s Parish Church.
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Bacon, John, the Younger English sculptor in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Some of his notable colonial works include the statues of Charles Cornwallis and Richard Wellesley in Kolkata and Mumbai. Bacon also produced a number of memorials in the British Caribbean for individuals linked to slavery, such as the monument to Ralph Payne, 1st Baron Lavington in Antigua, the monument to Frances Inglis in Kingston Parish Church, Jamaica, and the monument to Duncan Anderson in St James’s Parish Church, Jamaica.
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Baily, Edward Hodges British sculptor active in the nineteenth century. Some of his notable colonial works include the statue of Richard Bourke in Sydney, Australia, the statue of David Hare in Kolkata, and the statue of Charles Metcalfe in Kingston, Jamaica. Baily also executed a number of monuments to figures with connections to transatlantic slavery, including a monument to Thomas Picton in Carmarthen (now dismantled), a monument to Henry Vassall-Fox, 3rd Baron Holland in Westminster Abbey, and a statue of Nicholas Conyngham Tindal in Chelmsford.
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Baker, Bryant British-born American sculptor active in the twentieth century.
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Banksy Pseudonymous England-based street artist and political activist active from the 1990s.
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Bañuelos, Tomás Spanish sculptor
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Barnard, George Grey American sculptor in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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Barton, Amanda Sculptor
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Bates, Harry English sculptor in the nineteenth century. His most notable colonial work was his bronze equestrian statue of Frederick Roberts. The statue of Roberts, which bankrupted Bates, was first installed in Kolkata, and copies were subsequently made posthumously by Henry Poole for London and Glasgow.
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Baucke, Heinrich German sculptor in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
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Bayes, Gilbert English sculptor in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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Behnes, William British sculptor active in the nineteenth century. Some of his notable colonial works include a memorial to William Praed in Tyringham Church in Buckinghamshire, a memorial to Joseph Marryat in St George's Church, Grenada, and the statues of Henry Havelock in London and Sunderland.
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Bell Birch, Charles English sculptor in the nineteenth century.
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Bell, John British sculptor in the nineteenth century. Bell produced a number of sculptures representing enslaved women during his career, including A Daughter of Eve - A Scene on the Shore of the Atlantic (1853), The Octoroon (1868), and Manacled Slave / On the Sea Shore (1877). Although Bell presented his abolitionist sympathies in these sculptures, his works have also been critiqued for commodifying the Black female body through allusions to the notion of illicit sexuality.
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Bělský, František Czech sculptor in the twentieth century.
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Belt, Richard Claude British sculptor in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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Bird, Francis English sculptor in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
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Boehm, Joseph Edgar Austrian-born British sculptor in the nineteenth century. Some of his notable colonial works include the statue of King Edward VII in Mumbai, two statues of Robert Napier, one of which is in London and the other in Barrackpore, and two statues of John Lawrence, one of which is in London and the other in Derry-Londonderry (having been repatriated from Lahore).
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Boucher, Jean Trained at the Beaux-Arts in Rennes, then Paris, he made a name for himself with his monument to Ernest Renan in 1903. After serving as a volunteer from 1914 to 1918, he became a professor at the Beaux-Arts de Paris in 1919 and was elected to the Académie des Beaux Arts in 1936. He created the sculptures for the Verdun Victory and Soldiers' Monument. His "Poilu" statue for the town of Vitré (1921) established him as a major statuary of the 1920s.
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Boulton, Richard Lockwood British sculptor in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Boulton founded the firm Messrs R. L. Boulton & Sons, which carried out a number of sculptural works both locally in Cheltenham and overseas. Boulton works include the Boer War Memorial in Cheltenham, the Cheltenham College Chapel reredos (also a memorial to the Boer War, accompanied by several carved colonial figures), and sculptures for Royal Alfred Sailors' Home (now Maharashtra Police Headquarters) in Mumbai.
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Bridgeman, Robert British sculptor in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
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Brilliant, Fredda Polish sculptor and actress in the twentieth century.
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Brock, Thomas English sculptor in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Some of his notable colonial works include the statue of Victoria in the Victoria Memorial Hall, Kolkata, the statue of Henry Bartle Frere in London, and the statue of John Nicholson, which was first installed in Dehli but was later repatriated and re-erected in Dungannon, Northern Ireland.
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Brothers, Wills English sculptors in the nineteenth century
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Brown, William Kellock Scottish sculptor in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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Bruce-Joy, Albert Irish sculptor working in England in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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Burnard, Neville Northey British sculptor in the nineteenth century. Burnard's patron, the Cornish MP Sir Charles Lemon, 2nd Baronet had an indirect connection to British slavery through his father Sir William Lemon, 1st Baronet, who was a mortgage holder of the Belmont estate in St Vincent.
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Campbell, Thomas Scottish sculptor active in the nineteenth century.
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Carew, John Edward Irish sculptor active in the nineteenth century.
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Carpentière, Andries English sculptor of French or Flemish descent working in Britain at the beginning of eighteenth century.
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Cartwright, Thomas English stonemason and sculptor
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Cassidy, John Irish sculptor who worked in Manchester in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Cassidy is probably most well known for sculpting the statue of the slave-trader Edward Colston for Bristol in 1895, but he also produced other colonial works, including the two statues of John and Enriqueta Rylands in Manchester's John Rylands Library.
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Chantrey, Francis Legatt English sculptor active in the early nineteenth century. Some of his notable colonial works include the statue of Edward Hyde East in Kolkata and the equestrian statue of Thomas Munro in Chennai. Chantrey also executed a number of monuments to figures with connections to transatlantic slavery, including a monument to Isaac Hawkins Browne in Badger, Shropshire, a monument to John 'Mad Jack' Fuller in Brightling, Sussex, and a bust of Charles Long, 1st Baron Farnborough, which is now in the collections of the National Gallery.
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Chatham, Herbert British sculptor active in the early twentieth century.
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Chavalliaud, Léon-Joseph French sculptor in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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Cheere, Henry English sculptor in the eighteenth century.
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Chongren, Zhang Chinese sculptor in the twentieth century and friend of the Belgian cartoonist Hergé.
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Cibber, Caius Gabriel Danish sculptor in the seventeenth century.
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Clapperton, Thomas John Scottish sculptor active in the twentieth century.
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Clarke, George English sculptor active in the nineteenth century.
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Clarke, George Somers British architect and Egyptologist in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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Colton, William Robert British sculptor in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Some of his notable colonial works include the Boer War Memorial in Worcester and the Royal Artillery Boer War Memorial in London.
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Cornell, David British sculptor
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Croggon, William British sculptor active in the early nineteenth century.