
Text source: The Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists (Oxford University Press)
1930–1993
British
Text source: The Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists (Oxford University Press)
© The Executors of the Frink Estate and Archive. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2025. Image credit: The Ingram Collection of Modern British and Contemporary Art
Jo Baring
© The Executors of the Frink Estate and Archive. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2025. Image credit: The Ingram Collection of Modern British and Contemporary Art
Jo Baring
Elisabeth Frink with 'Lying Down Horse', France, 1969. Image credit: courtesy of the Frink estate
Jo Baring and Sarah Turner
Being Human: modern sculpture at Bristol Museum & Art Gallery. front cover of exhibition booklet by Julia Carver and Bristol Museum & Art Gallery, published by Sanson & Company
Image credit: Trustees of the Royal Air Force Museum
Katey Goodwin
© the estate of Edward Bawden. Image credit: The Ingram Collection of Modern British and Contemporary Art
Emma Frith and Jade King
Anne Purkiss at the top of Nelson's Column, 1987. Image credit: Anne-Katrin Purkiss
Anne-Katrin Purkiss
Untitled. 2014, sculpture installation by Cathy Wilkes (b.1966). © Cathy Wilkes. Image credit: Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, CC BY-SA 3.0 (source: Wikimedia Commons)
Patricia Yaker Ekall
© The Executors of the Frink Estate and Archive. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2025. Image credit: The Ingram Collection of Modern British and Contemporary Art
Jo Baring
© Kenneth Armitage Foundation / Bridgeman Images. Image credit: British Council Collection
JoAnna Novak
Still from HENI Talks' film on Elisabeth Frink's 'Dorset Martyrs Memorial'. Image credit: HENI Talks
Jo Baring and HENI Talks
© The Henry Moore Foundation. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2025 / www.henry-moore.org. Image credit: The Higgins Bedford
Deborah Nash
Girl. 1953–1954, bronze by Reg Butler (1913–1981). © estate of Reg Butler. Image credit: Bristol Museums, Galleries & Archives
Julia Carver
© the artist. Image credit: Patricia Tutt / Art UK
Andrew Shore
© The Executors of the Frink Estate and Archive. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2025. Image credit: Tracy Jenkins / Art UK
Lydia Figes
Eve. 1882, bronze by Auguste Rodin (1840–1917). Image credit: Tracy Jenkins / Art UK
Lydia Figes
© the artist's estate / Bridgeman Images. Image credit: Pembroke College Oxford JCR Art Collection
Julia Carver
The Townley Discobolus. 2nd century AD marble copy of a 1st century BC bronze original by Myron. Image credit: British Museum, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Iain Calderwood
Image credit: Royal Academy of Arts
Helen Record
Portrait photograph of French sculptor Auguste Rodin (1840–1917) at Meudon . 1905, photograph by Gertrude Käsebier (1852–1934). Image credit: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington DC, public domain
Julia Carver
War Memorial at Trade Union Congress, Great Russell Street. 1950s, sculpture by Jacob Epstein (1880–1959). © the artist's estate / Tate Images. Image credit: Steve Cadman, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 (source: Flickr)
Penelope Curtis
Her numerous public commissions include Wild Boar for Harlow New Town, Blind Beggar and Dog for Bethnal Green, a lectern for Coventry Cathedral, Shepherd for Paternoster Square beside St. Paul's Cathedral and a Walking Madonna for Salisbury Cathedral. In 1982, she was for her services to art created DBE. A 1985 retrospective was given to her at the RA of which she was an elected member. As an exhibitor she showed at all major UK venues including the RSA, SSWA, WIAC, RGI, Grosvenor Gallery, Compass Gallery, Glasgow, Marjorie Parr Gallery and at the New Grafton Gallery, Barnes and at venues around the world. Her work is represented in the Tate Gallery, Abbot Hall Art Gallery, Jerwood Sculpture Park, Lancaster University Art Gallery, Liverpool University Art Collection, New Hall College, Cambridge, University of Warwick Art Collection, Yorkshire Sculpture Park and in public collections world-wide. Many of her drawings from the 1960's appeared as prints executed by the Curwen Press. Elisabeth Frink was diagnosed with cancer in her early sixties. Despite this, she was working on a colossal statue, 'Risen Christ', for Liverpool Cathedral. This sculpture would prove to be her last as, just one week after its installation she died aged 62. Frink was the mother of the painter Lin Jammet and her estate is handled by and exhibited at Beaux Arts Bath and Beaux Arts London. Her estate at her death was valued at £4.6 million the equivalent in 2014 of £8.4 million.
Bibliography: The Art of Elisabeth Frink by Edwin Mullens. Published by Lund Humphries London, 1972. ISBN 0853313369.
Frink, Elisabeth, 1930-1993: Sculpture: A catalogue raisonné. Published by Harpvale Books, Salisbury, 1984. ISBN 0946425051.
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