Victorian sculpture continues to challenge us. Despite Victorian studies’ masterful readings of painting and photography, three-dimensionality demands alternative approaches to appreciate nineteenth-century sculptural aesthetics and its place in Victorian culture. The articles assembled in this issue offer innovative readings of a range of encounters with Victorian sculpture, including the role of classical statuary in Victorian women’s writing; the church sculpture of Nathaniel Hitch; Queen Victoria memorials in New Zealand; imperialism and Henry Hugh Armstead’s Outram Shield; the reflexive influence of Robert Browning’s poetic and sculptural methodologies; the photographic afterlives of Hiram Powers’s Greek Slave; and the influence of chronophotography and motion studies in the movement from neoclassical to modernist sculpture in nineteenth-century Britain. Exhibition curators provide reflections on ‘Curating Victorian Sculpture’ in the second section of the issue, offering new perspectives on sculptors Alfred Drury and John Tweed. The third section, ‘Reviewing “Sculpture Victorious”’, features reviews of each incarnation of the exhibition held at the Yale Center for British Art and at London’s Tate Britain, and David J. Getsy’s afterword considers ‘Victorian Sculpture for the Twenty-First Century’, highlighting the significance of this issue of 19 for the field.
Introduction
Reading Victorian Sculpture
Marmoreal Sisterhoods: Classical Statuary in Nineteenth-Century Women’s Writing
Patricia Pulham
2016-06-22 Issue 22 • 2016 • Victorian Sculpture
Nathaniel Hitch and the Making of Church Sculpture
Claire Jones
2016-06-22 Issue 22 • 2016 • Victorian Sculpture
‘A token of their love’: Queen Victoria Memorials in New Zealand
Mark Stocker
2016-06-22 Issue 22 • 2016 • Victorian Sculpture
The Relief of Lucknow: Henry Hugh Armstead’s Outram Shield (c. 1858–62)
Jason Edwards
2016-06-22 Issue 22 • 2016 • Victorian Sculpture
Photographs of Sculpture: Greek Slave’s ‘complex polyphony’, 1847–77
Patrizia Di Bello
2016-06-22 Issue 22 • 2016 • Victorian Sculpture
‘A series of surfaces’: The New Sculpture and Cinema
Rebecca Sheehan
2016-06-22 Issue 22 • 2016 • Victorian Sculpture
Curating Victorian Sculpture
Exhibiting Victorian Sculpture in Context: Display, Narrative, and Conversation in ‘John Tweed: Empire Sculptor, Rodin’s Friend’
Nicola Capon
2016-06-22 Issue 22 • 2016 • Victorian Sculpture
Reviewing ‘Sculpture Victorious’
Review of ‘Sculpture Victorious: Art in an Age of Invention, 1837–1901’ at Tate Britain, 25 February to 25 May 2015
Clare Walker Gore
2016-06-22 Issue 22 • 2016 • Victorian Sculpture
Review of ‘Sculpture Victorious: Art in an Age of Invention, 1837–1901’ at the Yale Center for British Art, 11 September to 30 November 2014
Jonathan Shirland
2016-06-22 Issue 22 • 2016 • Victorian Sculpture