artist
Lynn Russell Chadwick was born in London on Nov. 24, 1914. After studying at the Merchant Taylors' School, he worked as an architectural draftsman from 1933 to 1939. He served as a pilot during World War II. After the war Chadwick began to design furniture, textiles and even some architectural projects. He also started to build mobiles similar to those executed by Alexander Calder whose work was at first unknown to him. His first mobile of aluminum and balsa wood was shown at the Aluminum Development Stand at the Builders' Trades Exhibition. Positive public reaction to these mobiles led to his first solo exhibition at the Gimpel Fils Gallery in London in 1950. Chadwick, however, soon discarded these kinetic, moving elements from his sculpture, but continued to use his own particular mode of construction and assemblage rather than the prevailing norm of carving or modeling his sculptures.
Chadwick and his art essentially came of age after World War II, an energetic yet unsettled time of great artistic experimentation when the new existential anxiety movement(a kind of post traumatic war syndrome) confronted both the deep-seated traditions of human representation and a nascent attraction to modern abstraction. In the 1950's he employed skeletal lines and rough planes and surfaces that were organized into generalized images of people and animals. In 1956 when he was 41 and just six years into his art career Chadwick won a first prize for sculpture at the Venice Biennale and along with that award came international fame and enormous financial success. In 1964 he was made a Commander of the British Empire and in 1985 a French Officier de l' Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. His first major success came in 1953 when he was among a dozen semifinalists for the Unknown Political Prisoner International Sculpture Competition, and he received an honorable mention. In the 1960's Mr. Chadwick's work was partly eclipsed by the increasingly abstract tendencies in modern sculpture, but he still enjoyed a lucrative career into the 1980's. His sculptures during this period were human figures cast in bronze and clad in rough drapery while sporting geometric (both pyramidal and rectangular) heads. These works blended the surreal with a monumental quality that was more often associated with the large scale works of Henry Moore. In 1988 Mr. Chadwick was again invited to exhibit in the Venice Biennale for which he created a pair of seated figures, male and female, titled ''Back to Venice.'' These expressionistic, figurative works of welded iron and bronze earned him international acclaim.
Three times married, Chadwick had four children: Simon by his first wife the Canadian poet Ann Secord whom he married in 1942, Sarah and Sophie by his second wife Frances Mary Jamieson whom he married in 1959, and Daniel by his third wife the Hungarian photographer Eva Rainer whom he married in 1965. Chadwick died on April 25, 2003 at the age of 88 at his home in Lypiatt Park in Stroud, Gloucestershire.
provenance
The Artist
Galeria Freites, Caracas, Venezuela
American Private Collection
exhibitions
Giacometti-Chadwick - Facing Fear, Museum de Fundatie, Zwolle, Netherlands, September 22 2018 - January 6 2019, this cast.
literature
Dennis Farr and Eva Chadwick, “Lynn Chadwick: Sculptor (With a Complete Illustrated
Catalogue) 1947-2005,” cat. No. 198
Dennis Farr, “Lynn Chadwick,” London: Tate Publishing, 2003, fig. 16, ill. p. 45
*This cast has been verified by Eva Chadwick.