Art Funded by you

Cornucopia

Frank Dobson, 1927

© The artist's estate

From an unpublished fragment of his autobiography, we learn that the immediate inspiration for this work came to Dobson during his travels in Ceylon in 1924 with the novelist L. H. Myers. His reputation had already been established by the Mansard Gallery's Group X Exhibition four years earlier, and Ezra Pound was soon introducing Dobson to his friends as the saviour of sculpture in Britain. Roger Fry applauded the clay sketch for Cornucopia in 1925 as something quite out of the ordinary, and in 1927 Clive Bell congratulated its author on a masterpiece without a British rival. It is certainly one of the most important modern carvings produced in this country before the advent of Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth.

More information

Title of artwork, date

Cornucopia, 1927

Date supported

1967

Medium and material

Stone

Dimensions

109 cm

Grant

1000

Total cost

2300

Content note: This object record is part of our archive and has not been updated since it was first published. It may contain inaccurate information or outdated language. Please get in touch if you think this record should be amended.

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