George Bullock(c.1777–1818) was asculptorand furniture-maker working inLiverpoolandLondon.
Life
editGeorge Bullock was born inBirmingham,where his mother ran an exhibition of wax models in the late 1790s. His brother,William Bullock,opened a museum of curiosities in the city in 1800. He moved it toLiverpoolthe next year, and George went with him.
By 1804, George Bullock had left his brother's museum, and gone into business with a looking-glass maker called William Stoakes. They advertised themselves as "Cabinet Makers, General Furnishers and Marble Workers", trading from a showroom called the "Grecian Rooms" in Bold Street, Liverpool. Around 1806, Bullock dissolved his partnership with Stoakes and took over the Mona marble quarries at Llanvechell on the island ofAngleseyfor a lease of £1000. The marble was shipped to Liverpool, where it was used for chimneypieces and other decorations. He used it widely in his furnishing schemes, such as the refurbishment of Thomas Johnes’ house atHafod.He also supplied marble to other sculptors.[1]
At about this time, a guide to Liverpool described his Grecian Rooms as offering "an extensive assortment of elegant and fashionable furniture; as also, statues, figures, tripods, candelabra, antique lamps, sphinxes, griffins, &c., in marble, bronze, and artificial stone." Bullock also stocked "a good collection of ancient and modern busts; among the latter, those of many of the most distinguished characters in Liverpool and its neighbourhood, modelled by himself."[2]
Following the success of his company he moved to London in 1813, becoming director of the Mona Marble Works.[3]These marbles were used in the monuments to the Rev Glover Moore inSt Cuthbert'sinHalsall,Lancashire, and to Anna Maria Bold in St Luke's inFarnworth,Lancashire. He exhibited at the Royal Academy in London and the Liverpool Academy between 1804 and 1816. He was the President of the Liverpool Academy in 1810 and 1811. He also undertook commissions for his furniture designs, notably forSir Walter Scottand for the government, to provide furnishings forNapoleon'sexile onSt. Helena.
He died at home 4 Tenterden Street nearCavendish Squarein London.[4]
Known works
edit- Bust ofWilliam Roscoe(1804)
- Bust of theDuke of Gloucester(1806)
- Statue ofHoratio Nelson(1807) inLiverpool(fromCoade stone)
- Bust of SirWilliam Elford(1807)
- Bust ofSarah Siddons(1808)
- Bust of Sir James Smith (1810)
- Bust of Dr Wilkinson (1810)
- Bust ofLord Tamworth(1811)
- Bust ofCharles Kemble(1812)
References
edit- ^"Details of Sculptor".Henry Moore Institute. Archived fromthe originalon 27 March 2012.Retrieved2 August2011.
- ^The stranger in Liverpool; or, An historical and descriptive view of Liverpool.Liverpool: Thomas Kaye. 1807. p. 118.
- ^Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660-1851 by Rupert Gunnis
- ^Dictionary of British Sculptors 1660-1851 by Rupert Gunnis
- Terry Cavanagh-Public Sculpture of Liverpool-LUP-1997,quoting R.Gunniss, 1951,Dictionary Of British Sculptors 1660-1851,new revised edition, undated, published in London).
External links
edit- Items designed by George Bullockin theV&Acollection