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  • March 14, 1863
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  • NEW MATERIALS FOR THE LIFE OF JOHN BACON. R.A.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 14, 1863: Page 3

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New Materials For The Life Of John Bacon. R.A.

me to trouble you with this note ; as I am quite sure there could be no personal acquaintance that enabled Mr . Cunningham to estimate my father ' s character . Xt is now a quarter of a century since my father ' s name appeared in the Family Library . The writer has given him ciedit for eminent genius and ability in his professionbut has thrown out very ungenerous

, insinuations against his character ; which , I grant , ought to have been refuted at the time ; but I thought that I should only be brought into a profitless paper warfare , and that new statements , as foreign to truth as the first , would be put forth ; and I therefore allowed all to pass , without even a remonstrance .

I am willing to believe that the biographer , not inowing my father personally , was satisfied in taking much of his description from the sculptors in the Eoyal Academy , all of whom , at that time , were actuated by envy and disappointment at my father ' s celebrity and success iu his profession . But for this , no such statement could have been printed for the public eye as that he made an " audacious proposition to the Government to do all the national monump . nts

at a certain percentage below the Parliamentary price . '' All this I pronounce to be , with much more introduced at the same time , a gratuitous unqualified falsehood . I well recollect when the order came to my father to prepare designs for all the public monuments which the House of Commons , had voted for five of our naval commanders ; which order wasin

, like manner , sent to the other sculptors who were Eoyal Academicians . It is true that two out of the five were adjudged to my father , but quite unexpectedly to him ; nor would he have prejudiced his flame by daring , as the biographer calls it , to ask for more than his share .

I need not advert to the contempt which is cast over his religious opinions and habits . He was unfairly dealt with in this respect ; and if the world were not too ready to join in such scandal , it would be labour spent in vain . Believe me , & c , J . BACON . "

It is impossible to read this letter from a clever son , in defence of his father ' s memory , written five-andfifty years after his father ' s death , without a respect and regard for the filial reverence of the writer . What defence of my father , if any , I made , beyond a letter of acknowledgment , courtesy , and compliment , I cannot now remember .

The history of prices in art is instructive . For the Westminster Abbey " Chatham " monument , Bacon received six thousand pounds . I have seen the agreement , , dated 8 th March , 1779 . The monument was to he erected before the 25 th December , 17 S 3 , and Bacon fulfilled his engagement . This , at the time , was the hi

ghest sum ever given for a monument ; nor do I believe that it has been since exceeded by any public grant or subscription for a monument in marble , larger sums have since been received by sculptors in bronze . The late Matthew Cotes Wyatt had close on fifteen thousand pounds for the West End Wellington ;

"hantrey had , with money and gratuitously given gun ^ jetal , something like seven thousand pounds for the Cit y Wellington . What did Mr . Foley receive "in * u " for his Calcutta Lord Hardinge ? Was Bacon ' s wo thousand pounds , minus the much canvassed twoand-a-half per cent ., a large sum for the bronze King George III . and the bronze Father Thames in the court yard of Somerset House ? And was not Sir

New Materials For The Life Of John Bacon. R.A.

Richard Westmacott ' s alleged ten thousand pounds pay for the " Hyde Park Achilles , " the highest sum ever given for the mere reproduction in metal of any statue ? The present able Professor of Sculpture in the Eoyal Academy of Art ( Sir Richard Westmacott ' s son ) will perhaps kindly enlighten us on this point .

There are very few busts by Bacon ; but the few are fine in execution . His King George III ., at the Society of Antiquaries , has an indescribable excellence in it , unlike Nollekens and unlike Chantrey . There are duplicates of his " What George , what Third , " equally fine . The " carving" I can compare only with

the die-siukiug of Simon in the far-famed " Petition Crown " of Charles II . —that crown , the envy of all collectors of coins . My old friend Joseph Theaksione , of whom I have already made mention in this series of articles , for his unequalled skill in making marble look like satin or ermine , wrought under Bacon , and from his conversation while at work in Chantrey ' s studio , my father derived all he knew from " men " of Bacon as a man .

That Bacon should die worth " sixty thousand 230 imds , " without making busts , seems to me inexplicable ; and that Flaxman should die worth only " four thousand pounds" ( equally unproductive as he was of busts ) , seems to me incomprehensible . The money amassed by Nollekens and Chantrey , married , but

childless ( one greedy , the other grasping ) , I can . understand ; but I cannot see how Bacon acquired , by scul pture alone , the large sum he was unable to take with him . And here I will observe that the English scul ptor who should have amassed the most money from what physicians and lawyers call their " practice "

, was the elder Westmacott . Sir Richard flourished in the great era of Parliamentary votes for soldiers , seamen , and statesmen , and had more than three sculptors ' shares of the monuments voted by Parliament . What was Sir Richard Westmacott's property sworn under at his death ?

" St mommientum requiris" is Sir Christopher Wren ' s best monument ; a like inscription should have served for Guy , the founder of the noble hospital in London which bears his name . There were Guy governors , however , who , when Bacon was alive , thought otherwise ; and Bacon , at the cost of one thousand pounds ( prices of labourskilled or

other-, wise , I like to quote and see quoted ) made a monument to Guy , that , — " shouldering God's altar , " as it does ,- adds nothing to Guy ' s munificence of soul , or Bacon ' s fame as one of the greatest sculptors England has produced . PETER CuNNiHGiLUvr .

On The Arch And Arcades.

ON THE ARCH AND ARCADES .

( Continued from page 188 . ) It would occupy a great deal too much of our time were I to attempt to enumerate even the most conspicuous examples of this popular and pleasing feature , the arcade . Italy abounds in them . The city of Bologna , more than any other city in Europe , or perhaps in the world , is rendered remarkable by them : you may traverse

that large city in most directions wholly under their cover ; but perhaps one of the most singular arcades in existence is that which extends for upwards of two miles from one of the city gates up to a church built on the summit of a height overlooking the city . This arcade was built by the inhabitants in honour of the church to which it leads , and for the public use and benefit , at their own cost , each citizen contributing an arch .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1863-03-14, Page 3” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_14031863/page/3/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 1
CLASSICAL THEOLOGY.—LXII. Article 1
NEW MATERIALS FOR THE LIFE OF JOHN BACON. R.A. Article 2
ON THE ARCH AND ARCADES. Article 3
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 5
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
THE GRAND LODGE PROPERTY. Article 8
DR. KNIPE, BROS. A. F. A. WOODFORD AND MATTHEW COOKE. Article 8
ST. MARK'S LODGE (No 1159). Article 10
THE MASONIC MIRROR Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 14
PROVINCIAL. Article 15
SCOTLAND. Article 15
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
Poetry. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

New Materials For The Life Of John Bacon. R.A.

me to trouble you with this note ; as I am quite sure there could be no personal acquaintance that enabled Mr . Cunningham to estimate my father ' s character . Xt is now a quarter of a century since my father ' s name appeared in the Family Library . The writer has given him ciedit for eminent genius and ability in his professionbut has thrown out very ungenerous

, insinuations against his character ; which , I grant , ought to have been refuted at the time ; but I thought that I should only be brought into a profitless paper warfare , and that new statements , as foreign to truth as the first , would be put forth ; and I therefore allowed all to pass , without even a remonstrance .

I am willing to believe that the biographer , not inowing my father personally , was satisfied in taking much of his description from the sculptors in the Eoyal Academy , all of whom , at that time , were actuated by envy and disappointment at my father ' s celebrity and success iu his profession . But for this , no such statement could have been printed for the public eye as that he made an " audacious proposition to the Government to do all the national monump . nts

at a certain percentage below the Parliamentary price . '' All this I pronounce to be , with much more introduced at the same time , a gratuitous unqualified falsehood . I well recollect when the order came to my father to prepare designs for all the public monuments which the House of Commons , had voted for five of our naval commanders ; which order wasin

, like manner , sent to the other sculptors who were Eoyal Academicians . It is true that two out of the five were adjudged to my father , but quite unexpectedly to him ; nor would he have prejudiced his flame by daring , as the biographer calls it , to ask for more than his share .

I need not advert to the contempt which is cast over his religious opinions and habits . He was unfairly dealt with in this respect ; and if the world were not too ready to join in such scandal , it would be labour spent in vain . Believe me , & c , J . BACON . "

It is impossible to read this letter from a clever son , in defence of his father ' s memory , written five-andfifty years after his father ' s death , without a respect and regard for the filial reverence of the writer . What defence of my father , if any , I made , beyond a letter of acknowledgment , courtesy , and compliment , I cannot now remember .

The history of prices in art is instructive . For the Westminster Abbey " Chatham " monument , Bacon received six thousand pounds . I have seen the agreement , , dated 8 th March , 1779 . The monument was to he erected before the 25 th December , 17 S 3 , and Bacon fulfilled his engagement . This , at the time , was the hi

ghest sum ever given for a monument ; nor do I believe that it has been since exceeded by any public grant or subscription for a monument in marble , larger sums have since been received by sculptors in bronze . The late Matthew Cotes Wyatt had close on fifteen thousand pounds for the West End Wellington ;

"hantrey had , with money and gratuitously given gun ^ jetal , something like seven thousand pounds for the Cit y Wellington . What did Mr . Foley receive "in * u " for his Calcutta Lord Hardinge ? Was Bacon ' s wo thousand pounds , minus the much canvassed twoand-a-half per cent ., a large sum for the bronze King George III . and the bronze Father Thames in the court yard of Somerset House ? And was not Sir

New Materials For The Life Of John Bacon. R.A.

Richard Westmacott ' s alleged ten thousand pounds pay for the " Hyde Park Achilles , " the highest sum ever given for the mere reproduction in metal of any statue ? The present able Professor of Sculpture in the Eoyal Academy of Art ( Sir Richard Westmacott ' s son ) will perhaps kindly enlighten us on this point .

There are very few busts by Bacon ; but the few are fine in execution . His King George III ., at the Society of Antiquaries , has an indescribable excellence in it , unlike Nollekens and unlike Chantrey . There are duplicates of his " What George , what Third , " equally fine . The " carving" I can compare only with

the die-siukiug of Simon in the far-famed " Petition Crown " of Charles II . —that crown , the envy of all collectors of coins . My old friend Joseph Theaksione , of whom I have already made mention in this series of articles , for his unequalled skill in making marble look like satin or ermine , wrought under Bacon , and from his conversation while at work in Chantrey ' s studio , my father derived all he knew from " men " of Bacon as a man .

That Bacon should die worth " sixty thousand 230 imds , " without making busts , seems to me inexplicable ; and that Flaxman should die worth only " four thousand pounds" ( equally unproductive as he was of busts ) , seems to me incomprehensible . The money amassed by Nollekens and Chantrey , married , but

childless ( one greedy , the other grasping ) , I can . understand ; but I cannot see how Bacon acquired , by scul pture alone , the large sum he was unable to take with him . And here I will observe that the English scul ptor who should have amassed the most money from what physicians and lawyers call their " practice "

, was the elder Westmacott . Sir Richard flourished in the great era of Parliamentary votes for soldiers , seamen , and statesmen , and had more than three sculptors ' shares of the monuments voted by Parliament . What was Sir Richard Westmacott's property sworn under at his death ?

" St mommientum requiris" is Sir Christopher Wren ' s best monument ; a like inscription should have served for Guy , the founder of the noble hospital in London which bears his name . There were Guy governors , however , who , when Bacon was alive , thought otherwise ; and Bacon , at the cost of one thousand pounds ( prices of labourskilled or

other-, wise , I like to quote and see quoted ) made a monument to Guy , that , — " shouldering God's altar , " as it does ,- adds nothing to Guy ' s munificence of soul , or Bacon ' s fame as one of the greatest sculptors England has produced . PETER CuNNiHGiLUvr .

On The Arch And Arcades.

ON THE ARCH AND ARCADES .

( Continued from page 188 . ) It would occupy a great deal too much of our time were I to attempt to enumerate even the most conspicuous examples of this popular and pleasing feature , the arcade . Italy abounds in them . The city of Bologna , more than any other city in Europe , or perhaps in the world , is rendered remarkable by them : you may traverse

that large city in most directions wholly under their cover ; but perhaps one of the most singular arcades in existence is that which extends for upwards of two miles from one of the city gates up to a church built on the summit of a height overlooking the city . This arcade was built by the inhabitants in honour of the church to which it leads , and for the public use and benefit , at their own cost , each citizen contributing an arch .

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