In Tate Britain
Biography
James Havard Thomas (22 December 1854 – 6 June 1921) was a Bristol-born sculptor active in London and Capri. He became the first Chair of Sculpture at the Slade School of Art in London. He was known for his painstakingly precise sculptures resulting from elaborate and time-consuming processes for achieving sculptural realism. He emerged from the same roots as the "New Sculpture" in Britain, and his career runs parallel to (and in dialogue with) that movement.
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Read full Wikipedia entryArtworks
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James Havard Thomas Mrs Asher Wertheimer
1907 -
James Havard Thomas Lycidas
1902–8 -
James Havard Thomas The Offering
c.1908 -
James Havard Thomas Cow and Calf
1897 -
James Havard Thomas Irrigators, Southern Italy
c.1899–1906 -
James Havard Thomas Cardinal Manning
1876–86 -
James Havard Thomas Thyrsis
1912 -
James Havard Thomas Castagnettes No. 2
1900
Artist as subject
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Sir William Rothenstein James Havard Thomas
1920 -
James Kerr-Lawson J. Havard Thomas Asleep
1910