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David Watson Stevenson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Robert Burns statue, Bernard Street, Leith, 1898, by David Watson Stevenson
Wallace on the Wallace Monument
John MacMillan, Master of the Merchant Company, Edinburgh in 1899, by David Watson Stevenson 1901
Mary Queen of Scots by D W Stevenson, Scott Monument, Edinburgh

David Watson Stephenson (25 March 1842 – 18 March 1904) was a Scottish sculptor, executing portraits and monuments in marble and bronze.

Biography

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Stevenson was born in Ratho, Midlothian, Scotland, on 25 March 1842, the son of William Stevenson and Margaret Kay.[1] He studied at the Trustees' Academy, Edinburgh. From 1860 he took an eight-year apprenticeship under the sculptor William Brodie.[2]

He won the South Kensington National Prize for student sculpture with a statuette of the Venus de Milo and completed his studies in Rome, Italy.[3]

He worked as assistant to Sir John Steell on the Prince Albert Monument forming the centrepiece of Charlotte Square in Edinburgh.[2] Here he added figures of "Science & Learning" and "Labour" on the corners.[4] He became known for his portrait sculptures executed in marble and bronze. His best known and most iconic work is the 1869 bronze figure of William Wallace on the Wallace Monument near Stirling.[2]

He became a member of the Royal Scottish Academy.[5] He lived in a townhouse at 2 Castle Terrace facing onto St Cuthbert's Churchyard at the west end of Princes Street.[6]

Stevenson died on 18 March 1904, aged 61. He is buried with his younger brother, William Grant Stevenson, also a sculptor, in the south-west section of Grange Cemetery in Edinburgh. The bronze portrait relief head of William on the monument was sculpted by Henry Snell Gamley.

Works

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Stevenson's most loved and publicly seen statue is the figure of William Wallace on the Wallace Monument in Stirling.[7] This fine statue should not be confused with the far cruder, modern statue near the visitor centre, but stands on the side of the monument itself.

Stevenson made the figures of Mary, Queen of Scots, James VI of Scotland and Halbert Glendinning on the Scott Monument, Edinburgh (1874); the Henry Bolckow Monument, Middlesbrough (1881); Robert Tannahill, Paisley (1884) and (Mary Campbell (Highland Mary)), Dunoon (1896).[2] His sculptures of Sir John Steell a fellow sculptor (1887) and Napier of Murchiston (1898) are held in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery.[4] He also created five of the multiple statues on the exterior of the Portrait Gallery: James Hutton; John Napier; King James VI; James Campbell and Adam Duncan.

He created the Saracen Fountain in cast iron for the Kelvingrove International Exhibition of 1901. It was later moved to Alexandra Park, Glasgow.[2] This included a repeat of three figures from an earlier monument to John Platt (MP) in Oldham (1878). Copies were made for Town Hall Park in Warrington (destroyed 1942) and the Sammy Marks Zoological Gardens in Pretoria, South Africa.

In 1868, he created the impressive Celtic cross as a memorial to Horatio McCulloch on his grave in Warriston Cemetery.

In 1884, he created the statue of Hygieia with Thomas Bonnar's classical "St Bernard's Well" in Stockbridge, Edinburgh.

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References

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  1. ^ "Church registers – Old Parish Registers Births and baptisms" (PDF). ScotlandsPeople. Scotland, UK: National Records of Scotland. 25/03/1842 STEVENS, DAVID (Old Parish Registers Births 698/A 30 59 Ratho) Page 59 of 193. Retrieved 6 June 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e "David Watson Stephenson (1842–1904)". Glasgow Sculpture. Retrieved 9 March 2014.
  3. ^ Glasgow City of Sculpture: Stevenson
  4. ^ a b "The Character Statues".
  5. ^ "David Watson Stevenson RSA". Sculpture.gla.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 9 March 2014.
  6. ^ Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1889–90
  7. ^ "David Watson Stevenson RSA – Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Britain and Ireland 1851–1951". Archived from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 9 March 2014.
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