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Charles Sargeant Jagger

Charles Sargeant Jagger MC ARA (17 December 1885 – 16 November 1934) was a British sculptor who, following active service in the First World War, sculpted many works on the theme of war. He is best known for his war memorials, especially the Royal Artillery Memorial at Hyde Park Corner and the Great Western Railway War Memorial in Paddington Railway Station. He also designed several other monuments around Britain and other parts of the world.

Charles Sargeant Jagger
Detail from Jagger's Royal Artillery Memorial
Born17 December 1885
Died16 November 1934 (aged 48)
London, England
EducationSheffield School of Art, Royal College of Art
Known forsculpture, relief
Notable workRoyal Artillery Memorial, London
Henry Mond, 2nd Baron Melchett
AwardsBritish Prix de Rome, Military Cross
Patron(s)Imperial War Graves Commission (now Commonwealth War Graves Commission)
Sentry by Charles Sargeant Jagger

Biography edit

Jagger was the son of a colliery manager, and was educated at Sheffield Royal Grammar School. At age 14 he became an apprentice metal engraver with the Sheffield firm Mappin & Webb.[1]

He studied at the Sheffield School of Art before moving to London to study sculpture at the Royal College of Art (1908–11) under Édouard Lantéri. Jagger worked as Lanteri's assistant, and also as instructor in modelling at the Lambeth School of Art. He counted among his friends William Reid Dick and William McMillan.[1] His early works dealt with classical and literary themes and were influenced by the New Sculpture movement in the focus on medievalism and on surface qualities.[2] His student work won him a travelling scholarship that made it possible for him to spend several months in Rome and Venice. In 1914 he won the British Prix de Rome.[3]

Both his elder sister, Edith, and his younger brother, David, were painters.

Military service edit

When war broke out in 1914, Jagger gave up his Rome scholarship to join the army. At first, Jagger joined the Artists' Rifles, and in 1915 he was commissioned in the Worcestershire Regiment. Jagger served in Gallipoli and on the Western Front, and was wounded three times. He was awarded the Military Cross for gallantry.

Work as a sculptor edit

Jagger's style tended towards realism, especially his portrayal of soldiers. The fashion at the time was for idealism and modernism in sculpture, but Jagger's figures were rugged and workman-like, earning him a reputation for 'realist' sculpture.[4] Although Jagger was commissioned as a sculptor of a variety of monuments, it is for his war memorials that he is chiefly remembered.

Whilst convalescing from war wounds in 1919, he began work on No Man's Land, a low relief which is today part of the Tate Collection.[5] It depicts a "listening post", a technique of trench warfare in which a soldier would hide among the corpses, broken stretchers and barbed wire of No Man's Land, in order to listen for the enemy.

 
The Royal Artillery Memorial

His Royal Artillery Memorial (1921–25) at Hyde Park Corner in London is one of his best-known works. It features a giant sculpture of a howitzer surrounded by four bronze soldiers and stone relief scenes, and is dedicated to casualties in the British Royal Regiment of Artillery in World War I.[1] When Jagger was commissioned to work on the Royal Artillery Memorial, he remarked to the Daily Express the "experience in the trenches persuaded me of the necessity for frankness and truth".[4]

Monumental works of the period used symbolic figures rather than actual depictions of soldiers. Furthermore, during the war years, a government edict had banned images of dead British soldiers. Jagger defied both these conventions by creating realistic bronze figures of three standing soldiers and the body of a dead soldier laid out and shrouded by a greatcoat.[4] The Gunner became the inspiration for a hero in the children's fantasy novel Stoneheart by Charlie Fletcher.

Jagger was made an Associate of the Royal Academy in 1926.

After the demand for war memorials had subsided, Jagger continued to receive important commissions and his works were increasingly influenced by Art Deco. Some of his works include allegorical stone figures at Imperial Chemical House, London (1928) and The Kelham Rood (1929).

In 1931 Jagger was commissioned by architect Edwin Lutyens to design a sculpture of Christ the King for the designs for Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral. The sculpture was never executed because Lutyens' design was extremely costly and funding for the building work ran out. A model of Lutyens' unrealised building is displayed in the Walker Art Gallery.[6][7] Jagger was also commissioned to provide sculptures of elephants and imperial lions for Lutyens' government buildings in New Delhi, India.

Jagger produced many smaller works, such as busts, statuettes, reliefs, and exhibited them at the Royal Academy in 1913–34, his work continued to be exhibited posthumously, including at the Glasgow Empire Exhibition in 1938.[1]

 
Charles Sargeant Jagger blue plaque in his home village of Kilnhurst, South Yorkshire (2018)

Charles Sargeant Jagger died suddenly from pneumonia on 16 November 1934. He was in the process of finishing a statue of George V for New Delhi at his death, and work on it was completed by William Reid Dick.[4] A documentary about Jagger's work and featuring this statue of George V was in the process of being filmed by Pathe. This was edited into a short two-minute filmic obituary which was released under the title An Unfinished Symphony in Stone.[4][8]

A touring memorial exhibition was organised by two of his chief patrons in 1935–36 (Freda, Lady Forres and Henry Mond, 2nd Baron Melchett). Two years later a second touring exhibition was arranged called Art of the Jagger Family, which featured sculptures by Charles Sargeant Jagger together with portraits by his brother, David (also highly successful), and landscapes and flower subjects by his sister, Edith.[4] Thereafter his reputation declined until 1985–86 when a large retrospective exhibition entitled War and Peace Sculpture was held at the Imperial War Museum, with the Mappin Art Gallery, Sheffield.[1]

A blue plaque was unveiled in his home village, Kilnhurst by the Rotherham District Civic Society in October 2018. A similar plaque was unveiled in 2000 at his London home, 67 Albert Bridge Road, Battersea.

Selected works edit

Jagger's major commissions include the following:[1]

London, United Kingdom
Work Date Image Description Location Notes
No Man's Land 1919–20   Bronze relief of a soldier hiding among the dead bodies, broken stretchers and barbed wire of No Man's Land at 'listening post'. Victoria & Albert Museum Original plaster had a verse: "O, little mighty band that stood for England That with our bodies for a living shield Guarded her slow awakening" (removed in the bronze). On loan from the Tate Collection [1]
Great Western Railway War Memorial 1922   Bronze statue of a soldier reading a letter from home Platform 1, Paddington Station To commemorate the founding of the Army Post Office Corps in 1882, its successor the Royal Engineers (Postal & Courier Services), commissioned Jill Tweed and Mike Smith to sculpt a life-size statue of Jagger's Great Western Railway War Memorial.[9] The statue entitled Letter from Home was unveiled at Inglis Barracks, Mill Hill, London on 16 July 1982 by Queen Elizabeth II.[10] In 2007 the statue was moved to RAF Northolt.
Royal Artillery Memorial 1925
 
 
 
 
 
Four bronze figures on Portland stone plinth Hyde Park Corner
Ernest Henry Shackleton 1927–32   Bronze figure mounted in wall alcove Royal Geographical Society The Ernest H. Shackleton Monument (The Victorian Web)
The Builder, Marine Transport, Agriculture and Chemistry 1928
 
 
 
 
Portland stone figure groups on 5th floor balustrade Imperial Chemical House, Millbank
St. George and Britannia 1928
 
 
Portland stone figures on entrance gate Thames House, Millbank
The Kelham Rood 1929   Bronze Crucifixion triptych group of Christ, Mary and Mary Magdalen St John the Divine, Kennington Originally sculpted for the chapel at Kelham Hall, Nottinghamshire
The Scandal Relief 1930   Bronze Art Deco relief of embracing figures with accompanying fire basket Victoria & Albert Museum Private commission from Henry Mond, 2nd Baron Melchett for the interior of Mulberry House, Smith Square, Westminster purchased by the museum for £106,000[11][12][13][14]
United Kingdom outside London
Work Date Image Description Location Notes
Torfrida c.1911 Torfrida Praying female figure Clifton Park Museum, Rotherham Torfrida (The Victorian Web)
Guildhall Square Cenotaph 1921
 
 
Two stone statues of machine gunners (Vickers and Lewis guns) Guildhall Square, Portsmouth
Sculpture of a Sentry 1921   Bronze soldier wearing greatcoat and helmet, holding a bayonet Watts Warehouse (now the Britannia Hotel), Manchester A maquette of the Manchester Sentry can also be seen at the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool
Bedford War Memorial 1921   Stone figure of the Anglo Saxon Lady Athelflaed, ruler of Mercia, vanquishing a dragon Bedford The monument stands on the Embankment opposite Rothsay Gardens[15]
Hoylake and West Kirby War Memorial 1922
 
 
Two 3m bronze figures against an 11.5m granite obelisk - hooded woman and infantry soldier holding a bayonet rifle Grange Hill, Hoylake, Merseyside The soldier's bayonet has been removed due to previous vandalism, but is reinstated annually for the Armistice Day Memorial Service.[16]
Brimington War Memorial 1921   Marble Britannia figure, winged helmet, sword and shield; shield decorated with lion, scales and wreath Church of St Michael and All Angels, Brimington, Derbyshire The figure originally stood on a plinth which was later stolen [17]
Monument to Charles Pelham, Lord Worsley 1914   Marble relief of Lord Worsley kneeling at prayer All Saints Church, Brocklesby, Lincolnshire Monument is in the 17th century style to complement the adjacent Pelham family tomb of 1629[18][19]
Christ the King 1931 Maquette for Lutyens' model of his proposal for Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral Liverpool Commissioned by Sir Edwin Lutyens and intended for the top of the west front; not executed, but several posthumous metal casts exist.[20] Lutyens' model is at the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool
Worldwide
Work Date Image Description Location Notes
Anglo-Belgian Memorial 1923   Sculptures of a British and Belgian soldier side by side with reliefs either side Brussels, Belgium Casts of the reliefs are held at the Imperial War Museum, London
Nieuport Memorial 1928
 
 
 
Three stone lions standing guard around a cenotaph Nieuwpoort, Belgium Memorial commemorates 566 soldiers from the Antwerp Expedition of October 1914 and subsequent battles in the area in July 1917.[21]
Cambrai Memorial 1928
 
 
Two stone reliefs depicting soldiers fighting and carrying the wounded in the trenches Louverval Military Cemetery, Cambrai, France Memorial commemorates over 7000 servicemen of the United Kingdom and South Africa who died in the Battle of Cambrai in November and December 1917[22]
Port Tewfik Memorial 1926   Two crouching tiger sculptures guarded the memorial Originally at Port Tewfik (or Port Taufiq), Suez Canal, Egypt Jagger's work was destroyed in the Israeli-Egyptian fighting (date uncertain); the memorial was relocated to the Heliopolis War Cemetery.[23]
Shrine of Remembrance 1927–34
 
 
 
Two bronze soldiers - Driver holding a horse bridle, and British infantry soldier standing guard with rifle and bayonet. Melbourne, Australia The "Wipers" figure is a re-casting of the soldier from the Hoylake and West Kirby memorial, and the "Driver" is a re-casting from the Royal Artillery Memorial in London.[24]
Viceroy's House and the Jaipur Column 1929
 
 
Mughal-style Elephants in the outer walls; bas-reliefs on the Jaipur Column New Delhi, India Commissioned by Sir Edwin Lutyens[25]
Lord Reading statue 1920s   Statue of Lord Reading, Viceroy of India (1921-1926). Reading, England One of the statues commissioned from Jagger by Lutyens for New Delhi, later moved to Eldon Square gardens in Reading in 1971.[26]
Lord Hardinge statue 1928   Statue of Lord Hardinge of Penshurst, Viceroy of India (1910-1916). New Delhi, India One of the statues commissioned from Jagger by Lutyens for New Delhi, later moved to Coronation Park.[26][27]
George V statue 1936   Large statue of King George V wearing his robes for the Delhi Durbar of 1911 New Delhi, India Unfinished at the time of Jagger's death in 1934, this statue was completed by William Reid Dick and was originally erected in 1936 under a Lutyens-designed canopy at the India Gate arch. It was moved in 1968 to Coronation Park.[28][29]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f ed. Alan Windsor (1988), British Sculptors of the Twentieth Century, Ashgate Publishing {{citation}}: |author= has generic name (help) ISBN 1-85928-456-6
  2. ^ "Jagger, Charles Sargeant". Grove Art online. 2007. Retrieved 9 July 2007.
  3. ^ "Jagger, (Charles) Sargeant". Grove Art online. 2007. Retrieved 9 July 2007.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Ann Compton (1985), The Sculpture of Charles Sargeant Jagger, Ashgate Publishing, ISBN 0-85331-864-6
  5. ^ "No Man's Land 1919-20". Tate. 1 August 2004. Retrieved 9 July 2007.
  6. ^ The Very Greatest Building that was never Built 11 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine (sourced from Findarticles.com)
  7. ^ Transcript of audio download of 'Lutyen's Cathedral' talk 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine by Paul O'Keeffe
  8. ^ An Unfinished Symphony in Stone (FLV) (Motion picture). London, United Kingdom: British Pathé. 28 January 1935. Pathé PT 253, FILM ID: 1110.20, MEDIA URN: 38633. Retrieved 24 March 2020. (00:02:26)
  9. ^ . PCS Branch Royal Engineers Association. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 29 August 2015.
  10. ^ "Court Circular." Times [London, England] 17 July 1982: 10. The Times Digital Archive. accessed 28 August 2015
  11. ^ ""On display, the sculpture that revealed an aristocrat's guilty secret" by Arifa Akba, The Independent, 18 April 2009". Independent.co.uk. 17 April 2009. from the original on 22 April 2009. Retrieved 19 April 2009.
  12. ^ https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-5013726
  13. ^ https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/mulberry-house-menage-a-trois-scandal-house-in-westminster-goes-on-sale-for-ps25m-10286032.html
  14. ^ http://www.vam.ac.uk/content/articles/t/the-scandal-relief/
  15. ^ Daniel Stannard/Bedfordshire County Council (2007). (PDF). Bedfordshire Buildings and Monuments. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 November 2007. Retrieved 4 November 2007.
  16. ^ Public Monument and Sculpture Association. . National Recording Project. Archived from the original on 21 May 2010. Retrieved 3 November 2007.
  17. ^ Douglas Spencer (2002). . Archived from the original on 23 January 2008. Retrieved 3 November 2007.
  18. ^ The Church Monuments Society. . Archived from the original on 13 August 2007. Retrieved 3 November 2007.
  19. ^ Peter Fairweather. . Archived from the original on 15 June 2007. Retrieved 3 November 2007.
  20. ^ Julian Treuherz. . Apollo Magazine. Archived from the original on 11 May 2008. Retrieved 3 November 2007.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 October 2007. Retrieved 2 November 2007.
  22. ^ "Louverval Military Cemetery". from the original on 7 November 2007. Retrieved 2 November 2007.
  23. ^ Commonwealth War Graves Commission. "Heliopolis (Port Tewfik) Memorial". from the original on 31 January 2018. Retrieved 31 October 2007.
  24. ^ (PDF). Shrine of Remembrance Education Program. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 August 2007. Retrieved 9 July 2007.
  25. ^ Christopher Hussey (1953), The Life of Sir Edwin Lutyens, Antique Collectors' Club ISBN 0-907462-59-6
  26. ^ a b Johnson, David A. (2016). "The Great War's impact on imperial Delhi: commemorating wartime sacrifice in the colonial built environment". In Walsh, Michael J.K.; Varnava, Andrekos (eds.). The Great War and the British Empire: Culture and society. Taylor & Francis. p. 255. ISBN 9781317029830.
  27. ^ ""Charles, Baron Hardinge of Penshurst" by Charles Sargeant Jagger". Victorian Web. from the original on 15 September 2020. Retrieved 11 February 2021.
  28. ^ ""George V" by Charles Sargent Jagger". Victorian Web. from the original on 18 December 2020. Retrieved 11 February 2021.
  29. ^ McGarr, Paul (2015). "The Viceroys are Disappearing from the Roundabouts in Delhi: British symbols of power in post-colonial India". Modern Asian Studies. 49 (3): 787–831. doi:10.1017/s0026749x14000080.

Further reading edit

  • Compton, Ann, ed. (1985), Charles Sargeant Jagger: War and Peace Sculpture, Imperial War Museum, ISBN 0-901627-31-3 (exhibition catalogue)
  • Compton, Ann (2004), The Sculpture of Charles Sargeant Jagger, Ashgate Publishing, ISBN 0-85331-864-6
  • Penny, Nicholas (November 1981). "English Sculpture and the First World War". Oxford Art Journal. 4 (2): 36–42. doi:10.1093/oxartj/4.2.36.

External links edit

  • An Unfinished Symphony in Stone (Pathé, 00:02:26) - a short film about Jagger's work on the sculpture of King George V
  • Great Western Railway War Memorial - York University Institute of Railway Studies and Transport History
  • . Your Archives. National Archives. Archived from the original on 10 June 2007. Retrieved 6 August 2017. - extensive summary of works on the National Archives wiki
  • - the Jagger's Brussels Monument (Dutch language)
  • No Man's Land in the Tate Collection (with biography)
  • . Sculpture. Victoria and Albert Museum. Archived from the original on 13 March 2009. Retrieved 11 June 2008.
  • Profile on Royal Academy of Arts Collections

charles, sargeant, jagger, december, 1885, november, 1934, british, sculptor, following, active, service, first, world, sculpted, many, works, theme, best, known, memorials, especially, royal, artillery, memorial, hyde, park, corner, great, western, railway, m. Charles Sargeant Jagger MC ARA 17 December 1885 16 November 1934 was a British sculptor who following active service in the First World War sculpted many works on the theme of war He is best known for his war memorials especially the Royal Artillery Memorial at Hyde Park Corner and the Great Western Railway War Memorial in Paddington Railway Station He also designed several other monuments around Britain and other parts of the world Charles Sargeant JaggerDetail from Jagger s Royal Artillery MemorialBorn17 December 1885Kilnhurst Rotherham Yorkshire EnglandDied16 November 1934 aged 48 London EnglandEducationSheffield School of Art Royal College of ArtKnown forsculpture reliefNotable workRoyal Artillery Memorial LondonHenry Mond 2nd Baron MelchettAwardsBritish Prix de Rome Military CrossPatron s Imperial War Graves Commission now Commonwealth War Graves Commission Sentry by Charles Sargeant Jagger Contents 1 Biography 2 Military service 3 Work as a sculptor 4 Selected works 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiography editJagger was the son of a colliery manager and was educated at Sheffield Royal Grammar School At age 14 he became an apprentice metal engraver with the Sheffield firm Mappin amp Webb 1 He studied at the Sheffield School of Art before moving to London to study sculpture at the Royal College of Art 1908 11 under Edouard Lanteri Jagger worked as Lanteri s assistant and also as instructor in modelling at the Lambeth School of Art He counted among his friends William Reid Dick and William McMillan 1 His early works dealt with classical and literary themes and were influenced by the New Sculpture movement in the focus on medievalism and on surface qualities 2 His student work won him a travelling scholarship that made it possible for him to spend several months in Rome and Venice In 1914 he won the British Prix de Rome 3 Both his elder sister Edith and his younger brother David were painters Military service editWhen war broke out in 1914 Jagger gave up his Rome scholarship to join the army At first Jagger joined the Artists Rifles and in 1915 he was commissioned in the Worcestershire Regiment Jagger served in Gallipoli and on the Western Front and was wounded three times He was awarded the Military Cross for gallantry Work as a sculptor editJagger s style tended towards realism especially his portrayal of soldiers The fashion at the time was for idealism and modernism in sculpture but Jagger s figures were rugged and workman like earning him a reputation for realist sculpture 4 Although Jagger was commissioned as a sculptor of a variety of monuments it is for his war memorials that he is chiefly remembered Whilst convalescing from war wounds in 1919 he began work on No Man s Land a low relief which is today part of the Tate Collection 5 It depicts a listening post a technique of trench warfare in which a soldier would hide among the corpses broken stretchers and barbed wire of No Man s Land in order to listen for the enemy nbsp The Royal Artillery MemorialHis Royal Artillery Memorial 1921 25 at Hyde Park Corner in London is one of his best known works It features a giant sculpture of a howitzer surrounded by four bronze soldiers and stone relief scenes and is dedicated to casualties in the British Royal Regiment of Artillery in World War I 1 When Jagger was commissioned to work on the Royal Artillery Memorial he remarked to the Daily Express the experience in the trenches persuaded me of the necessity for frankness and truth 4 Monumental works of the period used symbolic figures rather than actual depictions of soldiers Furthermore during the war years a government edict had banned images of dead British soldiers Jagger defied both these conventions by creating realistic bronze figures of three standing soldiers and the body of a dead soldier laid out and shrouded by a greatcoat 4 The Gunner became the inspiration for a hero in the children s fantasy novel Stoneheart by Charlie Fletcher Jagger was made an Associate of the Royal Academy in 1926 After the demand for war memorials had subsided Jagger continued to receive important commissions and his works were increasingly influenced by Art Deco Some of his works include allegorical stone figures at Imperial Chemical House London 1928 and The Kelham Rood 1929 In 1931 Jagger was commissioned by architect Edwin Lutyens to design a sculpture of Christ the King for the designs for Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral The sculpture was never executed because Lutyens design was extremely costly and funding for the building work ran out A model of Lutyens unrealised building is displayed in the Walker Art Gallery 6 7 Jagger was also commissioned to provide sculptures of elephants and imperial lions for Lutyens government buildings in New Delhi India Jagger produced many smaller works such as busts statuettes reliefs and exhibited them at the Royal Academy in 1913 34 his work continued to be exhibited posthumously including at the Glasgow Empire Exhibition in 1938 1 nbsp Charles Sargeant Jagger blue plaque in his home village of Kilnhurst South Yorkshire 2018 Charles Sargeant Jagger died suddenly from pneumonia on 16 November 1934 He was in the process of finishing a statue of George V for New Delhi at his death and work on it was completed by William Reid Dick 4 A documentary about Jagger s work and featuring this statue of George V was in the process of being filmed by Pathe This was edited into a short two minute filmic obituary which was released under the title An Unfinished Symphony in Stone 4 8 A touring memorial exhibition was organised by two of his chief patrons in 1935 36 Freda Lady Forres and Henry Mond 2nd Baron Melchett Two years later a second touring exhibition was arranged called Art of the Jagger Family which featured sculptures by Charles Sargeant Jagger together with portraits by his brother David also highly successful and landscapes and flower subjects by his sister Edith 4 Thereafter his reputation declined until 1985 86 when a large retrospective exhibition entitled War and Peace Sculpture was held at the Imperial War Museum with the Mappin Art Gallery Sheffield 1 A blue plaque was unveiled in his home village Kilnhurst by the Rotherham District Civic Society in October 2018 A similar plaque was unveiled in 2000 at his London home 67 Albert Bridge Road Battersea Selected works editJagger s major commissions include the following 1 London United KingdomWork Date Image Description Location NotesNo Man s Land 1919 20 nbsp Bronze relief of a soldier hiding among the dead bodies broken stretchers and barbed wire of No Man s Land at listening post Victoria amp Albert Museum Original plaster had a verse O little mighty band that stood for England That with our bodies for a living shield Guarded her slow awakening removed in the bronze On loan from the Tate Collection 1 Great Western Railway War Memorial 1922 nbsp Bronze statue of a soldier reading a letter from home Platform 1 Paddington Station To commemorate the founding of the Army Post Office Corps in 1882 its successor the Royal Engineers Postal amp Courier Services commissioned Jill Tweed and Mike Smith to sculpt a life size statue of Jagger s Great Western Railway War Memorial 9 The statue entitled Letter from Home was unveiled at Inglis Barracks Mill Hill London on 16 July 1982 by Queen Elizabeth II 10 In 2007 the statue was moved to RAF Northolt Royal Artillery Memorial 1925 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Four bronze figures on Portland stone plinth Hyde Park CornerErnest Henry Shackleton 1927 32 nbsp Bronze figure mounted in wall alcove Royal Geographical Society The Ernest H Shackleton Monument The Victorian Web The Builder Marine Transport AgricultureandChemistry 1928 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Portland stone figure groups on 5th floor balustrade Imperial Chemical House MillbankSt George and Britannia 1928 nbsp nbsp Portland stone figures on entrance gate Thames House MillbankThe Kelham Rood 1929 nbsp Bronze Crucifixion triptych group of Christ Mary and Mary Magdalen St John the Divine Kennington Originally sculpted for the chapel at Kelham Hall NottinghamshireThe Scandal Relief 1930 nbsp Bronze Art Deco relief of embracing figures with accompanying fire basket Victoria amp Albert Museum Private commission from Henry Mond 2nd Baron Melchett for the interior of Mulberry House Smith Square Westminster purchased by the museum for 106 000 11 12 13 14 United Kingdom outside LondonWork Date Image Description Location NotesTorfrida c 1911 Torfrida Praying female figure Clifton Park Museum Rotherham Torfrida The Victorian Web Guildhall Square Cenotaph 1921 nbsp nbsp Two stone statues of machine gunners Vickers and Lewis guns Guildhall Square Portsmouth 2 Sculpture of a Sentry 1921 nbsp Bronze soldier wearing greatcoat and helmet holding a bayonet Watts Warehouse now the Britannia Hotel Manchester A maquette of the Manchester Sentry can also be seen at the Walker Art Gallery LiverpoolBedford War Memorial 1921 nbsp Stone figure of the Anglo Saxon Lady Athelflaed ruler of Mercia vanquishing a dragon Bedford The monument stands on the Embankment opposite Rothsay Gardens 15 Hoylake and West Kirby War Memorial 1922 nbsp nbsp Two 3m bronze figures against an 11 5m granite obelisk hooded woman and infantry soldier holding a bayonet rifle Grange Hill Hoylake Merseyside The soldier s bayonet has been removed due to previous vandalism but is reinstated annually for the Armistice Day Memorial Service 16 Brimington War Memorial 1921 nbsp Marble Britannia figure winged helmet sword and shield shield decorated with lion scales and wreath Church of St Michael and All Angels Brimington Derbyshire The figure originally stood on a plinth which was later stolen 17 Monument to Charles Pelham Lord Worsley 1914 nbsp Marble relief of Lord Worsley kneeling at prayer All Saints Church Brocklesby Lincolnshire Monument is in the 17th century style to complement the adjacent Pelham family tomb of 1629 18 19 Christ the King 1931 Maquette for Lutyens model of his proposal for Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral Liverpool Commissioned by Sir Edwin Lutyens and intended for the top of the west front not executed but several posthumous metal casts exist 20 Lutyens model is at the Walker Art Gallery LiverpoolWorldwideWork Date Image Description Location NotesAnglo Belgian Memorial 1923 nbsp Sculptures of a British and Belgian soldier side by side with reliefs either side Brussels Belgium Casts of the reliefs are held at the Imperial War Museum LondonNieuport Memorial 1928 nbsp nbsp nbsp Three stone lions standing guard around a cenotaph Nieuwpoort Belgium Memorial commemorates 566 soldiers from the Antwerp Expedition of October 1914 and subsequent battles in the area in July 1917 21 Cambrai Memorial 1928 nbsp nbsp Two stone reliefs depicting soldiers fighting and carrying the wounded in the trenches Louverval Military Cemetery Cambrai France Memorial commemorates over 7000 servicemen of the United Kingdom and South Africa who died in the Battle of Cambrai in November and December 1917 22 Port Tewfik Memorial 1926 nbsp Two crouching tiger sculptures guarded the memorial Originally at Port Tewfik or Port Taufiq Suez Canal Egypt Jagger s work was destroyed in the Israeli Egyptian fighting date uncertain the memorial was relocated to the Heliopolis War Cemetery 23 Shrine of Remembrance 1927 34 nbsp nbsp nbsp Two bronze soldiers Driver holding a horse bridle and British infantry soldier standing guard with rifle and bayonet Melbourne Australia The Wipers figure is a re casting of the soldier from the Hoylake and West Kirby memorial and the Driver is a re casting from the Royal Artillery Memorial in London 24 Viceroy s House and the Jaipur Column 1929 nbsp nbsp Mughal style Elephants in the outer walls bas reliefs on the Jaipur Column New Delhi India Commissioned by Sir Edwin Lutyens 25 Lord Reading statue 1920s nbsp Statue of Lord Reading Viceroy of India 1921 1926 Reading England One of the statues commissioned from Jagger by Lutyens for New Delhi later moved to Eldon Square gardens in Reading in 1971 26 Lord Hardinge statue 1928 nbsp Statue of Lord Hardinge of Penshurst Viceroy of India 1910 1916 New Delhi India One of the statues commissioned from Jagger by Lutyens for New Delhi later moved to Coronation Park 26 27 George V statue 1936 nbsp Large statue of King George V wearing his robes for the Delhi Durbar of 1911 New Delhi India Unfinished at the time of Jagger s death in 1934 this statue was completed by William Reid Dick and was originally erected in 1936 under a Lutyens designed canopy at the India Gate arch It was moved in 1968 to Coronation Park 28 29 References edit a b c d e f ed Alan Windsor 1988 British Sculptors of the Twentieth Century Ashgate Publishing a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a author has generic name help ISBN 1 85928 456 6 Jagger Charles Sargeant Grove Art online 2007 Retrieved 9 July 2007 Jagger Charles Sargeant Grove Art online 2007 Retrieved 9 July 2007 a b c d e f Ann Compton 1985 The Sculpture of Charles Sargeant Jagger Ashgate Publishing ISBN 0 85331 864 6 No Man s Land 1919 20 Tate 1 August 2004 Retrieved 9 July 2007 The Very Greatest Building that was never Built Archived 11 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine sourced from Findarticles com Transcript of audio download of Lutyen s Cathedral talk Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine by Paul O Keeffe An Unfinished Symphony in Stone FLV Motion picture London United Kingdom British Pathe 28 January 1935 Pathe PT 253 FILM ID 1110 20 MEDIA URN 38633 Retrieved 24 March 2020 00 02 26 Letter from Home PCS Branch Royal Engineers Association Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 29 August 2015 Court Circular Times London England 17 July 1982 10 The Times Digital Archive accessed 28 August 2015 On display the sculpture that revealed an aristocrat s guilty secret by Arifa Akba The Independent 18 April 2009 Independent co uk 17 April 2009 Archived from the original on 22 April 2009 Retrieved 19 April 2009 https www christies com en lot lot 5013726 https www standard co uk news london mulberry house menage a trois scandal house in westminster goes on sale for ps25m 10286032 html http www vam ac uk content articles t the scandal relief Daniel Stannard Bedfordshire County Council 2007 The First World War Memorial Bedford PDF Bedfordshire Buildings and Monuments Archived from the original PDF on 27 November 2007 Retrieved 4 November 2007 Public Monument and Sculpture Association War Memorial Hoylake and West Kirby War Memorial National Recording Project Archived from the original on 21 May 2010 Retrieved 3 November 2007 Douglas Spencer 2002 A history and guide of St Michael amp All Angels Archived from the original on 23 January 2008 Retrieved 3 November 2007 The Church Monuments Society Lincolnshire Brocklesby All Saints Archived from the original on 13 August 2007 Retrieved 3 November 2007 Peter Fairweather All Saints Church Brocklesby and the Church of St Peter Great Limber Archived from the original on 15 June 2007 Retrieved 3 November 2007 Julian Treuherz The very greatest building that was never built Apollo Magazine Archived from the original on 11 May 2008 Retrieved 3 November 2007 The Belgian Front Line Nieuwpoort 1914 Archived from the original on 19 October 2007 Retrieved 2 November 2007 Louverval Military Cemetery Archived from the original on 7 November 2007 Retrieved 2 November 2007 Commonwealth War Graves Commission Heliopolis Port Tewfik Memorial Archived from the original on 31 January 2018 Retrieved 31 October 2007 The Driver and Wipers Memorial PDF Shrine of Remembrance Education Program Archived from the original PDF on 28 August 2007 Retrieved 9 July 2007 Christopher Hussey 1953 The Life of Sir Edwin Lutyens Antique Collectors Club ISBN 0 907462 59 6 a b Johnson David A 2016 The Great War s impact on imperial Delhi commemorating wartime sacrifice in the colonial built environment In Walsh Michael J K Varnava Andrekos eds The Great War and the British Empire Culture and society Taylor amp Francis p 255 ISBN 9781317029830 Charles Baron Hardinge of Penshurst by Charles Sargeant Jagger Victorian Web Archived from the original on 15 September 2020 Retrieved 11 February 2021 George V by Charles Sargent Jagger Victorian Web Archived from the original on 18 December 2020 Retrieved 11 February 2021 McGarr Paul 2015 The Viceroys are Disappearing from the Roundabouts in Delhi British symbols of power in post colonial India Modern Asian Studies 49 3 787 831 doi 10 1017 s0026749x14000080 Borough of Bedford Bedfordshire Archived 8 July 2011 at the Wayback MachineFurther reading editCompton Ann ed 1985 Charles Sargeant Jagger War and Peace Sculpture Imperial War Museum ISBN 0 901627 31 3 exhibition catalogue Compton Ann 2004 The Sculpture of Charles Sargeant Jagger Ashgate Publishing ISBN 0 85331 864 6 Penny Nicholas November 1981 English Sculpture and the First World War Oxford Art Journal 4 2 36 42 doi 10 1093 oxartj 4 2 36 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles Sargeant Jagger An Unfinished Symphony in Stone Pathe 00 02 26 a short film about Jagger s work on the sculpture of King George V Great Western Railway War Memorial York University Institute of Railway Studies and Transport History Charles Sargeant Jagger Sculptor 1885 1934 Your Archives National Archives Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 6 August 2017 extensive summary of works on the National Archives wiki Brits Oorlogsmonument Monument britannique the Jagger s Brussels Monument Dutch language No Man s Land in the Tate Collection with biography The Scandal Relief Sculpture Victoria and Albert Museum Archived from the original on 13 March 2009 Retrieved 11 June 2008 Profile on Royal Academy of Arts Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Sargeant Jagger amp oldid 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