Estonian-Scottish sculptor
Benno Schotz
(28 August 1891 ? 11 October 1984) was an Estonian-born Scottish sculptor, and one of Scotland's leading artists during the twentieth century.
Biography
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Early life
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Schotz was the youngest of six children of
Jewish
parents, Jacob Schotz, a watchmaker, and Cherna Tischa Abramovitch.
[1]
He was educated at the Boys Grammar School of
Parnu
,
Estonia
. Later he studied at the
Grossherzogliche Technische Hochschule
in
Darmstadt
, Germany.
In 1912, he immigrated to Glasgow, where he gained an engineering diploma from the
Royal Technical College
. From 1914 to 1923 he worked in the drawing office of
John Brown & Company
,
Clydebank
shipbuilders
, while attending evening classes in sculpture at the
Glasgow School of Art
.
[2]
Artistic career
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Schotz became a full-time sculptor in 1923. An important early patron was the Dundee art collector William Boyd, thanks to whose influence both Dundee Dental School and Dundee Art Galleries & Museums hold pieces by him.
[3]
From this point onwards his reputation grew and he became a full member of the
Royal Scottish Academy
, head of sculpture at the Glasgow School of Art (a post he held from 1938 until his retirement in 1961), and eventually was appointed the
Sculptor in Ordinary for Scotland
in 1963. His pupils included the artists
Hannah Frank
, Stewart Bowman Johnson, and
Inge King (nee Neufeld)
.
His homes at West Campbell Street and later Kirklee Road were a focus for meetings of artists, writers, actors, and politicians. He was a member of the
Glasgow Art Club
.
[4]
He helped refugees including
Jankel Adler
and
Josef Herman
.
He was a committed
Zionist
, and also proud of his adopted
Scotland
. He worked until a few weeks before his death at the age of 93. He was buried in
Jerusalem
.
He was made a Freeman of the City of Glasgow in 1981. In that year, Gordon Wright published his autobiography,
Bronze in My Blood
.
Work
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During his career, Schotz produced several hundred portraits and compositions including figure compositions, religious sculptures, semi-abstracts, and modelled portraits. His bust of
James Maxton
is on public display at the Maxton remembrance garden in
Barrhead
near
Paisley
. Other publicly accessible work includes:
- Memorial to Provost
John Jarvie
of
Kilsyth
, first freeman of the burgh, commissioned in 1954 is a portrait in relief and can be seen in John Jarvie Square, off East Burnside Street,
Kilsyth
.
[5]
- The Psalmist
(1974) in the
T. J. Honeyman
Memorial Garden of
Kelvingrove Park
,
- the
Joseph Black
Memorial
(1953) at the
University of Glasgow
,
- the statues of Saints Margaret and Ninian on the front of the 1929-31 (former) Bank of Scotland building on Sauchiehall St,
- the
Painting
and
Sculpture
reliefs on the
Mercat Building
(1928?29) and
- the
Stations of the Cross
sculptures in
St. Charles' Parish Church
North Kelvinside
.
- the Crucifix in
St Columba's Church, Woodside
, Glasgow
- Ex Terra
in
Glenrothes
town centre next to the bus station
- bust of
James Pittendrigh Macgillivray
,
Scottish National Portrait Gallery
(1924)
- busts of William Boyd, Mrs William Rettie, and William Tattersall in Dundee Dental Hospital & School, University of Dundee
[3]
- a bust of William Boyd's daughter Joan at The McManus: Dundee's Art Gallery & Museum
- bust of
Keir Hardie
,
People's Palace, Glasgow
[6]
- eleven foot high sculpture 'The Window on the World', Vale of Leven Academy Alexandria.
The majority of these works were in Glasgow and the surrounding area. He was responsible for the repair of the bridge sculpture at Kelvingrove Park beside the now refurbished art gallery and museum.
Although Benno Schotz is frequently referred to as an Estonian sculptor, all his professional life was in Scotland. He became a naturalised British subject in 1930.
He became a full member of the Royal Scottish Academy, in 1937. He headed the Sculpture and Ceramics dept. of the Glasgow School of Art from 1938 until his retirement in 1960. His active life as a sculptor continued thereafter with renewed vigor and he created his most ambitious and monumental works over the next 20 years.
In 1963, he was appointed The Sculptor in Ordinary for Scotland, a member of the Royal household.
A major retrospective exhibition of his works (1971) was held at the Royal Scottish Academy, Edinburgh.
His interest in the drawing of trees developed, with the drawings becoming more and more complex and abstract. He mounted a successful exhibition of Sculptures and Related Drawings in Glasgow (1961). His last sculpture was executed less than six weeks before his death, aged 93.
He was Life-President of the Royal Glasgow Institute of the Fine Arts.
Honors include: Freedom of the City of Glasgow; Honorary Fellow of The Hebrew University; Honorary LL.D, Strathclyde University; Honorary Member of the British Society of British Sculptors; Honorary Member of the Royal Institute of Architects in Scotland.
Source: his daughter, Mrs. S. C. Crome, and son, Mr. A. M Schotz.
Books
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- Schotz, Benno (1981).
Bronze in my blood : the memoirs of Benno Schotz
. Edinburgh, Scotland: G. Wright Pub.
ISBN
9780903065375
.
Gallery
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References
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Further reading
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- Jonathan Blackwood, "Benno Schotz: Unknown Estonian Sculptor", kunst.ee. Autumn 2007, Tallinn
- Benno Schotz,
Bronze In My Blood
(Edinburgh: Gordon Wright, 1981)
- Hugh T. Stevenson, "Schotz, Benno (1891?1984)",
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
, Oxford University Press, 2004
accessed 29 July 2007
External links
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