Elisabeth Frink (1930-1993)
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Aesops Fables - Eagle by Elisabeth Frink
Aesops Fables - Eagle. 
 
Aesops Fables - horse by Elisabeth Frink
Aesops Fables - horse. 
 
Aesops Fables - Lion by Elisabeth Frink
Aesops Fables - Lion. 
 
Aesops Fables - mouse by Elisabeth Frink
Aesops Fables - mouse. 
 

Biography

Dame Elisabeth Jean Frink CH DBE RA (14 November 1930 – 18 April 1993) was an English sculptor and printmaker. Her Times obituary noted the three essential themes in her work as "the nature of Man; the 'horseness' of horses; and the divine in human form".

Frink studied at the Guildford School of Art (now the University for the Creative Arts) (1946–1949), under Willi Soukop, and at the Chelsea School of Art (1949–1953).[8] She was part of a postwar group of British sculptors, dubbed the Geometry of Fear school, that included Reg Butler, Bernard Meadows, Kenneth Armitage and Eduardo Paolozzi. Frink's subject matter included men, birds, dogs, horses and religious motifs, but very seldom any female forms. Bird (1952; London, Tate), one of a number of bird sculptures, and her first successful pieces (also Three Heads and the Figurative Tradition) with its alert, menacing stance, characterizes her early work. She created a bookrest in the form of an eagle, for the lectern of the new Coventry Cathedral, as well as a canopy for its Bishop's throne.