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Sculpture: ▲ Steven Gregory: Bag Men, Bronze, Signed S Gregory, Set 4 of 9, 127cm high Steven Gregory was born in South Africa in 1952 but has lived in London since the 1960’s. He studied sculpture at St Martins School of Art. Gregory has exhibited widely both in the UK and globally, including Germany, France, Italy, Iceland, New York and Czech Republic. In 2002 he exhibited in Thinking Big, 21st Century British Sculpture, at the Peggy Guggenheim Museum, Venice. In 2005-2006 Gregory held a solo exhibition Skulduggery with Cass Sculpture Foundation. In 2006-2007 Damien Hirst, who has been a collector of Gregory’s work since 2002, included some of Gregory’s skull sculptures in his Murderme exhibition In the darkest hour there may be light at the Serpentine Gallery, London. In 2007 Gregory had a solo exhibition Steven Gregory, Bone Stone Bronze at the Nicholas Robinson Gallery in New York. Steven Gregory is also a regular exhibitor at the Royal Academy of Arts Summer Exhibitions in London and continues to maintain a strong presence of work at the Cass Sculpture Foundation, West Sussex where other bronzes in this edition were exhibited. Their exhibition notes remarked; "Anthropomorphic paper bags cast in bronze. These insectile apparitions have amused, enthralled and have even made skin creep, as they are variously funny, intriguing and sinister. Like circus clowns they emerge jauntily from the woodland, their bag bodies in attitudes of buffoonery, frolic and mischief. The sense of carnival is at once fun and a little scary in this bag parade. As children, we all at some point put our heads in paper bags. To hide from the world and yet be part of it, with an assumed identity unlike our own, is as basic as learning to walk. Masks are as old as human ritual, they hide, alter and also protect - and so do paper bags".
A reclaimed medium to light oak church altar of rectangular form with good quality Gothic tracery and further carved detail, twin pedestal panelled supports, stamped internally A Harold & E Jones and dated 1926, together with further brass memorial plaque, etc, 152 cm long x 72 cm wide x 92 cm in height

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