It is pleasing to report, in July 2013, that as a result of
very detailed research, a book has now been published on the
life and Sculpture of Paul Montford
MAKING MELBOURNE'S MONUMENTS
by Catherine Moriarty.
Published by Australian Scholarly Publishing
ISBN 978 1-921875-59-5
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Extra Links and snippets of information
Examples of his sculptures

Report from Press about his work
on the National War Memorial
- in Victoria, Australia
Montford in Australia
By Donald Richardson
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[48] |
See the bottom of this page
for the {references1-23}
Paul Raphael
Montford’s sculpture is ubiquitous in inner-city Melbourne, but it is
rarely noticed because it seems to have always been there. He is best
known, of course, for designing the sculptures on the First World War
memorial, the Shrine of Remembrance, and for the statue of Adam Lindsay
Gordon in Collins Street, but he achieved much in the fourteen years he
spent in the city before his death from leukaemia in 1938.
Montford was born in
London in 1868, the son of a successful sculptor and Curator of the RA
schools, Horace Montford, with whom he studied initially {1}. He
distinguished himself as a student in the RA schools from 1887, winning
seven prizes and, in 1891, a scholarship to study in Italy, France and
Spain. Thence he showed in the RA almost every year, even after he
migrated to Australia in 1923.
In England, he
followed his father in a significant career making bronze portrait busts
and figures and carved architectural sculpture. He was one of the
sculptors of the portraits of artists in the niches of the Victoria and
Albert Museum, and he made the Croydon War Memorial (1921) and four
magnificent sculptural groups on the Kelvin Way Bridge, Glasgow (1914-20),
and worked on the Cardiff City Hall and Law Courts, Battersea Town Hall
and Polytechnic and other projects. A laudatory article on him appeared in
The Architects’ Journal, 1 December, 1922 - about the time he
would have embarked for Australia.
He was too old to
serve in the First World War, but he would not have volunteered anyway as
he was conscientious objector. Both of these factors influenced his move
to Australia. He said that, in England, the war memorial commissions of
the 1920s were being given to younger - and returned - men {2}, like
Sargent Jagger {3}. But it may also have been that his style was seen as
too retro for the new world that had emerged during the War.
He arrived in
Australia in March, 1923, bringing with him some of the bronze figures
which later found their homes around Melbourne {4}. Understandably, it
took him some time to establish himself and, in the interim, he taught
sculpture at the Gordon Institute of Technology, in Geelong {5}. He had an
exhibition, probably of the works he had brought out with him, in the
Geelong Art Gallery in mid-1924 {6}. Apart from that period, he seems to
have occupied his studio at 32 Bruce Street, Toorak, for all the years he
was in Australia {7}. He is said to have been very theatrical and
opinionated and to have led a 'bohemian' life.
He was very
energetic and professional and soon began to make an impression in
Melbourne through entering in competitions and into the intellectual and
artistic life of the city. He came, of course, with excellent credentials
8}. His opinions were sought by journalists {9} and he often wrote letters
to the editors of the newspapers expressing his views on aspects of art,
design and architecture and the training of sculptors {10}. However, his
style was not what is ‘usually called original’, it lacking ‘the
electrifying touch that makes one catch one’s breath’, according to a
published critique of his Geelong exhibition {11}.
He entered in the
Port Said (Desert Mounted Corps) War Memorial competition soon after he
arrived in Melbourne {12} - without success, although his entry was
reviewed favourably in The Journal and the Proceedings of the RIBA-RIVA,
July, 1923 {13}. Closing date for entries was 31 March, 1923, so he must
have worked on it as soon as he arrived in Australia, although he may have
heard about it while still in England and either entered from there or
worked on it en route. Ironically, Web Gilbert, who won the competition,
was able to do little work on it before he died in 1925 and - although
Montford had won the Shrine of Remembrance commission by then - because
the government took four years to provide the finance for it, he accepted
a commission to scale up Gilbert’s maquette. This situation grated
exceedingly, although it only lasted for a few weeks - in 1926.
In 1924, the
Melbourne City Council paid £500 for the bronze Water Nymph and placed it
in the lily-pool in Queen Victoria Gardens. Also, he came second to Brook
Hitch in the competition for the Sir Ross Smith memorial, in Adelaide, and
he was unsuccessful in the Hume and Hovell Centenary sculpture
competition.{14}
On 19 December,
1923, the winner of the Shrine of Remembrance competition was named –
the architectural firm of Philip Hudson and James Wardrop, with Montford
the sculptor. Montford was always - and always recognised as - a full
member of this team, and much was made in the press of his contribution,
although his role in the execution of he sculpture was that of ‘director’.
He sub-contracted the young Lyndon Dadswell to make the plaster maquettes
for the inner frieze and the carving of these and the granite ‘buttress
groups’ (from Montford’s ½-size plaster maquettes) was contracted out
to a team of stone-masons.
An indication of
Montford’s energy and professionalism is the amount of work he started
or completed while he was working on, and supervising others carving, the
sculptures for the Shrine (1927-32):
-
1926-30 – A
Court Favourite (bronze figure, Flagstaff Gardens, Melbourne) {15}
-
1927 –
restoration of the statues in the Fitzroy Gardens for the Melbourne
City Council {16}
-
1927?-29 –
Camperdown War Memorial (life-size bronze, Spirit of Empire)
-
1927-1928/29 –
William Benjamin Chaffey Memorial, Mildura (life-size bronze of
Canadian-born Chaffey (1859-1926), ‘the father of Mildura’)
-
1931 – bronze
bust of Delafield W Cook, committee member of the Victorian Artists'
Society {17}
-
c.1928-32 –
bronze bust of Sir John Monash (which was initially placed in Monash
Square, Yallourn, and moved to the La Trobe Valley Arts Centre,
Morwell, when Yallourn was demolished in the 1980s) {18}.
-
1928-30 –
bronze busts of Frank Tate (1963-1939), first Director of Education in
Victoria 1902-3819, Hamilton Russell (Alfred Hospital, Melbourne) and
Senator Sir Harry Lawson, Premier of Victoria 1918-24 (Lyttleton
Street, Castlemaine)
-
1928-30 –
Malvern War Memorial
-
c.1928 - Virgin
and Child, Carmelite Church, Middle Park, Melbourne - beaten copper
over wood, fabricated by Robert Prenzel to Montford’s design {20}
-
1928-32 - Adam
Lindsay Gordon memorial, Collins Street, Melbourne – seated. over
life-size bronze {21}
-
c.1930 – a
bronze relief bust of Sir Walter Baldwin Spencer (Melbourne
University) {22}
-
1930-32 –
Carlo Catani memorial, Upper Esplanade, St Kilda (bronze bust by
Montford on clock-tower {23}
-
1932 –
memorial to Bishop Long (bronze relief and plaque in Bathurst
Cathedral)
Other sculptures
Montford completed before his death were full-size bronzes of John Wesley
(1935 - outside Wesley Church, Melbourne) and Justice Higginbotham (1936
– Macarthur Place, Carlton), the George V Memorial, Ararat (n.d.; must
be post-1936) and busts of Sir Robert Gibson and Sir Charles Nathan, a
prominent member of the Returned Soldiers, Sailors and Airmens Imperial
League of Australia and Warden of the Shrine of Remembrance (both made
from death-masks).
In 1939, the widowed
Marian Montford returned to England where she was granted a civil list
pension for her husband’s service to sculpture. She took Montford’s
ashes with her and scattered them in the woods at Leatherhead, Surrey.
Donald Richardson
(August, 2004) [51]
References: {1-23}
1 |
Horace Montford - about whom little seems to have
been recorded - won a gold medal in the RA in 1869. |
2 |
‘Paul Raphael
Montford, RBA, RSBS, the Well-Known
Sculptor’, Table Talk,
25 September, 1930, p.13. |
3 |
Whose two figures, in replica, from his Artillery
Memorial, in Hyde Park, London, were removed from the former State
Library to the precincts of the Shrine of Remembrance in 2004. It is
ironic that, in Australia, Montford missed out on the Adelaide
National War Memorial commission, it having been given to Rayner
Hoff, a returned soldier migrant from the UK. |
4 |
In fact, most of the bronzes that are in Australia
seem to have been brought out with him. This probably includes the
bronze Atalanta Defeated
(c.1900) (copies in the National Gallery of Australia and the Art
Gallery of South Australia). |
5 |
Now Deakin University. |
6 |
It was reviewed favourably by J S Macdonald in the Melbourne
Herald, 29 July, 1924. Otherwise there is
no record of this exhibition. |
7 |
His widow, Marian (nee
Dibdin) – herself a portrait
painter - wrote to the Australian War Memorial from that address
shortly after his death. |
8 |
He was a member of the Royal British Artists
(RBA)
and the Royal Society of British Sculptors (RSBS) (Table
Talk, 25 September, 1930). |
9 |
See The Herald,
op.cit., Table
Talk, 25 September, 1930, p.13, and The
Age, 1 August, 1931, p.7. |
10 |
Three examples: |
|
in his evidence before the Federal Public Works
committee inquiring into the National War Memorial he spoke of the
ideal relationship between sculpture and architecture (The
Argus, 9 April, 1928).
a report headed ‘Mr Montford condemns Epstein’, The
Argus, 15 July, 1929, p.6.
he supported Web Gilbert’s Matthew Flinders memorial
against critics, The Argus,
22 June, 1932, p.6. |
11 |
op.cit. |
12 |
Unlike most war memorial competitions, this one was
not restricted to veterans of the war. It was won by Web Gilbert,
who - like Montford - had been too old to serve. |
13 |
The maquette of his entry may be that illustrated in Art
in Australia, 3, 19; March, 1927, p.59,
and that offered for sale to the Australian War Memorial by his
widow on 11 February, 1938 - a month after his death. |
14 |
Photograph in the Geelong
Advertiser, 5 September, 1924. |
15 |
Described as ‘a good study of a very thin youth
playing with a panther’ in The Sydney Morning
Herald. It was presented to the MCC by
Baron Marks in 1930 (The Argus,
6 February, 1930, p.7) and it seems that he had purchased it in 1926
or 1927 for £400. |
16 |
For which, it is recorded, he was paid £250. |
17 |
The Argus, 5 May, 1931, p.5. |
18 |
Copies in the National Portrait Gallery, the
Australian War Memorial (acquired from Marian Montford, 1939, and
mentioned in her letter of 1 February, 1938) and the La Trobe Valley
Arts Centre, Morwell. |
19 |
Photograph in The Argus,
4 August, 1928, p.4. |
20 |
Photograph in The Argus,
29 March, 1928, p.13. Robert Prenzel (1866-1941) was a Prussian
wood-carver and cabinet-maker who came to Melbourne in 1888. He
carved the ceiling and walls of St Patrick’s Cathedral. Presumably
he made his carving from Montford’s plaster. |
21 |
Commissioned by the Adam Lindsay Gordon Memorial
Committee and supported by both the Victorian Government and the
Melbourne City Council. The original conception was a standing
figure (photograph in The Argus,
12 November, 1928, p.5). See also The
Argus, 8 October, 1930; 21 April, 1931,
p.5; 8 July, 1931, p.5; 5 July, 1932, and 31 October, 1932, p.6. The
sculpture was cast in London and won the Royal Society of British
Sculptors’ gold medal in 1934 (presumably this was the plaster,
which must have remained in London, because the bronze was unveiled
in Spring Street Gardens, Melbourne, in October, 1932 (The
Argus, 31 October, 1932, p.6). |
22 |
Illustrated on the cover of The
Argus Camera Supplement, 11 October,
1930. |
23 |
Carlo Giorgio Catani (1852-1918) was an engineer who
carried out improvements to the Yarra banks and St Kilda foreshore. |
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