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INTRODUCTION

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2011

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Summary

eighteenth century sculpture has long been out of fashion in England, and there is no more curious example of this truth than the fact that the only existing reproductions of the great series of busts in Trinity Library are four very poor engravings of the Bacon, Ray, Coke and Cotton by Lewis after Ince in the Cambridge Portfolio of 1840, while the magnificent models for four of them in the British Museum have never been reproduced at all, though a fifth, acquired in May, 1924, was published by myself in The Times of May 13th. The statue of Newton is, and deserves to be, world-famous; but even it is less familiar than it should be. It seemed to me worth while therefore to bring before the public–more especially the Cambridge public–the artistic value of these works, than which there is no nobler group of historical portraits in the world.

Roubiliac executed many busts for single patrons, but such a series is unparalleled elsewhere.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1924

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