2. ALLAN SCOTT
Allan Scott always had a
passion for sculpturing
and still gets an
enormous amount of
satisfaction creating
them . He particularly
enjoys work that involves
the human figure.
3. GARY SCOTT’S
Gar y Scott’s, who gave up a
successful career to embark
on his diploma course at the
Art Academy. Gar y’s work is
abstract with an ambiguity of
form and inherently organic
feel which draws the viewer
in. His sculptures are
expressive and convey an
energy which imbues them
with life. He was awarded the
Art Academy Mixed Media
Sculpture Prize 2013.
4. GEORGE SEGAL
George Segal was an
American painter and
sculptor associated with the
Pop Art movement. He was
presented with the United
States National Medal of
Arts in 1999. In 1957, he
was included in “Ar tists of
the New York School:
Second Generation,” an
exhibit at the Jewish
Museum. For the next three
years he showed annually at
the Hansa.
5. JOHN ROGERS
John Rogers (1829–1904)
was an American sculptor
who produced very
popular, relatively
inexpensive figurines in
the latter 19th century. He
became famous for his
small genre sculptures,
popularly termed "Rogers
Groups", which were mass-produced
in cast plaster. A
total of 80,000 copies of
almost 80 Rogers Groups
were sold across the
United States and abroad.
6. CONSTANTIN BRANCUSI
Formal studies took him
first to Bucharest, then
to Munich, then to the
École des Beaux-Arts in
Paris from 1905 to 1907.
His art emphasizes clean
geometrical lines that
balance forms inherent
in his materials with the
symbolic allusions of
representational art.
7. HENRY MOORE
Henry Spencer Moore was
an English sculptor and
ar tist. He was best known
for his semi-abstract
monumental bronze
sculptures which are
located around the world
as public works of ar t. His
forms are usually
abstractions of the human
figure, typically depicting
mother-and-child or
reclining figures.