Joyce Bidder
Muriel Joyce Bidder (5 January 1906 – 26 February 1999) was an English sculptor. Over a long career, she created works in a variety of materials. BiographyBidder was born at Wimbledon in south-west London and studied at the Wimbledon School of Art, where she was taught by the sculptor Stanley Nicholson Babb.[1][2] In 1933, she met Daisy Borne, whom she taught to carve.[1] The two set up a studio together at Wimbledon and became life-long companions.[1] Bidder worked in a variety of materials, including bronze, green slate, marble, terracotta, stone and wood to produce statuettes, group figures and reliefs.[3] She often worked in woods such as walnut, Spanish chestnut, oak and mahogany.[3] Her subjects included sporting events, such as the sculpture group Tackled, and depictions of labourers at work.[4] Bidder regularly exhibited at the Royal Academy in London between 1931 and 1957, and between 1933 and 1971 showed a total of 65 pieces with the Society of Women Artists.[3][5] She was elected an Associate of the Society of Women Artists in 1949 and became a full member two years later. She was also a Fellow of the Royal Society of British Sculptors.[1][3] Examples of her work appeared in the 1986 exhibition Sculpture in Britain Between the Wars, organised by the Fine Art Society, which hosted a joint exhibition of work by her and Borne in 1987.[1][4] References
External links1 artwork by or after Joyce Bidder at the Art UK site |