Movement in British sculpture c. 1877-c. 1920. The term was first used in 1894 by the writer EDMUND GOSSE, in an essay of that title in the Art Journal, to denote developments in late 19th-century British sculpture. Gosse's label was retrospective, as the movement's ancestry can be traced back to the mid-Victorian sculptors John Henry Foley and Alfred Stevens. The New Sculpture cannot be defined by a particular style, iconography or ideological manifesto, and no sculptors grouped together to propound or promote it; Janson has defined it as 'anything different from what had been thought possible in the 1870s'. However, in spite of the scope for individualism, the protagonists of the New Sculpture recognized each other's achievements and consciously attempted to revive the quality of British sculpture. Their success in transforming it from the conservative Neo-classical blandness of such artists as William Theed and John Bell to a multi-media symbolist decorative fantasy underlines the movement's revolutionary nature.
See the Abbreviations for further details.




