Monument to Edward Onslow Ford

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Completion datec. 1901
LocationLondon
Edward Onslow Ford
ArtistJohn William Simpson and Andrea Carlo Lucchesi
Completion datec. 1901
SubjectEdward Onslow Ford
LocationLondon
Coordinates51°31′55″N 0°10′38″W / 51.5319°N 0.1771°W / 51.5319; -0.1771
Listed Building – Grade II
Official nameMonument to Edward Onslow Ford,including Pair of Lamp Standards
Designated9 January 1970
Reference no.1066531

The Monument to Edward Onslow Ford is a Grade II listed monument on Abbey Road in St John's Wood, London, near Ford's former home. Onslow Ford was himself a sculptor and would produce many memorials and monuments in his own lifetime.[1]

The monument was erected around 1901 unveiled by Lawrence Alma-Tadema, with artists such as John William Simpson and Andrea Carlo Lucchesi involved in the design. It takes the form of a Portland stone obelisk with bronze detailing including a relief bust of Onslow Ford by Lucchesi and on the obverse side a copy of Ford's Muse taken from his Shelley Memorial by Simpson. The monument is listed alongside the two ornamented lamps to either side.[2] An inscription on the monument reads 'To thine own self be true', a quote from Hamlet.[3]

Ford was a member of the New Sculpture movement, with strong influences from Alfred Gilbert. The memorial was set up by friends, colleagues and admirers with whom Ford was popular.[4]

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