Rayner Hoff: The Life of a Sculptor

Rayner Hoff: The Life of a Sculptor

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In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia.

In the 1920s and 1930s, Rayner Hoff was the most gifted – and controversial – public sculptor in Australia, best known for the sculptures and friezes that adorn Sydney’s Anzac Memorial, including Sacrifice at its centre.

After moving from London in the early 1920s, Hoff taught at and eventually ran the National Art School. As well as completing the Anzac Memorial sculptures – which generated uproar when the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney opposed two further works planned for the Memorial – he also designed the original Holden lion badge, won the Wynne Prize in 1927, and made firm friends with luminaries like Norman Lindsay, Hugh McCrae and Mary Gilmore.

This biography tells the story of Hoff’s life and work for the first time, and how he spearheaded an Australian sculpture renaissance and left a mark that is still keenly felt today.

Title: Rayner Hoff: The life of a sculptor

Author: Deborah Beck

Publisher: New South Publishing

ISBN: 9781742235325

Publication Date: First edition, 2017

Language: English

Binding: Flexicover [paperback]

Dimensions: 25 x 19 x 2cm

Shipping Weight: 1kg

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