Bust of Mary, Princess of Wales, by Sydney March, 1903
Bust of Mary, Princess of Wales, by Sydney March, 1903
Bust of Mary, Princess of Wales, by Sydney March, 1903
Bust of Mary, Princess of Wales, by Sydney March, 1903
Bust of Mary, Princess of Wales, by Sydney March, 1903
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bust of Mary, Princess of Wales, by Sydney March, 1903
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bust of Mary, Princess of Wales, by Sydney March, 1903
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bust of Mary, Princess of Wales, by Sydney March, 1903
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bust of Mary, Princess of Wales, by Sydney March, 1903
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Bust of Mary, Princess of Wales, by Sydney March, 1903

Bust of Mary, Princess of Wales, by Sydney March, 1903

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Height: 43cm (17in) 

Patinated bronze. Formal head and shoulders bust of Queen Mary as Princess of Wales in state dress and wearing Ladies of England Tiara and the 11 Row Pearl Choker. Cast by the art founders Elkington & Co. Signed and dated to the reverse of the integral base ‘Sydney March 1903 /Elkington & Co / London’. 

Sydney March (1876–1968) was the second of nine children, eight of whom became artists;  Edward (1873-1941), Percival (b.1878), Frederick (b.1881), Dudley (1881-1962), Elsie (1884-1974), Walter (b.1889) and Vernon (1891-1930). Originally from Yorkshire the March family moved to London around the turn of the century when Sydney was enrolled at the Royal Academy Schools and where he was awarded the first prize medal for a model of a statue or group. Between 1906 and 1932, he exhibited thirteen times at the R.A., primarily portrait busts, statuettes, and equestrian statues. The March siblings established their own sculpture studio at Goddendene, Kent, in 1901. Sydney also worked with the art founders Elkington, and was responsible for royal portraits, including Queen Victoria, Queen Alexandra and George V, and for producing figures, busts and statues of leading figures of the day.  In the early 1920‘s the March studio was honoured with a visit by members of the Royal Family. Sydney’s public works include statues of Colonel Bevington (Tooley Street, London Bridge, 1911) and Lord Kitchener (Calcutta, 1914; Khartoum, 1921, removed to Royal School of Military Engineering, Chatham, 1958). Among his portrait busts were Cecil Rhodes, Sir John French. March also executed a number of war memorials including Bromley Parish Church (1921), Lewes, East Sussex, the Diamond War Memorial, Derry (1925), the United Empire Loyalists Memorial (Hamilton, Ontario, 1929). Following the death of Vernon March in 1930, Sydney and his siblings completed the Canadian National War Memorial at Ottawa.