Important design object of the great English artist Steven Barry Sykes
A animalier subject, represents an irresistible polychrome fish
Registered, signed and dated on the back
Steven Barry Sykes (30 August 1914 - 22 January 1999) was a British artist, known for his Gethsemani chapel in the reconstructed cathedral of Coventry.
Steven Sykes is considered a significant artist of the twentieth century and his works are mentioned in the list of many important buildings and highly appreciated by the Historic England.
The Twentieth Century Society has called him a "significant artist at national level", so much so that his former house is now a historical good.
Sykes contributed with works of art to many churches from the United Kingdom and has collaborated with architects such as Basil Spence and Gerard Goalen.
Sykes worked with Spence at the Cathedral of Coventry, while Goalen commissioned him works in the churches he was rearranging or designing.
It mainly became a great expert in the creation of relief tiles and pots in Picasso's style just like our beautiful ceramic that exposed in many locations, including at the 1951 Festival of Britain.
Sykes taught at Chelsea School of Art from 1946 to 1979.
In 1947 he created a series of neoromantic paintings and drawings.
His war art was made known to the public in 1984 thanks to an article by the Sunday Times on his D-Day watercolors.
Coventry Cathedral
Chapel of Christ in Gethsemani, Cathedral of Coventry, 1959-1960
One of Sykes' best known works is the mosaic of the Gethsemani chapel in the Cathedral of San Michele, in Coventry.
Our Lady Lillington
Sykes made the mosaics for the church of Our Lady of Lillington, classified by Grado II, to Royal Leamington Spa.
San Gregorio, South Ruislip
In 1965 Sykes collaborated with the architect Gerard Goalen to the rearrangement of St Gregory the Great, a church of Grado II in South Ruislip, for which he created a sculpture of the architrave.
British pavilion
Basil Spence, with whom Sykes worked for the cathedral of Coventry, later invited Sykes to design the sculpture of the fountain for the British pavilion at the Montreal Expo 67.
Chapel of the Monument to the Fallen, National Cathedral, Washington DC
Phoenix School, Tower Hamlets
This special school in Farquaharson and McMorran (1951-52) in Tower Hamlets, includes four Sykes reliefs.
Each object of our gallery on request is sold accompanied by a certificate of authenticity issued by Sabrina Egidi expert of the Court and of the C.C.I.A.A. from Rome.
This article comes from a private collection and is therefore unpublished on the market
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