Joseph Edwards (5 March 1814 – 9 January 1882) was a Welsh sculptor. His work appears in many churches and cemeteries in England and Wales, in Westminster Abbey, and in the old town hall of Merthyr Tydfil. Seventy of his works were exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts between 1838 and 1878.
Background
Joseph Edwards was born on 5 March 1814 in Merthyr Tydfil, Glamorganshire, Wales, the son of a stonemason, and went to school in Merthyr. At the age of seventeen he saw the collection of stone Celtic crosses at Margam Abbey and decided to become a sculptor. Apprenticed to a memorial mason in Swansea, he was quickly promoted to foreman. In 1835, he went to London where he began working for William Behnes.[1][2]
Commenting on Edwards' bust of Thomas Stephens, The Art Journal said, "[The Welsh] may well be proud of their countryman, Joseph Edwards. There are artists who will make as good busts, but there is no living sculptor who can produce monumental work so pure, so refined, so essentially holy."[4]
By 1881 he seems to have fallen on hard times as he was living as a lodger in Robert Street, west of Euston Station[5] and that year, sponsored by George Frederic Watts, Edwards was awarded a pension under the Turner Bequest, but he died shortly after receiving it.[1]
Monuments in many churches and cemeteries in Wales, Westminster Abbey, Merthyr Tydfil old town hall
Busts of members of the Beaufort, Guest, Raglan, and Crawshay families
Busts of well-known Welsh people including Taliesin ap Iolo, Thomas Stephens (c. 1871), G. T. Clark, William Williams (M.P. for Coventry), Edith Wynne, and George Virtue
Bust of Welsh historian, literary critic and social reformer Thomas Stephens (1821–1875), c. 1871 by Joseph Edwards; presented to Stephens as a testimonial after 25 years as honorary secretary of the Merthyr Library[10]: xlvi
1886 masthead illustration of The Girl's Own Paper, based on The Spirit of Love and Truth by Edwards[11]
Grave of Joseph Edwards in Highgate Cemetery, set in ivy-covered surrounds, with his bas-relief portrait
^Williams, B. T. (1876). The Life of Thomas Stephens. pp. xix–xlviii, in Stephens, Thomas (1876). Evans, Sylvan (ed.). The Literature of the Kymry (2nd ed.). London: Longmans, Green, & Co.