Simon Verity (1 July 1945 – 11 August 2024) was a British sculptor, master stonecarver and letter cutter. Much of his work is garden sculpture and figure sculpture in cathedrals and major churches.[1] His works are in the private collections of King Charles III, Sir Elton John and Lord Rothschild.[2]
Background
Verity was born in Amersham in 1945, the son of Terence Verity, an architect and art designer, and his wife Enid, née Hill, artist, designer and colour theorist.[3][4] Following his education at Marlborough College, he received his training through an informal apprenticeship to his great-uncle, Oliver Hill, at Daneway House,[5] and under the conservationist Professor Robert Baker's teaching at Wells Cathedral.[1]
A 1988 memorial by Verity for the writer Sophie Behrens was the catalyst for the creation of Memorials by Artists, an organization dedicated to the creation of unique memorials.[8][9]
Settling in the United States about 1988, Verity worked as director on the carving of the west portal of the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine, New York (also known as the Portal of Paradise) from 1988 until 1997. At the start, Verity was assisted by six apprentices. In 1993, Jean-Claude Marchionni, a master stonecarver from France, joined Verity in the project.[16] A procession of 32 matriarchs and patriarchs from the Old and New Testaments were carved from blocks of limestone already in place.[17]
In 2004, Verity was commissioned to design and build a hand-carved map of the United Kingdom to form the paving for the British Memorial Garden in New York's Hanover Square. The Garden commemorates the 67 British victims of the 11 September 2001, attack on the World Trade Center. The map features all the counties of Great Britain, as well as the boroughs of London and British Islands and protectorates. The map is carved from grey flagstone from Caithness and sandstone from Moray, Scotland.[2]
Verity participated in a programme of artist's residencies, lectures and demonstrations in the United States. In January 2015, he visited Duke University for a 10-day residency during which he recreated the Head of a virtue, a 1245 sculpture from Notre-Dame Cathedral that is now in the collection of the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke.[18]
Verity's writings include memoirs of his apprenticeship with Oliver Hill[19][20] and The Library of Libraries (2013), a satirical illustrated polemic inspired by the campaign to preserve the stacks in the main branch of the New York Public Library.[21][22][23]
Personal life and death
In 1970, Verity married Judith Mills; they had three children and later divorced.[4][24] In 2013, he married Martha Becker Finney.[4]
A demi-angel with lute (south side) and (in the gable apex) a nude figure of St Peter with net and keys, both on the image screen at Exeter Cathedral (commissioned 1984)[28]
A seated king in niche 199 of the West Front at Wells Cathedral (1980/81)[29]
A plaque in The V&A Temple at The Laskett, Herefordshire, for Sir Roy Strong (1988)[31] and a medallion to celebrate Sir Roy’s retirement after 14 years as Director of the V&A Museum (1987).[32]
^FORSTER, A., HOBBS, P.R.N., MONKHOUSE, R.A. and WYATT, R.J., Environmental Geology Study: Parts of West Wiltshire and South-east Avon (Keyworth: British Geology Survey, 1985), p. 133
^David S. Neal, Warwick Rodwell, Canterbury Cathedral, Trinity Chapel: The Archaeology of the Mosaic Pavement and Setting of the Shrine of St Thomas Becket, 2022, p. 368