- Hereford Screen
The Hereford Screen is a great
choir screen designed by SirGeorge Gilbert Scott (1811-1878) and made by Coventry metalworking firm Skidmore & Co. forHereford Cathedral , England in 1862. It was one of the greatestGothic Revival works in iron of the nineteenth century. When it was unveiled in 1862, it was hailed as the "grandest and most triumphant achievement of modern architectural art". Weighing over eight tonnes, the screen is an extraordinary mixture of wrought and cast iron, brass, copper, semi-precious stones, and mosaics, supporting electroformed statues of Christ and attendant angels. In 1967 the screen was dismantled as it was no longered considered fashionable. TheVictoria and Albert Museum acquired the screen in 1984, but it was in very poor condition. In 2001, after a successful campaign to fund the largest conservation project ever undertaken by the Museum, the fully restored metal masterpiece was erected in pride of place, overlooking the main entrance.Bibliography
*cite book|author=Jackson, Anna (ed.)|title= V&A: A Hundred Highlights|publisher=V&A Publications |year=2001 ISBN 1851773657
External Links
* cite web |publisher=
Victoria and Albert Museum
url= http://www.vam.ac.uk/collections/metalwork/metalwork_stories/hereford/index.html
title= The Hereford Screen
work=Metalwork
accessdate= 2008-08-26
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