- Jonah Jones (sculptor)
Jonah Jones (
17 February 1919 –29 November 2004 ) was born Leonard Jones in the north east of England, but known as a Welsh sculptor,writer and artist-craftsman. He worked in many media, but is especially remembered as a sculptor in stone, lettering-artist andcalligrapher .Life
The eldest of four children, Jones was born in 1919 near Wardley,
Tyne and Wear . His father was a local man who had been a coalminer before being invalided in theFirst World War , his mother came fromYorkshire .Registering in the
Second World War as aconscientious objector , Jonah Jones was enlisted in theBritish Army as anon-combatant . He served in 224 Parachute Field Ambulance, within the6th Airborne Division , taking part in theArdennes campaign and the airdrop over theRhine atWesel in March 1945.Following
demobilisation in 1947, Jones' career began in a shared practice with the artistJohn Petts inNorth Wales , followed soon after by a short, intensive stay at the workshop of the lateEric Gill , where he learned the techniques of lettering and carving in stone.During the 1950s Jones established a full-time workshop practice, one of the few who were able at that time in Wales to earn a living solely from art.
Art
Jonah Jones worked in many media. He cut letters in
slate , carved instone and producedbronze busts . He taught himself both the traditional techniques of stained andleaded glass and the newer ones of concrete glass. He painted inwatercolour , a medium in which he produced a distinctive body of work based on vernacular calligraphy, a technique in which the artist and poet David Jones was a major influence. He also produced two published novels, a book of largely autobiographical essays, an illustrated book about the lakes of North Wales, and a biography ofClough Williams-Ellis , the architect ofPortmeirion .Jonah Jones's major public commissions include work for the chapels of
Ratcliffe College ,Leicestershire ;Ampleforth College ,North Yorkshire ; and Loyola Hall,Rainhill ,Merseyside ; St Patrick's Catholic church,Newport ,Monmouth ; theNational Museum of Wales ,Cardiff ;Coleg Harlech ,Gwynedd ; andMold Crown Court ,Flintshire . His private work is marked by a preoccupation withChristian imagery and biblical themes (particularly that ofJacob ), the Welsh mythological tales of theMabinogion , the landscape of North Wales, and the Word.He found time, too, to work in the field of art education, acting as external assessor to many colleges of art throughout the UK during the 1960s and 1970s, culminating in a four-year period as director of Dublin’s
National College of Art and Design , 1974–1978, a period in which he was also a director of theKilkenny Design Workshops.His treatment of Welsh subject matter and working of Welsh-language texts were abiding themes throughout his half-century career in Wales.
elected writings
*"A Tree May Fall", Bodley Head, 1980, ISBN 0370303202
*"The Lakes of North Wales", Whittet Books, 1983, ISBN 0905483545
*"Zorn", William Heinemann Ltd, 1987, ISBN 0434377341
*"The Gallipoli Diary", Seren Books/Poetry Wales Pr Ltd, 1989, ISBN 1854110101
*"Clough Williams-Ellis: Architect of Portmeirion", Seren Publishing, 1997, ISBN 1854112147References
*Stephens, Meic. "The New Companion to the Literature of Wales." Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1998. ISBN 0708313833
*Smith, Alison. "John Petts and the Caseg Press." Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing Ltd, 2000. ISBN 07546 00343
*Rowan, Eric. "Art in Wales: an Illustrated History 1850-1980." Cardiff: Welsh Arts Council/University of Wales Press, 1985, ISBN 0708308546External links
* [http://books.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,11617,1390405,00.html Jonah Jones obituary] , Guardian
* [http://news.independent.co.uk/people/obituaries/article22761.ece Jonah Jones obituary] , The Independent
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