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William Behnes
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William Behnes (1795 – 3 January 1864) was a British sculptor of the early 19th century.


Life
Born in London, Behnes was the son of a piano-maker and his English wife. His brother was , also a sculptor, albeit an inferior one. The family moved to and there William studied art at the Dublin Academy.

After the family returned to London, Behnes continued his artistic training, studying at the School of Art from 1813, under the tutorship of Peter Francis Chenu. As a painter, he exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1815 and won several medals during the ensuing years. In 1819 he won a Society of Arts gold medal for inventing an instrument to assist sculpture work, having by this time begun to practice successfully as a sculptor.

In 1837 Behnes was appointed 'Sculptor in Ordinary' to . His pupils included noted sculptors George Frederic Watts, and , and Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins.

Despite huge success, being declared "superior to Chantrey" in bust portraiture, he could not manage his finances and was declared bankrupt in 1861. His final work, the statue of Sir Henry Havelock (1861) in , has the claim to fame of being the first known statue based purely upon a photograph of his subject.

It is likely that he was an alcoholic and also a gambler, and this was worsened by bankruptcy. He moved to "miserable lodgings" in Charlotte Street.

He was found lying unconscious in a gutter, with only three pence in his pocket, on New Years Day 1864 and died on 3 January in Middlesex Hospital.

He was buried in an unmarked grave in Kensal Green Cemetery. George Cruikshank, who had known him, campaigned to raise money for a monument and to present a bronze bust of Behnes to the , but there was little progress and the campaign was abandoned. Dictionary of British Sculptors, 1660–1851,

In December 2016, a folio of 41 pages of Behnes' sketches (some double-sided) was sold at auction by Cuttlestones Auctioneers & Valuers at in Staffordshire, for £2,200. It includes sketches of the Duke of Newcastle, Sir , and Sir .


Works
He produced many busts of children, reliefs and also some notable church monuments and statues, including ones of Dr William Babington in St Paul's Cathedral and Major-General Sir (believed to be the first statue based on a photograph, two casts were made – one is today situated in , London, the other in Mowbray Park, Sunderland) and several of Sir (including ones situated in Leeds, Peel Park in , and at the Peel Centre in in north-west London). Other subjects included: , Sir , and George Cruikshank.

  • Bust of , surgeon, Foundling Hospital, London (1817)
  • Monument to John Tunno, St. John's Wood Chapel (1819)
  • Bust of Dr William Lister Governor of St Thomas' Hospital in London (1820)
  • Monument to , Paddington Parish Church, London (1823)
  • Bust of Joseph Marryat, St George's, Grenada, West Indies (1824)
  • Bust of (1825)
  • Bust of Sir Isaac Coffin, 1st Baronet, Athenaeum, Boston, USA (1826)
  • Statue of the Earl of Egremont, (1826)
  • Bust of , Trinity College, Dublin (1827)
  • Wax bust of Princess Victoria (Later ) (using her actual hair) (1829)
  • Figures on the clock-tower at Buckingham Palace (1829)
  • Monument to Dr Andrew Bell, Westminster Abbey (1832)
  • Monument to Admiral Sir , Westminster Abbey (1832)
  • Monument to John Woodhouse, Dean of Lichfield, Parish Church (1833)
  • Monument to Sir Henry Russell, 1st Baronet, Swallowfield, Berkshire, (1836)
  • Bust of Sir Benjamin Collins Brodie, 1st Baronet, Royal College of Surgeons, London (1836)
  • Statue of William Babington, St Paul's Cathedral (1837)
  • Monument to , Church (1837)
  • Bust of (1837)
  • Monument to Sir John St Aubyn, 5th Baronet, , Cornwall (1839)
  • Bust of Sir Thomas Hardy, naval hero, Greenwich Hospital Chapel (1839)
  • Statue of Baron Joy, Dublin (1840)
  • The mare's head "The Queen of Beauty" as ridden by Lord Seymour (1843)
  • Statue of Sir John Thomas Jones, St Paul's Cathedral (1843)
  • Statue of Sir Thomas Gresham, Royal Exchange, London (1845)
  • Statue of Sir , Westminster Abbey, (1850)
  • Statue of , Leeds (1852)
  • Statue of , Peel Park, Bradford (1855)
  • Statue of , Peel Centre, previously and Postman's Park, Grade II listed, possible copy of the Bradford work (1855)
  • Monument to Mrs Elsworth, Highgate Cemetery (1858)
  • Statue of Sir , , (1861) (plus a copy in Sunderland)


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