Harry Everington

Harry Everington (21 February 1929 – 2000)[1] was a British sculptor, the co-founder of the former Frink School of Figurative Sculpture based in the towns of Stoke-on-Trent (latterly Tunstall), Staffordshire.

Life

Everington was born on February 21, 1929 near Keighley in Yorkshire. He attended Roundhay School and then studied at Leeds College of Art and the Slade in London.[1] Following National Service in the Royal Air Force he became a lecturer at Shrewsbury College of Art. In the mid-1960s he moved to Swansea College of Art, where he became head of the fine art and architecture departure. In the early 1970s he became Principal of Dyfed College of Art.

Following his resigning from Dyfed College he moved to the Stoke-on-Trent, where he concentrated on his own sculptures, working in limestone, wood, clay and steel.[1] At the age of 60 he enrolled as a student at the Sir Henry Doulton School of Art. Following the school's closure in 1993, Everington, and Rosemary Barnett, the former head of the Doulton School, set up the Frink School (named after Dame Elizabeth Frink). It opened in 1996.[1]

Simon Everington,[2] a British sculptor living in Japan, is his youngest son.

Public works

References

External links

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