Special issue: Monuments in Conversation: Westminster Abbey in the Long Eighteenth Century.
Liverpool University Press is pleased to inform you of the latest content in 'Sculpture Journal', a highly regarded publication that is essential reading for those working in and researching sculpture in all its aspects from prehistory to the present across the globe.
This special issue of 'Sculpture Journal' offers the first sustained, collective study of Westminster Abbey’s sculptural canon, repositioning the Abbey not as a series of isolated monuments but as a densely interconnected pantheon shaped by centuries of artistic, religious, and political forces. Emerging from the 2024 Henry Moore Institute conference Monuments in Conversation, the issue invites readers to re-evaluate how monuments function within this singular space—and how their meanings shift through changing contexts, technologies, and audiences. In a detailed Q&A, guest editor Gemma Shearwood provides insight into the motivations behind the issue, its methodological innovations, and the perspectives it brings to pantheon studies.
Read the Q&A and browse this new issue online > https://liverpooluniversitypress.blog/2025/12/01/monuments-in-conversation-inside-the-westminster-abbey-special-issue-of-sculpture-journal/
If you would like to read content from 'Sculpture Journal', please consider recommending a journal subscription to your librarian. Institutional subscriptions provide full online access to the complete archive—nearly 30 years of scholarship dating back to 1997—and support the ongoing publication of this vital resource.>https://liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/action/recommendation?doi=10.3828/sj
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Table of contents
INTRODUCTION
GEMMA SHEARWOOD
RESEARCH ARTICLES
Imperial conversations: linking the Caribbean, South Asia and North America through the monuments to William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield, Vice-Admiral Charles Watson, and George Montagu Dunk, 2nd Earl of Halifax, c. 1801, 1933 and 2026
GEMMA SHEARWOOD
‘Even their ashes’: female selfhood and same-sex love in the monument to Mary Kendall and Catherine Jones, c. 1712
SARAH MONKS
Caught between monumental traditions: Grinling Gibbons’s monument to Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell
CHARLOTTE DAVIS
OPEN ACCESS
Placing poets: Cowley’s ‘Dust’, Thomas Sprat and the making of Poets’ Corner, 1667–1713
CLAUDINE VAN HENSBERGEN
Monumental death: thinking about the conservation of monuments through Louis-François Roubiliac’s Nightingale monument
IZABELLA GILL-BROWN
Sir Francis Chantrey’s ‘delicate and honourable conduct in all matters relating to the Abbey’, 1814–41
M. G. SULLIVAN
Experiencing and re-experiencing the monument to William Shakespeare
SAMANTHA LUKIC-SCOTT
A sphere of influence: the monument to Sir Isaac Newton by William Kent and Michael Rysbrack
MARJORIE COUGHLAN
From memorial to museum piece? John Flaxman’s monument to George Lindsay Johnstone
MICHAEL SMITH
Afterword: in our time? Scaling/queering the Westminster Abbey sculptural pantheon
JASON EDWARDS
REVIEWS
NOAH F. DASINGER: Lorenzo G. Buonanno, The Performance of Sculpture in Renaissance VeniceALBERT GODETZKY: Ethan Matt Kavaler, Actors Carved & Cast: Netherlandish Sculpture of the Sixteenth Century
JENNIFER S. GRIFFITHS: Ara H. Merjian, Fragments of Totality: Futurism, Fascism, and the Sculptural Avant-Garde
CONTRIBUTORS
Quellennachweis:
TOC: Sculpture Journal 34.4 (2025). In: ArtHist.net, 02.12.2025. Letzter Zugriff 03.12.2025. <https://arthist.net/archive/51263>.