Bishops' Advisory Commission on Doctrine
Striking Portrait of Morris Harding, sculptor at St Anne’s Cathedral, presented to the Cathedral and now on display
Press Releases
Added on 23/01/2013
The craftsman George Frederick Morris Harding, PPRUA
(1874–1964) spent many years as sculptor of the impressive capitals and corbels
of the nave pillars at St Anne’s Cathedral, Belfast. Recently, a rare portrait of Harding
by the artist Poppy Mollan which had come onto the local art market was
generously purchased and presented to St Anne’s by a donor who wishes to remain
anonymous. This striking portrait of Harding is now hanging in the ambulatory of
the cathedral. The Dean of Belfast, the Very Revd John Mann, who only last year
unveiled a Blue Plaque in commemoration of Morris Harding outside the artist’s
home at Church Road, Holywood, said, ‘I am delighted that the Cathedral has been
so generously presented with this painting by a philanthropic donor. Morris
Harding made a remarkable contribution to the visual impact of this special
sacred space and it is fitting that his portrait is now on display
here.’
As an accomplished craftsman, the English–born Harding was invited in 1925, at the age of 51, to work on designs for many of the capitals and corbels in the nave together with other carvings and the bronze soldier on top of the memorial lectern to the fallen of the 36th (Ulster) Division. This body of work became the major undertaking of his career. For more than twelve years Harding worked high above the floor of the cathedral completing the work. The carvings include depictions of the philosopher Bishop George Berkeley; Bishop Jeremy Taylor, author of the spiritual classic Holy Living and Holy Dying; and the hymn–writer Mrs Cecil Frances Alexander who wrote ‘There is a green hill far away’, ‘All things bright and beautiful’ and ‘Once in royal David’s city’. Shipbuilding, the linen industry, agriculture, science and the arts are also represented. Dean Mann considers the carved stonework in the nave of St Anne’s to be ‘both spectacular and fascinating: spectacular because of its complexity and variety, fascinating because of its relationships – both to the City of Belfast and to the Church and Christianity’.
Once living in Belfast, Harding joined the Belfast Arts Society and later became President of the Royal Ulster Academy. He shared a studio in Holywood, Co. Down with the noted artist Rosamond Praeger whose work is also integral to the cathedral’s decorative scheme in both the baptistery and on the bronze plaque at Carson’s tomb.
The portrait of Harding is thought to be the one exhibited by Belfast–based artist Poppy Mollan at the Ulster Academy of Arts in 1936. Mollan and John Luke assisted Harding in 1938 with a commission for the Northern Ireland Government’s pavilion at the Glasgow Empire Exhibition. Mollan went on to exhibit at the Royal Hibernian Academy between 1927 and 1940.
Issued on behalf of St Anne’s
Cathedral Belfast by:
The Church of Ireland Press Office
| | |
| For further information please contact: | |
| Church of Ireland Press Office Church of Ireland House 61–67 Donegall Street Belfast BT1 2QH Tel: (028) 9082 8880 (from NI) Tel: (048) 9082 8880 (from RoI) Fax (028) 9032 3554 E–mail: Press Office | |
| Paul Harron: (duty phone) +44 (0)7787 881582 Janet Maxwell: (duty phone) +353 (0) 87 948 4412 www.ireland.anglican.org/news | |
| | |
|
|
|
