Sculpture at Woburn

EKKEHARD ALTENBURGER

OLIVER BARRATT

FERNANDO BOTERO

REMBRANDT BUGATTI

MAT CHIVERS

ALBERIC COLLIN

MICHAEL COOPER

MARK CORETH

GEOFFREY DASHWOOD

SOPHIE DICKENS

NIC FIDDIAN-GREEN

ARISTIDE MAILLOL

RUPERT MERTON

JOHN DE PAULEY

WILLIAM PEERS

WILLIAM PYE

AUGUSTE RODIN

ALMUTH TEBBENHOFF

JULIAN WILD

DAVID WORTHINGTON

click images to enlarge

 

Mark Coreth

Mark Coreth was born in London in 1958 and was immediately dispatched to the family farm in the Kenyan highlands where the Equator ran through the house. Black and white Colobus monkeys leapt amongst the branches in the trees behind the house where leopard and cheetah also lived. This idyllic childhood fostered Mark's early and continuing passion for wildlife.

After prep school in Kenya, Mark attended Ampleforth and on leaving joined The Blues and Royals, serving with the Regiment as a regular officer. He has spent time in England, Cyprus, Germany, Ireland and the Falkland Islands during the 1982 hostilities. On his return to England he was commissioned to make a silver sculpture of his regiment's drum horse for the Warrant Officer's Mess and later a second cast in bronze became the Household Cavalry’s wedding present to The Duke and Duchess of York.

Whilst Mark has had no formal art training his ability is based quite simply on dedication and hard work coupled with an acute and perceptive eye, drawing heavily on experiences gained during his early years in Kenya. Mark's sculptures reflect his instinctive understanding of the moods of the animals he sculpts. Working with extraordinary speed, if the original plasticine or clay fails to speak to him within a couple of hours Mark destroys it and starts again. He captures violence, speed, tranquillity and pathos with deceptive ease, and is now internationally recognized as a master sculptor of the animal in motion.

His specially commissioned work includes a pair of lifesize Cheetah in a bronze tree for the ruling family of Dubai, a large figure for the re-launch of Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre, and the monumental Millennium sculpture The Waterhole at The Natural History Museum which incorporates over 50 animals. Unusually for an artist he enjoys the challenge of a commission so there are many more public and private pieces all around the world.