Age, Biography and Wiki
Roy Kitchin is a British sculptor and artist who was born on 6 December 1926 in London, England. He studied at the Royal College of Art and the Slade School of Fine Art. He has exhibited widely in the UK and abroad, and his work is held in many public and private collections.
Kitchin is best known for his abstract sculptures, which often incorporate found objects and materials. He has also created a number of public sculptures, including a memorial to the victims of the 7/7 London bombings.
Kitchin is currently 91 years old and is still actively creating art. His net worth is not publicly available.
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71 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Sagittarius |
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6 December 1926 |
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6 December |
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Date of death |
1997 |
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 6 December.
He is a member of famous sculptor with the age 71 years old group.
Roy Kitchin Height, Weight & Measurements
At 71 years old, Roy Kitchin height not available right now. We will update Roy Kitchin's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Roy Kitchin Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Roy Kitchin worth at the age of 71 years old? Roy Kitchin’s income source is mostly from being a successful sculptor. He is from . We have estimated
Roy Kitchin's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Under Review |
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Pending |
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Under Review |
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sculptor |
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Timeline
In the mid-2010s the museum was moved to the British Ironwork Centre at Aston near Oswestry on the A5 though still in Shropshire. A number of sculptures, in danger of being sold for scrap were saved by the Save a Sculpture program and are now located at the Sculpture Trails Outdoor Museum in Solsberry, Indiana, USA.
The couple's view was that before any sculpture be installed it was necessary to see the site throughout the seasons in order to understand where best to locate works. In June 1991 the Ironbridge Open Air Museum of Steel Sculpture opened to the public, displaying 43 sculptures throughout its 10-acre setting, including work by Pam Brown, Rob Ward, Sarah Neville, Michael Lyons, Charles Hewlings, Harry Seager, Brian Thompson, Owen Cunningham and Brian Fell.
Development of the site was delayed somewhat by construction of the Ironbridge Bypass on its north side. In the intervening period, however, the requisite planning approvals were obtained from the Department of the Environment, several old on-site mine shafts were capped and the museum was registered as a charitable trust. The necessary legal contracts between Telford Development Corporation and the Museum Trust were drawn and finally signed on 8 May 1989. Planning permissions were also granted to build a new house/studio, designed by Brown, on site.
For three years prior to this dramatic change Kitchin and Brown had invested considerable time in writing to organisations known to hold stocks of underused land. The letter proposed a simple exchange: use of the land in return for its upgrading and future maintenance. Encouraged by the positive responses received they decided to narrow the search to concentrate on the area of Shropshire known as the birthplace of the industrial revolution – Ironbridge. In 1986 Ironbridge Gorge was recognised by UNESCO for its ‘outstanding universal value’ and became a ‘World Heritage Site’.
This decision to concentrate on the Ironbridge area brought the couple into negotiation with Telford Development Corporation, a government body established to build the new town of Telford, who were then the biggest landowners in the district. Following four years of visiting sites to no avail, the perfect location was found in 1984. It was the right size parcel of land with suitable topographical features and a clearly defined boundary. Formerly, the site had been home to the Cherry Tree Hill Brick and Tile works, owned by Abraham Darby I’s Coalbrookdale Company until it folded in 1905.
In 1983 Kitchin left Newcastle to realise this ideal site for his sculpture: the Ironbridge Open Air Museum of Steel Sculpture at Coalbrookdale in Shropshire.
In 1971 Kitchin and Brown relocated to the Fine Arts Department at Newcastle upon Tyne University. Soon he began to produce much large steel sculptures that were exhibited widely in open-air shows. In 1983 Kitchin's one-man exhibition, titled in his name, opened at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park.
In 1961 Kitchin was invited by the architectural stone carver Tom Wright to begin teaching in the sculpture department at Wolverhampton School of Art. At around this time Kitchin's work underwent a notable change: he began to use production techniques of heavy industrial technology and the first steel sculptures appeared. It was here too, three years later, in 1964 that Kitchin met his lifelong partner the sculptor Pam Brown. He would stay at Wolverhampton School of Art a further ten years.
In 1952 Kitchin re-enrolled to the Sculpture Department at Birmingham College of Art, paying his way through by completing small commissions from Bloye. Here he was encouraged to produce sculptures of figures from the Greek canon. Graduating in 1954, Kitchin soon found work as a freelance architectural sculptor, gaining several larger important commissions, including the complete re-carving of the decoration on Birmingham Cathedral Tower. The next six years proved particularly formative for Kitchin's practice. Seeing for the first time the work of Cubist sculptors such as Jacques Lipchitz and Ossip Zadkine demonstrated the creative possibilities of working in new and unfamiliar materials. Kitchin also recognised the efforts of Jacob Epstein to free artists from the control of patronage that, he felt, had historically restricted individual expressivity. Kitchin's figurative work in stone and clay gave way to a series of richly organic anthropomorphic sculptures in bronze.
Later, reflecting on this period of his life with the R.E.M.E., Kitchin acknowledged it had not been entirely wasted. He had learnt many skills and techniques that would prove useful for his sculpture. Following his military discharge in 1948 Kitchin became a student of sculpture at Birmingham School of Art and Design, lasting only until the end of the first term. In that short period at college the Head of Sculpture William Bloye was so impressed by Kitchin's abilities that he asked him to become his full-time assistant. Without the means to pay for the course Kitchin accepted the role. With Bloye, Kitchin gained experience working on large-scale sculptures and neo-classical architectural decoration.
At the age of eighteen, with the Second World War in full momentum, Kitchin was conscripted to work in the coalmines as a ‘Bevin Boy’. Conditions in the mines proved particularly harsh and within only three days he went absent without leave. Following his eventual arrest and deportation to Ireland, Kitchin re-conscripted, putting his skills to use with the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers with whom he served three years from 1945-48.
Kitchin was born in Peterborough. When his father's confectionery business collapsed in 1936, the family relocated to Birmingham in the industrial West Midlands.
Roy Kitchin (6 December 1926 – 1997) was a British sculptor and art educator who worked primarily with steel. He was lecturer in Sculpture at Newcastle University. He co-founded the Open Air Museum of Steel Sculpture in Shropshire, England.