Professional freelance illustrator & graphic designer based in London’s East End. His website.
This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
Paul Bommer
Creations i
Hanbury Hall - tiled plaque
These 20 Delft tiles are decorated with scenes and symbols important in Hugue...
Other Subjects
John Hungerford Pollen
Decorative artist. Born 6 New Burlington Street to Richard and Anne, sister to Charles Cockerell. Ordained as an Anglican priest in 1845, but converted to Roman Catholicism in1852. He worked on man...
Vanessa Bell
Artist and interior designer, born Vanessa Stephen at 22 Hyde Park Gate, London. Sister of Virginia Woolf. She married Clive Bell in 1907 and their home in Gordon Square became the focus of what wa...
Antoine Watteau
Artist. Born Jean-Antoine Watteau in Valenciennes. In 1702, he moved to Paris and worked as a scene painter at the Opera. He is credited with inventing the genre of 'fêtes galantes', which shows sc...
Gerald Moira
Gerald Edward Moira was an English painter best known for his murals. Born in London, the son of a former Portuguese diplomat. His first commission was a mural for J. Lyons and Co., for the Trocad...
Sir David Low
Cartoonist and caricaturist. Born David Alexander Cecil Low in Dunedin, New Zealand. He worked for several newspapers, before coming to London and joining the 'Star'. In 1927 he moved to the Evenin...
Previously viewed
Pavlova statue
SW1, Victoria Street, Victoria Palace Theatre
A statue of Pavlova was added to the top of this newly built theatre in 1911 to celebrate the dancer and the role that the owner, Alfred ...
Lieutenant Colonel Oliver Cyril Spencer Watson, VC
Born Oliver Cyril Spencer Watson. After leaving the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst, he served in India, Gallipoli and eventually France. On 28th March 1918 at Rossignol Wood, north of Hebuter...
Robert Bentley Todd
SE5, Bessemer Road, King's College Hospital
The statue was originally erected in the great hall of the old King's College Hospital, near Lincoln's Inn Fields. and then in 1863, move...
Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them