Person    | Male  Born 4/5/1843  Died 10/7/1923

Robert Wallace Martin

Categories: Sculpture

Sculptor, normally referred to as Wallace, rather than Robert. Born Upper Thames Street. He was the lead sculptor in the art pottery factory run by him and his three brothers, producing  from the 1870s through to 1914, when the Martin Brothers Potters closed. A small amount of work continued to be produced until Wallace died, the last of the four.

Wallace trained as a sculptor and started the pottery in 1873 in Fulham (Pomona House, 111 New King's Road - still there and looking very much the artists' studio). It moved to Havelock Road, Southall (all redeveloped, nothing from the period remaining) in 1877. The brothers divided the work as follows: Walter - glazing and firing, Edwin - colouring, Charles (b. September 1846) - advising about customer preferences. The creative work of the sculptor was Wallace's. He specialised in fantastique, grotesque and wondrous beasts. 

In 1870 he joined the Plymouth Brethren and attended weekly meetings for the rest of his life.

In the c.1900 photograph Wallace is seated at the left, with behind him, reading left to right: Edwin, Walter, Charles.

The Phillips 2015 catalogue Wondrous Beasts, Feathered Fantasies is very informative with many photos of the work. From that catalogue: "1874: Wallace is introduced to the ironmonger Frederick Nettlefold, a patron who purchases and displays the Martin Brothers' works in his showroom, and orders tiles for the boardroom fireplace after visiting Pomona House. 1877: Nettlefold advances the Martin Brothers the money to secure premises at Southall Middlesex." Nettlefold continued as a good patron until his death in 1913.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
Robert Wallace Martin

Creations i

Norwood fountain - Autumn

Autumn is clutching an armful of fruit.

Read More

Norwood fountain - Junius

Most of this decorative rim has been lost. Only this 'Junius' section and, to...

Read More

Norwood fountain - Spring

Spring carries a bag of seeds and his job is to walk the fields casting the s...

Read More

Other Subjects

James Alexander Stevenson (Myranda)

James Alexander Stevenson (Myranda)

Stevenson signed himself as Myranda (a elision of his wife's name, Myra, and their surname) to avoid being confused with another sculptor of the same name. We have not yet found much information a...

Person, Sculpture

1 memorial
Hedley Hope-Nicholson

Hedley Hope-Nicholson

Barrister, literary critic and Charles I obsessive. He hyphenated his Nicholson with his wife's Hope. Andrew Behan researched this eccentric character, bur first a preamble from Andrew: "I couldn'...

Person, Sculpture

2 memorials
Jamie Sargeant

Jamie Sargeant

Sculptor. He trained with the Orton Trust, and became apprentice and then assistant to David Kindersley (father of Richard), who raised him in the tradition and spirit of direct carving and the tre...

Person, Sculpture

1 memorial
Raymond Ewers

Raymond Ewers

Born Australia.  Served in WW2 initially as a sapper and then as a war artist.

Person, Sculpture, Australia

1 memorial
Marcus Cornish

Marcus Cornish

Sculptor. Other work in London includes the 2001 'Stag' in St James's Square.

Person, Sculpture

3 memorials