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Charles Regnart

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Charles Regnart (1759-1844) was an English sculptor, specialising in funerary monuments. His masterpiece is said to be the 17th century-style recumbent figure of George Rush in the parish church in Farthinghoe. The figure shows Rush in old age, lying with his slippers on, clutching a Bible and staring to heaven. Regnart flourished from 1790 until 1830. His style has been described as "pseudo-Classical" and is typified by much folded drapery and an overall pattern of white (usually a draped funerary urn or casket) against a black background.

Contents

Life

He was born in Bristol in England the son of Philip Regnart (1739-1805), a carver and statue maker from Flanders who had worked under Thomas Ricketts of Gloucester, and who claimed descent from the Gothic chief Raginhart who sacked Rome with Alaric. Charles mother was Mary Magrath. He had four brothers, Philip, Joseph, Alexander and Stephen.

Charles married a Miss E Hunter of Hexham at Little Mary-la-Bonne Church in London, with whom he had one son, Charles, born in 1796. They lived at 12 Cleveland Street, off Cavendish Square in London. Following the death of his wife he married Jane, the family cook. They moved to a new house at Hampstead Road near Euston around 1817. Charles exhibited several works at the Royal Academy.

He died on 19 November 1844 at St Marys Buildings, St Martin-in-the-Fields, London and was buried in Hampstead Road Cemetery in London.

Notable Monuments

see

  • Both Lucy Davidson and William Dunbar both at All Saints Church, Kingston upon Thames
  • John Beyton at Carshalton
  • George Medley at Buxted
  • Jane Rashleigh at Tywardreath (1795)
  • William Vachell at Hinxton (1795)
  • Thomas Somers Cocks at Eastnor (1796) (grandfather of Thomas Somers-Cocks)
  • Henry Davidson (the elder) All Saints Church, Kingston upon Thames (1799)
  • Michael Biddulph, Ledbury (1800)
  • Elizabeth St Aubyn, Orsett (1801)
  • Thomas Astle, Battersea Parish Church (1803)
  • Anthony Atcheson, Portsmouth Cathedral (1804)
  • Memorial to John Andre (executed as a British spy 1780), in the Grosvenor Chapel, London (1804)
  • Admiral White at Cookham (1810)
  • Lt Henry Sedgewick at Hackney Parish Church (1811)
  • Robert Hoy (d.1811) in Higham in Suffolk
  • Sir John Kemp, Gissing (1815)
  • Jeremia Tarleton at the Church of Our Lady and Saint Nicholas, Liverpool (destroyed by German bombing in December 1940)
  • Hugh James, Carlisle Cathedral (1817)
  • David Milligan, Jamaica Cathedral (1818)
  • Sir Jonathan Miles, Ealing Parish Church (1821)
  • Anne Margaret Brymer (d.1840), Port Antonio, Jamaica (1842)
  • References

    Charles Regnart Wikipedia


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