
Gillian Jagger
Gillian Jagger is a noted sculptor and teacher. She was born in London in
1930, the daughter of the celebrated English artist, Charles Sargeant Jagger,
sculptor of the Royal Artillery Memorial in Hyde Park, No-Man's Land at the
Tate, Britain, and a number of other prominent works in London and throughout
England, Belgium, Egypt, and India.
Gillian Jagger's home and studio is a farm in the rural village of Kerhonkson,
New York, about 100 miles north of New York City. Her work is rooted in the
natural world in which she lives and works, a world that includes her horses,
dogs, and cats. Her work is monumental and her materials include huge tree
trunks, farm implements, casts of dead animals and, in some works, the actual
corpses of animals she has found on her property. One of her latest works
consists of fragments of a plaster cast she made immediately after her lead
horse, Faith, was killed in a tragic accident.
Jagger's work is represented in many museum and private collections, and she
has been the subject of numerous one-person exhibits. In November, 2002, a
major retrospective of her work will be shown at the Elvehjem Museum of Art
at the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
Jagger is also a brilliant teacher. She is the Distinguished Professor of
Sculpture at the Pratt Institute, and a visiting professor at the Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts, the oldest art school in the United States.