Eric Gill

British artist and printer
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Also known as: Arthur Eric Rowton Gill
Quick Facts
In full:
Arthur Eric Rowton Gill
Born:
February 22, 1882, Brighton, Sussex, England
Died:
November 17, 1940, Uxbridge, Middlesex (aged 58)
Also Known As:
Arthur Eric Rowton Gill

Eric Gill (born February 22, 1882, Brighton, Sussex, England—died November 17, 1940, Uxbridge, Middlesex) was a British sculptor, engraver, typographic designer, and writer, especially known for his elegantly styled lettering and typefaces and the precise linear simplicity of his bas-reliefs.

Gill spent two years in an art school in Chichester and in 1899 was articled to a London architect; in 1902 he turned to letter carving after studying in his spare time at the new Central School of Arts and Crafts with Edward Johnston, a pioneer in the revival of lettering. From then until 1910, he worked as a carver of tombstones, although by 1909 he had turned to figure sculpture. “Mother and Child” (1912) brought him public notice. After 1912 his success as a sculptor was established, and he inspired an English revival of direct carving in stone rather than using preparatory clay models. He carved the stations of the cross for Westminster Cathedral (1914–18), London; these bas-reliefs and his famous torsoMankind” (1928) were cut in Hoptonwood stone, which he helped make fashionable in the 1920s and ’30s. Other major commissions included the relief “Prospero and Ariel” over the main entrance of Broadcasting House, London (1931), and the three bas-reliefs entitled “The Creation of Adam” (1935–38) in the lobby of the council hall of the Palace of Nations at Geneva.

He and Douglas Pepler founded St. Dominic’s Press in 1915. Gill contributed wood engravings and lettering for the press and also began his provocative writings on the relationship of religion to the workman and to art. In 1924 he was asked to do engravings for the Golden Cockerel Press; the best remembered of his hundreds of engravings and dozens of books is the Four Gospels (1931), printed from type expressly designed by him for the press. At this time he formed, with his son-in-law René Hague, a private press at his home in Pigotts where in 1931 he printed his controversial essay, “Typography.”

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Typefaces he designed included Perpetua (1925), Gill Sans Serif (1927), Joanna (1930), and Bunyan, designed in 1934 but recut for machine use and renamed Pilgrim in 1953.

Gill was made an associate of the Royal Academy in 1937 and of the Royal Society of British Sculptors in 1938. His books include Christianity and Art (1927), Work and Property (1937), and Autobiography (1940).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.