[1] During this period, Lambert helped Wood complete the Machine Gun Corps Memorial now located on Hyde Park Corner in London.
[2] Lambert's sculptures were first exhibited at Regent Street's Goupil Gallery in the spring of 1925 where he showed mainly bronze portraits.
[2] Between May and July 1928, the aristocrat and Bright Young Thing Stephen Tennant sat for a bust portrait by Lambert.
[6] Tennant, who owned the bust, was reportedly delighted with it, saying: "It is very startling...the fur collar of the coat looks like a huge dead snake, the face has a null, poisonous beauty that I like.
[10] Cast while Lambert still considered the bust unfinished, this piece is indicative of a looser handling of form as opposed to mimetic representation.
[10] In 1952 Lambert produced a sculpture for the entrance to the Time & Life Building at 1 Bruton Street, London.
[13] Lambert contributed six grotesque sculptures and two pinnacles to the headquarters of Associated Electrical Industries at 33 Grosvenor Place.