Robert Adams (sculptor)

In a critical review of a retrospective mounted by the Gimpel Fils gallery in London in 1993, Brian Glasser of Time Out magazine described Adams as "the neglected genius of post-war British sculpture",[2] a sentiment echoed by Tim Hilton in the Sunday Independent,[3] who ranked Adams' work above that of his contemporaries, Ken Armitage, Reg Butler, Lynn Chadwick and Bernard Meadows.

He left school at age 14 and did various manual jobs, firstly as a van-boy for a printer and later with the agricultural engineering company, Cooch & Sons,[4] where experience gained in crafting metals proved useful in his later artistic creations.

From 1937 to 1946 he attended evening classes part-time in life drawing and painting at the Northampton School of Art.

During the Second World War, Adams was a conscientious objector, but joined the Civil Defence as a fire warden.

[5] Between 23 November 1947 and 3 January 1948, he held his first one-man exhibition at Gimpel Fils Gallery, 84 Duke Street, London.

Concrete relief at the Musiktheater im Revier (1959)