T. B. Huxley-Jones

[1] After graduating, Huxley-Jones held the post of head of sculpture at Gray's School of Art in Aberdeen.

[1][3] Huxley-Jones received a large number of public commissions for his sculptures, which were often elegant compositions with a smooth surface and a simple profile.

[3] These public works include the statue of Helios at BBC Television Centre in London and the 1963 Joy of Life Fountain in London's Hyde Park, [4][5] He also created Mother and Child for Chelmsford's Central Park Memorial Gardens which won an award from the Royal Society of British Sculptors in 1966 and was renovated in 2009.

[6] Huxley-Jones was married to the artist Gwynneth Holt and lived at Chelmsford in Essex and died at near there, at Broomfield.

[3] Letters to Huxley-Jones from the architect Graham Richards Dawbarn are preserved at the Essex Record Office.

Reclining figure by Huxley-Jones outside Hornsey Library.
Helios Statue White City