Tribute to Teddington Sculptor Avril Vellacott
By The Editor
5th Nov 2021 | Local News
Avril Vellacott, a sculptor and one of the leading members of Teddington's arts community, has died aged 79 at her home in Elmfield Avenue after a short illness.
Her career as a sculptor dated back to the 1960s, and over the years her work included a large number of portrait sculpture commissions – not least a bust of Jeremy Thorpe, the former Liberal leader, which is part of the Parliamentary Art Collection.
Avril studied at the City and Guilds of London Art School, taking the Sculpture Prize for her year, and she taught at Richmond Adult and Community College for more than 20 years.
Away from her work, she was an enthusiastic member of Twickenham Rowing Club Women's Recreational Rowing Team.
Two of her best known local works can be seen at Teddington Library and Teddington Memorial Hospital: at the library is a bust of Sir Noël Coward (who was born a few yards further up Waldegrave Road); and her bust of Pamela Bryant in the hospital celebrates the
unflagging work of the Life President of the Friends of Teddington Memorial Hospital. Working for many years mostly in the field of figurative and portrait sculpture, Avril specialised in terracotta portraits and has exhibited at the Royal West of England, Dartington Hall and the Society of Portrait Sculptors at the Mall Galleries in London. She embraced the new world of social media and posted regularly on Facebook and YouTube. At home, during Richmond ARTHouse events (celebrating the borough's rich diversity of creative talent), her front driveway became a covered workshop demonstration area, and she opened her back garden so that visitors could enjoy some of her larger piecesof figurative work.
Avril Vellacott is survived by her two sons and seven grandchildren.
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