
Alfred Drury (1856-1944) was a British sculptor associated with the New Sculpture movement, which revitalized British sculpture in the late Victorian period. He studied under Dalou in Paris and created architectural sculptures, portrait busts, and public monuments with a naturalistic refinement.
Drury's work decorates the facade of the V&A, the War Office in Whitehall, and other major London buildings. His figures combine classical composure with the lively surface detail characteristic of the New Sculpture.
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