Me (center) with the fund raising committee for my lockkeeper sculpture.
As the British monarchy is in the news, let me add my slender links to the royal family. Not least being Prince Charles's contribution that covered the cost of casting my sculpture for the town of Sowerby Bridge. The article that accompanied the above press cutting reads:
The sceptics said that a small Yorkshire mill town would never be able to raise the money to pay for the sculpture - but it did! The money came from all over the place: the dentist, the sweet shop, the bobby on the beat and the old ladies who dipped into their savings. The town's newsagent has a vested interest in the lockkeeper's boot laces: after all, his contribution paid for them. When Prince Charles got wind of what we were doing, he also chipped in handsomely. He didn't sell off his football boots, but someone in Sowerby Bridge did, and the proceeds went towards the Sculpture Fund.
The sculpture went on to win the 2000 National Trust Award for Public Sculpture. From one of the old ladies that dipped into their savings, I received a letter that read:
I don't know much about art, but I do know that your sculpture will always be loved by the people of this town.
Incidentally, Prince Charles (now the King) shares many of my views on art and architecture. The Prince's Foundation School of Traditional Arts stresses the importance of working from live model, and his Regeneration Through Heritage initiative recognizes the merits of architecture linked to the Industrial Revolution.