George Fullard British, 1923-1973

During the Second World War George Fullard served in the army where he suffered severe injuries and narrowly escaped death when his tank was blown up in the prolonged battle for Monte Cassino. He was left severely wounded and with permanent scars on his head and shoulder. The experience of war became a central theme in his work as is particularly evident in later drawings and assemblages which explore images and ideas from that traumatic period. His drawings and sculpture that focus on themes of walking, falling and running figures allude directly to his experiences and particularly the terrifying blitzkrieg on Sheffield in 1940 which he witnessed.

 

Alongside his expressionist approach to modelling Fullard also used the idiom of assemblage to deal with the topic of war. He preferred to call himself an ‘image maker’ rather than a sculptor and particularly enjoyed the surprising juxtapositions that resulted from assembling disparate objects saying:

 

"It is that element of the unplanned which seem to have most point for me - the conscious effort of a complex production in order to produce the unforseen. This is the basis of work - to plan and produce around a conscious ‘idea’ or subject really in order to permit the entry of the unexpected..."

 

Today Fullard’s work can be found in a number of private and public collections, including the Arts Council of Great Britain, Leeds City Art Galleries, Sheffield Galleries and Museums and the Tate Collection, London. Several bronze sculptures are on permanent public display in Sheffield City Centre.