Obituary: Stephen Hines, Leeds sculptor and teacher
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Entirely self-taught, his artistic talent had been spotted by the nuns who taught him at St Joseph’s School in the Leeds district of Hunslet and inspired him to hitchhike to Italy, where he learnt the “old ways” alongside the masons in the marble quarries of Carrara.
He had left school at 15 to became a French polisher, and later spent three months in the 5th Royal Tank Regiment, before deciding the military was not for him.
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Hide AdInstead, he gained qualifications at night school and attended Keswick Hall College of Education in Norwich, where he met his wife, Margaret. They married in 1974 and he became a schoolteacher, eventually settling in Ossett, where he maintained a home studio.
His commissions included hundreds of sculptures in stone and marble, as well as sandblasts. His piece Leodis, produced for the opening of the St. John’s Centre in Leeds, depicted the history of the city. More recently he completed a memorial called Victims of War, to the people of Leeds who were hit during the Second World War.
He exhibited at the Royal Academy, Leeds Playhouse, Wakefield Cathedral, Christie’s and Covent Garden in London, Scone Palace in Scotland, and at Expo 88 in Brisbane, Australia.
His biggest assignment was the 12ft Millennium of the West which portrays a mixture of carved characters set amidst a pageant of events which shaped modern history.
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Hide AdSited off Thorpe Lane in Tingley, near Morley, it was originally designed to be the centrepiece of a hotel and leisure complex. But, he lamented, it never got off the ground, and he was never paid.
He carved it from a block of Morley Bluestone, and noted that had Michelangelo been a Yorkshireman, he would have used it, too.
His Vatican