How you can use this image
Notes
Add or edit a note on this artwork that only you can see. You can find notes again by going to the ‘Notes’ section of your account.
'The Eagle Slayer' was cast in 1851 by the Coalbrookdale Company, having been designed by popular Victorian neoclassical sculptor John Bell. The sculpture is made of cast iron, a material previously only used for industrial use. The sculpture shows a shepherd who, upon discovering one of his sheep has been killed by an eagle, fires an arrow and kills the eagle. The statue appears in the 1875 Coalbrookdale Company catalogue (No. 210). A smaller statuette version of 'The Eagle Slayer' was also cast by the Coalbrookdale Company. 'The Eagle Slayer' was originally displayed at the Great Exhibition in 1851 and was presented to the Exhibition's commissioner at its conclusion, and resided for some years at Kensington Palace. It later stood outside the original V&A building when it was the South Kensington Museum.
Title
The Eagle Slayer
Date
c.1851
Medium
cast iron
Measurements
H 256 x W 132 x D 166 cm
Accession number
L839
Acquisition method
on loan from the Victora and Albert Museum
Work type
Sculpture
Inscription description
COALBROOKDALE SHROPSHIRE