The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Celebrated sculptor marks two decades of work in Angus town

Bruce Walker, 71, relocated to Kirrie 20 years ago and is preparing to hold his first ever sale as a thank you to friends and customers

- GRAHAM BROWN gbrown@thecourier.co.uk

An Angus sculptor who has carved a global reputation for his stone and glasswork is celebratin­g an important milestone.

This week marks two decades since Bruce Walker set up a base in the heart of Kirriemuir, moving to the town’s Cumberland Close after 22 years in the old school at Kirkbuddo, south of Forfar.

Now 71, Mr Walker said his varied work gives him as great a buzz as it ever did as he prepares to take the wraps off a large-scale work for a site in the north-east which is due to be completed shortly.

Aberdeensh­ire-born Bruce, whose career began as a monumental mason, said: “Myself and my wife have both been heavily involved in the whole business for so many years, but I’ve no intention of retiring.

“It’s 53 years since I started my

I always wanted to make sculpture and glasswork something affordable for people to enjoy and over all these years I hope that I’ve managed to achieve that.

BRUCE WALKER

apprentice­ship and I’m getting more exciting pieces than ever to work on.

“They include the latest commission, which is being kept a bit of a secret until it is unveiled near Aberdeen soon, but it’s a wonderful piece to have been asked to do.

“As a thank you to friends and customers, we are holding our first ever sale on June 9, 10 and 11, and we hope people will come and see us.

“I always wanted to make sculpture and glasswork something affordable for people to enjoy and over all these years I hope that I have managed to achieve that.”

Across the many pieces Bruce has produced down the decades there is one monument, however, which stands proud in terms of its significan­ce.

In 2012, he carved the stunning Scott Wilson memorial at Glen Prosen.

Created from a massive block of Craigenlow granite and completed in the centennial year of Captain Robert Falcon Scott and Doctor Edward Wilson reaching the South Pole and their subsequent deaths, it depicts the relationsh­ip between the two men and their associatio­n with Glen Prosen, where planning for the Terra Nova expedition took place.

“Until I began that work I had no idea that it was the most important scientific expedition carried out by humanity,” said Bruce.

“That was my most emotional piece and I am still living it now, having recently met a member of the family of Frank Debenham who is now the closest link to the original expedition team.”

 ?? Picture: Gareth Jennings. ?? Sculptor Bruce Walker at work on a new project at his base in Kirriemuir.
Picture: Gareth Jennings. Sculptor Bruce Walker at work on a new project at his base in Kirriemuir.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom