Martin Purdy writes:
I find it rather poor that the Royal Mint should have misspelt Oscar Nemon's name not once but twice in its item on the new Churchill coin. I
posted a comment about the typos on the Royal Mint blog and the author corrected them, which is encouraging.
Jim Duncan also caught this. Sorry I didn't notice the typo; it is odd for the Royal Mint to make such a blunder. Below is more
information about Nemon and Churchill, from his estate's web site. Here's an image of the iconic 1965 Churchill crown, from the NGC web site.
The obverse is the Mary Gillick portrait of Queen Elizabeth II. -Editor
His hands on his hips, about to stride forwards, Oscar Nemon's 1970 bronze of Sir Winston
Churchill stands at the heart of British democracy - in the Members' Lobby of the House of Commons. It is a fitting place for the work of the
twentieth century�s most distinguished portrait sculptor, and a man who earned Churchill's respect as well as his friendship.
Nemon wrote in 1953 that he considered Churchill "one of the most remarkable personalities of all time", having admired him throughout
the war. The two men first met at the La Mamounia Hotel in Marrakech early in 1951. Born in Yugoslavia, Nemon had lived in Britain since the
1930's, but had lost almost all his family to the Holocaust, leading him to view Churchill with the depth of feeling which brings his portraits
of the statesman so intensely to life.
Lady Churchill asked Nemon if she could keep the terracotta bust he made at La
Mamounia because it "represents to me my husband as I see him and as I think of him." Shaped in Nemon's hotel room, it began a creative
collaboration between the two men which made Nemon Churchill's choice of sculptor when Elizabeth II commissioned a bust of Sir Winston for
Windsor Castle in 1952.
Other notable portraits followed, including a 1955 seated bronze for the
Guildhall, which Churchill unveiled, calling it "a very good likeness." They reflect the energy of the sittings during which they were
created. In his unpublished Memoir, Nemon recorded finding his distinguished subject "bellicose, challenging, and deliberately provocative"
The resulting sculptures became "not merely a likeness, but a biography of his life" - as Nemon had told a journalist he hoped they would
when interviewed while sculpting Churchill during the 1950s. Nemon was himself the subject of Churchill's only sculpture, created while Nemon was
sculpting Churchill, and now on display at Chartwell and in the Churchill Musuem.
Nemon's bronzes of Sir Winston Churchill are now to be found all over the world. They stand in Bletchley Park, Chartwell, Churchill College
Cambridge, the Cabinet War Rooms, The Guildhall, and the Houses of Parliament in London, St. Margaret's Bay, Dover, in Westerham, Kent, at
Windsor Palace, in Brussels, Copenhagen, Luxemborg, Monte Carlo, Moscow, Paris, Zagreb, Israel, Quebec, Toronto, Edmonton, Fredericton, Halifax,
Kansas City, Hyde Park, New York State, Canberra and Mexico City.
To read the complete article, see:
Nemon and Churchill (oscarnemon.org.uk/history/churchill_hist.html)
To read the earlier E-Sylum article, see:
2015 CHURCHILL £5 COMMEMORATIVE COIN (www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v17n47a18.html)
Wayne Homren, Editor
The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a non-profit organization
promoting numismatic literature. See our web site at coinbooks.org.
To submit items for publication in The E-Sylum, write to the Editor
at this address: whomren@gmail.com
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