Charles Doman
Charles Leighfield Jonah Doman FRBS was a sculptor from Nottingham.Career
Born in 1884, he was the son of George L. Doman, a stone carver and monumental mason. He trained at the Nottingham School of Art from 1897 to 1901, where he was a pupil of Joseph Else. Then he worked for his father and studied at the Royal College of Art in South Kensington, London from 1905 to 1908.
He married Selina Maud Alton in 1908 in Nottingham.
Sculpture which is visible in public buildings includes the Bust of Lord Trent at Highfields Park, Nottingham, Civic Law at Nottingham Council House, and The Port of London Authority building, erected in 1928.
He taught sculpture at the Putney School of Art. In 1923 he became an associate member of the Royal Society of British Sculptors and 1938 he was elected a Fellow.
He designed the first Armistice medal which was issued by the Royal Mint.
He died on 19 March 1944 in the southwest London suburb of Wimbledon southwest London and left an estate valued at £2,892 1s 7d..Works
- Sculpture of Truth, Nottingham Castle Museum, 1904
- Sculpture, Port of London Authority Building, London, 1922
- Sculpture, Lloyds, Leadenhall Street, London 1925
- Sculpted relief, Liberty's, 208-222 Regent Street, London, 1925-28
- Sculpted relief Charity, Royal Academy of Arts, 1929
- Sculpture of Civic Law, Nottingham Council House, 1929
- Sculptural group Boy and Pelican, Royal Academy of Arts, 1929
- Relief Panel, Half Landing, Administrative Block, Royal Masonic Hospital, Ravenscourt Park, London, 1933
- Bust of Jesse Boot, 1st Baron Trent, Highfields Park, University of Nottingham, 1934
- Reliefs, Home Ales brewery building, Daybrook, Nottingham, 1936
- Sculpted panel of Solicitude, exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts, 1937
- Bust of Dick Sheppard, 1938