, but while
Michelangelo's figure grasps a primitive sling, Carrick's grasps the sling of a rifle. war memorial. The large rock, a
glacial erratic, provides an interesting foil for the monument, indeed the shape is so similar that it may have been the inspiration for Carrick's figurative group After the war Carrick quickly re-established his yard in Edinburgh and again began exhibiting at the RSA with 'Jock' and 'With Bayonet and Bomb'. During the period from 1920 until around 1926 he was heavily involved in war memorial work. Carrick was a stone carver and preferred working in freestone, especially Doddington stone quarried in the
Cheviots. War memorials featuring his carved sculptures include
Lochawe,
Killin,
Oban,
St Margaret's Hope,
Kinghorn,
Newburgh and
Auchtermuchty. war memorial featuring Carrick's allegorical group 'Justice Guiding Valour'. 'Justice' restrains 'Valour' with a light touch of her finger, an action which is perhaps reminiscent of the light touch of the angel waking the Magi on the capital at
Autun by
Gislebertus. He later received a commission from the
South African Scottish Regimental Association to carve a copy of the Killin soldier for their own memorial which stands in
Burghers Park in
Pretoria. Carrick also executed figures in
bronze, including the figures of soldiers for the
Dornoch,
Forres,
Blairgowrie and
Walkerburn war memorials, and allegorical figures including 'Winged Victory' for
Berwick Upon Tweed and 'Justice Guiding Valour' for the
Fraserburgh war memorial. Despite being heavily engaged in this work, he did execute some other commissions in the early 1920s including carving the stone figures of 'The Leopard', 'The Vulture', and 'The Kangaroo' for the Animal Wall extension at
Cardiff Castle, and the tomb featuring the recumbent figure of Walter Campbell of Lochawe in Saint Conan's Kirk. == Edinburgh Castle ==