Under the auspices of the
Henry Moore Institute and the
University of Leeds, work began in 2000 on revising the dictionary for a new edition, overseen by
Ingrid Roscoe, with the assistance of co-editors Emma Hardy, a curator at the
Geffrye Museum, and Greg Sullivan, curator of British Art 1750–1830 at
Tate Britain. The Dictionary was published by
Yale University Press in 2009 under the slightly amended title
A Biographical Dictionary of Sculptors in Britain 1660–1851. The third edition is considerably enlarged: it contains 3,125 entries and runs to 1,620 pages (as compared to 514 pages for the second edition). It covers sculptors who were active in Britain at any time between 1660 and 1851, irrespective of their country of origin and even if they also worked outside these dates. All the artists listed in the Gunnis
Dictionary remain, but new ones have been added, reflecting later research on the subject. The book's format is closely based on the original, each entry consisting of a biographical text followed by a list of works. There is also a comprehensive general bibliography. Unlike Gunnis's editions, which included up to thirty illustrations, the new edition is unillustrated.
Reception The third edition was widely welcomed and recommended as a key starting point for research into this area of art. The view of the professional body for art historians in Britain, the
Association of Art Historians, was expressed by Rosa Somerville writing in the Association's journal,
The Art Book, in 2010 where she stated that the new dictionary "is a great advance on the work ... that was begun so enthusiastically and extensively by Rupert Gunnis". Somerville added that the new dictionary is "a handsome and scholarly reference book detailing British sculptors between the Restoration and the Great Exhibition". John Kenworthy-Browne, writing in
Apollo magazine, said: "This magnificent dictionary of British sculptors supersedes Rupert Gunnis's standard work simply by the sheer volume of information that it presents." Similarly in
The Art Newspaper, Oliver Garnett of the
National Trust wrote: "The result is breathtaking: 1,000 additional biographies, followed by work lists covering 35,000 individual pieces, tied to a bibliography of 3,000 items which will be immensely useful in its own right." Similar praise came from
Simon Watney, writing in
The Burlington Magazine, who said of the work that went into the new dictionary: "The result is a book of unrivalled authority, which employs a pleasurably straightforward format of biographies followed in each case by chronological sequences of religious and then secular works." A more qualified review came from Jean Wilson of the Church Monuments Society who, while allowing that the book "improves tremendously on its predecessor, that its coverage is enormously increased, and that it is enlightening", uncovered a number of "exasperating problems" of error and inconsistency in the book's indexes, and suggested that these do not reach the "high standards set by the editors" elsewhere in the volume. ==Online edition==