•
Whither, 1925. An allegorical painting depicting a funeral in a Horsham graveyard,
Horsham Museum & Art Gallery. •
Percy Harris's monument in the churchyard of
St Nicholas Church, Chiswick; the relief carving depicting the
resurrection of the dead was carved in the late 1920s and acquired by Harris for display in his garden. The gravestone is Grade II* listed. •
Architectural Aspiration, 1934, exterior and interior,
Royal Institute of British Architects •
Sight and
Sound panels, 1938,
Warner Theatre,
Leicester Square, London • 'Dawn' (aka 'Sunrise'). 1938, 15 foot sculpture, Adelphi building, London • Wood carvings for the
Cunard Line liners and •
St James's Theatre panels, 1959, four horizontal
bas-relief panels at the site of St James's Theatre, London. Depicts the heads of
Gilbert Miller,
George Alexander,
Oscar Wilde, and
Laurence Olivier and
Vivien Leigh) •
Progression, 1959, sculpture on facade of Marks & Spencer, 258-264 Edgware Road, London. Removed 1988. •
The Stag, 1962,
Maidstone, Kent. His largest work, originally located in Stag Place, London but moved to Maidstone in 2004. It was cast in aluminium by
H.H. Martyn & Co. •
Crucifixion of Jesus, 1964, St John's Church, Horsham. Made from coal dust and resin, it was removed from the facade of the church in December 2008 to
Horsham Museum and Art Gallery. Rev Ewen Souter, the vicar at St John's Church called said it was "a horrifying depiction of pain and suffering" that 'scared children and deterred worshippers'. •
Thomas Becket, 1970,
St Paul's Cathedral Churchyard, London •
The Boy David, 1971,
Chelsea Embankment • exterior work at
St Columba's Church, Pont Street, London •
The Churchill Memorial Screen, 1969, Churchill Shopping Centre Dudley, Partially destroyed and removed in 1992 due to deterioration and vandalism and held in secure storage. As of 2025 funding has been acquired by the Stourbridge Glass Museum for the restoration of one of the panels. ==Gallery==