Daisy Theresa Borne


Daisy Theresa Borne was a British sculptor.

Biography

Borne was born in London but travelled extensively as a child with her family and for a time lived in Moline in the United States where her father owned a printing ink business. Her mother's occupation is not recorded. Borne returned to Britain and studied sculpture at the Regent Street Polytechnic and also developed her singing ability to the extent she was offered, but refused, professional roles. In 1933 she met Joyce Bidder,, who taught her to carve and with whom she set up a studio in Wimbledon in south London that they maintained together for some fifty years. Borne is listed as an artist, and with others, having "significant cultural and social capital in their own right" as a member of the Women's Amateur Rowing Association, after World War II. She is also mentioned in an informal history of the 'Borne Regatta'.
Borne worked in a wide variety of materials, including plastic, marble, stone and wood to produce statuettes, figurines, fountains and works in relief. Between 1933 and 1971 she showed some 78 works at exhibitions of the Society of Women Artists and was elected an associate member of that body in 1949 and a full member in 1952. Borne was also, between 1932 and 1962 a regular exhibitor at the Royal Academy in London. She was also an associate member of the Royal Society of British Sculptors and for a time served as Vice-President of the Royal Society of Miniature Painters, Sculptors and Gravers. In 1987 the Fine Art Society hosted a two-women show of Borne and Bidder's work.
Borne exhibited her first piece in Palomina marble, Madonna of the Adoring Angels in 1939 at the Royal Academy. This was her first piece of a religious theme, which she would later specialise in.