This article is about the sculptor. For other people named David Petersen, see David Petersen.
David Petersen (born 1944) is a Welshsculptor, cultural commentator and television presenter based in St. Clears, Carmarthenshire. He is particularly known for his metal sculptures of dragons.[1]
Petersen was born in Cardiff in 1944, the son of Jack Petersen (1911–1990), a boxer who held the British Heavyweight title on two occasions.[2]
Petersen worked in the GKN steelworks in Cardiff before studying fine art at Newport College of Art (1961–1965).[1] He is an elected member of the Royal Cambrian Academy,[3] and has served as chairman of the British Artist Blacksmiths Association.[1]
For several years Petersen led the Welsh delegation to the Festival Interceltique de Lorient in Brittany. He resigned from the festival committee in 2008 in protest at the content of the Welsh pavilion.[4]
Petersen's sons Aaron, Toby and Gideon are sculptors who sometimes work collaboratively with their father.[3]
The Mametz Wood memorial commemorates an action of the 38th (Welsh) Division of the British Army during the First Battle of the Somme in 1916. The memorial, located on the site of the action in northern France, is of a large red dragon holding barbed wire, mounted on a stone plinth.[5]
Together with his sons, Petersen won a competition to make the National Millennium Beacon for the millennium celebrations.[7] The large stainless steel sculpture was erected on the porch of Cardiff City Hall.[8]
Petersen is also known as a television presenter on historical and cultural topics. His work includes Stop, Look, Listen: Tales from Wales (Channel 4, 2002) and When the Romans Came to Wales (Channel 4, 2003).[12][13]
^ abPetersen, David (1999). Your vote for Brecon and Radnorshire (election leaflet). archived in "The Welsh Political Archive". National Library of Wales. Archived from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 15 April 2015.