p of Gallows Hill on South Walks in 1986, and has been much admired ever since being one of Frink's most important and significant public works. The site in Dorchester marks the location where the town gallows were located in the 16th and 17th centuries, just outside the old town walls. The group is dedicated 'In memory of those who suffered in Dorset in the religious troubles of the 16 thd 17th centuries' many of whom were consigned to a barbaric and blood-thirsty death for their religious beliefs. Frink's work comprises three figures, a cowled figure, the hangman, who appears like 'Death' before the two resigned martyrs with hands clasped, one holding the hangman's gaze in a defiant manner. Unsurprisingly Frink's work is often compared to work by Rodin and the textural surface of these figures also suggests a link with the work of Giacometti, however this work is unmistakably her own at her most confident and monumental. Estimate: 8000-15000