Tag Archive: City of Sculpture

Head Turning Exhibition in Berkeley Square

A stunning new temporary exhibition of recent work by Emily Young has just been installed in Berkeley Square, Mayfair. Six gigantic heads by one of  Britain’s, if not the World’s greatest living sculptors.

The heads are enormous, up to two metres tall and weighing as much as four tonnes each. Unlike her giant heads in St Paul’s churchyard, it is possible to get really close to these new works, walk around them, touch them and really appreciate their scale and the sheer craft involved in their production.

At once figurative and abstract, ancient and modern, natural, yet man-made, monumental, yet deeply sensitive, a sense of solid permanence and fleeting transience are poetically combined; these are quite the most interesting and engaging new sculptures I have seen in many years.

Emily Young’s “The Metaphysics of Stone” will run in Berkeley Square, from 7th February – 25 April 2012. During February there is also an exhibition of more new work from the artist at The Fine Art Society in New Bond Street.

You can read more about them and  Emily Young at the FAS site or on the artist’s own website. But far better than reading any more, I would suggest that instead, you hop on a tube to Green Park  and experience them for yourself.

The author of this blog is a qualified City of Westminster Tour Guide who runs unique walking tours throughout Westminster, see tabs for details.

Ship Adrift in St James’s Square

I made a little time to go and see this monumental temporary addition to St James’s Square yesterday. Click any image for a larger version.

It is Paul McCarthy‘s sculpture ‘Ship Adrift, Ship of Fools’. It will be in St James’s Square until 15 February. The piece is on display courtesy of Hauser & Wirth and coincides with new exhibitions of McCarthy’s work at their galleries.

The massive new sculpture is described by the gallery as  “a contemporary rephrasing of a medieval allegory, depicting a world of power without principle as the ship and its denizens hurtle obliviously towards their own destruction.”

You can see the sculpture from outside the Square, it is in the north-eastern corner but to see it properly you will need to visit when the gardens are open on weekdays 9 am – 4.30 pm.

The author of this blog is a qualified City of Westminster Tour Guide who runs unique walking tours throughout London, see tabs for details.

Hand of God Touches Park Lane

The latest sculpture in Westminster City Council’s City of Sculpture initiative has been unveiled in Park Lane.

Hand of God by Lorenzo Quinn replaces the same artist’ s Vroom, Vroom. There are pictures of this previous work and some more details about the artist  from a previous post.

Click to see any image in a larger format.

The aluminium statue is scheduled to remain in place until February 2012.

 

The author of this blog is a qualified City of Westminster Tour Guide who runs unique walking tours throughout Westminster, see tabs for details.

 

Yuri Gagarin and Henry Moore in Cultural Exchange

As the new Yuri Gagarin statue was unveiled in London today it was revealed at the reception that a familiar London landmark will soon be leaving for the Kremlin in Moscow. One woman connects the two unique public exhibitions – Elena Gagarina, Yuri Garagin’s daughter.

The Yuri Gagarin statue was unveiled this morning outside the British Council’s offices on the Mall near Admiralty Arch. It is an exhibition copy of the original which stands in Lyubertsy.
The unveiling was performed by HRH Prince Michael of Kent and Elena Gagarina in front of a large crowd of press, dignitaries, and well wishers. Perhaps the most unusual feature of the morning was a greeting delivered live and direct from the International Space Station’s crew, in a reception immediately prior to the unveiling.
Elena Gagarina is not only the daughter of the the first man in space, she is also Director of the Kremlin Museums. In this capacity, she, together with the British Council, have arranged for the Kremlin to have its first ever show of Modern Art.
The Henry Moore exhibition will open at the Kremlin in Feb 2012 and will feature many sculptures and drawings by the British artist. The highlight of the show will be this familiar London landmark.

This is Moore’s Knife Edge Two Piece made between 1962 and 1965. It stands near the Victoria Tower at the Houses of Parliament and regularly crops up in the background of political interviews.

The international loan of such a well-known London landmark is very unusual but then the gift of a Russian memorial or monument is equally rare. Special permission was required from the Governor of Moscow and Lyubertsy authorities to make a copy of the original Gagarin statue so that Roscosmos, the Russian Space Agency, could present it as a gift to the people of Britain. It will stand in the current location for one year before moving to a permanent site.
The statue’s unveiling could not have been better timed. This year marks 50 years of manned space flight and today, July 14th is the 50th anniversary of Gagarin’s lunch with HM the Queen.
Gagarin visited the UK in July 1961. The authorities were wrong-footed and underestimated the enthusiasm with which he was greeted by the British public. What was to have been a pretty low-key 2 day visit was hastily extended to 4 days and a meeting with Harold Macmillan and lunch at Buckingham Palace arranged. During that lunch the Queen gave Yuri Gagarin a present of two dolls for his daughters, Elena and Galina. I wonder if they both still have them?
There is also an accompanying exhibition celebrating 50 years of manned space flight at the British Council but I will post separately about this.
The author of this blog is a qualified City of Westminster Tour Guide who runs unique walking tours throughout Westminster, see tabs for details.