Thursday 25 April 2024

'The age of the statue is dead'

 The unveiling of the latest appalling public statue – of the late Queen and her (rather more lifelike) corgis, in Rutland, a delightful little county that doesn't deserve such an outrage – prompts an excellent piece by Ben Lawrence in the Telegraph. He's right that 'the biggest problem with modern statues is that they're awful' – think, if you can bear to, of the Diana statue in Kensington Gardens, or the giant Lovers looming over St Pancras station. However, there are exceptions – one, indeed, being the statue of John Betjeman that also stands at St Pancras, another the Larkin statue (also by Martin Jennings) in Hull. Only recently a pretty good statue of Coleridge (by Nicholas Dimbleby) was unveiled at Ottery St Mary. I should also mention that Lichfield has two good public statues – of Erasmus Darwin and St Chad, by Peter Walker. However, these are outliers, and Ben Lawrence is surely right that 'the age of the statue is dead' – the age, that is, of the naturalistic public monument, a statue that served a purpose, was skilfully made, and invoked a kind of grandeur that has become quite alien to our levelling, denigrating culture. Alas. 

6 comments:

  1. See the work of Eran Webber, Eudald de Juana, Maudie Brady, Alicia Ponzio, and Sabin Howard, many (all?) graduates of the Florence Academy of Art.

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  2. One might say, "the age of the monument" or "the age of the memorial". In Washington, DC, the FDR memorial is busy and pedantic. One could say the same for the Martin Luther King, Jr., memorial. The WW II memorial is a handsome space, but somewhat incoherent.

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    1. Thanks, George. Looking at online images, I see what you mean about all of those. Here we also have a National Memorial Arboretum, with memorials to all the more recent wars set amid a fine collection of trees. The sculptural elements are for the most part very disappointing.

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  3. What do you think of the statue of Oscar Wilde facing his boyhood home in Dublin? I rather like it.

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    1. Well, I've never seen it, but to judge by the images online, I'm afraid it's a No from me.

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