Showing posts with label Sculpture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sculpture. Show all posts

Friday 4 March 2016

Berkeley Sqare Gardens

Berkeley Square Gardens is a green space in Mayfair, London, which dates back to the 1740’s. It houses different sculptures which are rotated to different pieces yearly. The garden has come quite a way from its hey-day.
In 1727, Berkeley Square Garden was built as an enclosed space. It had a water meadow that ran off the River Tyburn which was situated just south of the square. The Vestry minutes referred to meadow as the “the Common Sewer”.
 
Arrangements were made through an agreement between the 4th Lord Berkeley, his son and two carpenters Cook and Hilliard, who developed the square. 3 ½ acres were enclosed on the south and west end by “dwarf wall and wooden rails and pallisadoes set thereon.”
Emily Young - Earth/Cassandra II (2014)
There was no upkeeping of the garden of laying it out and keeping the garden tidy, as no one took responsibility of the garden. It was then enclosed for strict access during the mid-1740s.
 
During the 1760s, the railings and walls of the garden were taken down and by 1766, the garden “had gone to ruin”. An Act of Parliament was granted to enclose and adorn the square as proposed by residents who took it into their own hands to plan for fencing and laying of the garden. In the same year of 1766, the act gave residents the power to “raise money to pave, light and adorn the space”, which caused the rates to rise for the maintenance of the square.
“The plan approved at Gwynn’s Tavern in Berkeley Square. There is a grass plot in the middle, a gravel walk around, and iron pallisadoes; but there is no statue or bason in the middle. The undertaker of the work has engaged to finish it completely for £7,000.”
 
The following year, fences were up and the grounds laid with the layout kept to the original. A report from 1767 says that the square became “a handsome green walk next the railing, then a terras walk, and the rest laid out as a grass plot”. London Plane trees were later planted in 1789 by Edward Bourverie and is said to be the oldest Plane trees in London.
A statue of George III was erected but was taken down and replaced by a pump house/gazebo, which still stands there today. The statue was an equestrian sculpture cast in lead made by French sculptor Beaupre. But due to weather conditions and the weight of the rider, the legs of the horse snapped off, consequently causing it to be removed in 1827.
31 years later, Henry (3rd Marquess of Lansdowne) commissioned a nympy statue created by Alexander Munro in 1858, which was created of Carrara marble. It was located on the south side outside of the park offering water to any passer-by. It was later relocated inside the square when a path was laid leading up to the pump house. The water feature was restored in 1994.
During the World War II in 1941, the railings were removed and the square used for armaments manufacture for the units of the US army. After the war, the City Council reinstated it back as a garden, removing any air-raid shelters and replanting the lawns.  
In 1977, the Berkeley Square Ball was held in commemoration of the Queen Silvere Jubilee, which ran through the 1980’s and raised £800,000. The square is reference in Eric Maschwitz’s wartime ballad A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square.

Monday 22 February 2016

Henry Moore - Large Spindle Piece

Henry Moore’s Large Spindle Piece is inspired by Michelangelo’s painting on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. Standing at 3 metres high, the sculpture is now against the backdrop of the Grade I building of St. Pancras Railway Station.
 
It was installed and chosen as the piece not only for the complimentary backdrop with the station building, but as a way to deter anyone from sitting on or climbing the sculpture. The piece was previously stood at the British Council in the Spring Gardens near Trafalgar Square from 1981 to 1996. It has since moved to the Henry Moore Foundation at Perry Green and then the Yorkshire Sculpture Park. It is on loan from the Henry Moore Foundation to the Network Rail for at least 5 years.

Moore was inspired by a rough black pebble found in the fields around his home in Perry Green, Hertfordshire. Several versions were spawned with some found across the world in USA and Japan. The sculpture is made of bronze.

Monday 8 February 2016

Winter Lights Festival @ Canary Wharf

A series of light installations were displayed across Canary Wharf which was part of the Lumiere London festival this year. Many of the artworks are marvelled spectacles that are not only visually stunning but some are currently encouraged to interact with the artworks one way or another. The festival ran from 11 to 22 January 2016.

Some of the light installations can be found below:

The Luminous City - Nathaniel Rackowe

Light Sphere I - Tom Wilkinson

We Could Meet - Martin Richman

A Parallel Image - Gebhard Sengmüller

Moon - Iregular (Daniel Iregui)

Aura (2014) - Philips Lighting Design

Lumen Prize Exhibition - Lumen

The Pool - Jen Lewin Studio

My Light is Your Light - Alaa Minawi
Globoscope - Collectif Coin

Flawless - Gonzalo Bascuñan & Perrine Vichet

On the Wings of Freedom - Aether & Hemera

Infinity Pools - Stephen Newby

bit.fall - Julius Popp

Totem - Bitone Collective

Fantastic Planet - Amanda Parer

Saturday 30 January 2016

Lumiere London 2016 - Trafalgar Square and Westminster

Lumiere London is a festival bringing art installations created by artists from around the world. In total there were 5 installations in and around Trafalgar Square, Westminster and the Mall. The installations were on from Thursday 14 to Sunday 17 January 2016.

For one reason or another the installation by Pablo Valbuena created the kinematope for the mall wasn't on during the last day of the festival, unfortunately, I was not able to snap a picture for your viewing. The artwork would have featured streams of lights lining up on both sides of a road leading up to the fountain near Buckingham Palace.

There in total 5 installations on this trail:

Plastic Islands - Luzinterruptus

Centre Point Lights

Neon Dogs - Deepak Mann-Kier

The Light of the Spirit - Patrice Warrener

#LumiereLDN

 

Friday 29 January 2016

Lumiere London 2016 - King's Cross

Lumiere is a series of light installations dotted around London with a selection of different displays such as sculptures and projections. The event is produced by Artichoke and supported by the Mayor of London. Some of it was at King's Cross from 14 to 17 January 2016. Asides from the gazing upon the wondrous beauty of these art pieces in the King's Cross area, there was a chance to get free candy floss at each point of the installation, which adds to the nice finish to the evening.

There are in total 11 installations in this trail at King's Cross:

Platonic Spin - Nathaniel Rackowe

IFO (Identified Flying Object) - Jacques Rival

Joining the Dots - Cleary Connolly

King's Cross Tunnel - Allies & Morrison / Spires + Major

Dresses - Tae gon KIM

Light Graffiti - Floating Pictures

binaryWaves - LAB[au]

Circus of Light - Ocubo

Litre of Light - Mick Stephenson, Central Saint Martin's Students & MyShelter Foundation

Spectra-3 Lux - FIELD.Io

Diver - Ron Haselden

#LumiereLDN