This is a list of public art in Victoria , a district in the City of Westminster, London.
Victoria is roughly described as the area around Victoria station. It includes the conservation areas of Broadway and Christchurch Gardens, Grosvenor Gardens and the environs of Westminster Cathedral. Particularly noteworthy examples of architectural sculpture can be found at 55 Broadway, where in 1928–1929 sculptors including Eric Gill and Henry Moore were engaged on representations of the Four Winds; two further figures, Night and Day, were carved by Jacob Epstein. [1] A great deal of public art by recent graduates of art schools in London was incorporated into Cardinal Place, a development of 2005. [2]
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates | Date | Artist / designer | Architect / other | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Blue Coat Scholar | Blewcoat School, Caxton Street | 1709 | Statue in niche | Grade I | ||||
Hercules taming the horses of Diomedes | Buckingham Palace Riding School, Buckingham Palace Road | 1859 | William Theed | James Pennethorne | Relief | Grade I | [3] | |
More images | Statue of Sir Sydney Waterlow, 1st Baronet | Westminster City School, Palace Street 51°29′52″N0°08′21″W / 51.4978°N 0.1393°W | 1901 | Frank Mowbray Taubman | — | Statue | — | Unveiled 27 June 1901. A replica of the statue in Waterlow Park, Highgate. [4] |
Queen Victoria and Edward VII | Caxton Hall | 1902 | [5] | |||||
Christ in Majesty with the Virgin and Saints Joseph, Peter and Edward | Westminster Cathedral 51°29′46″N0°08′23″W / 51.4962°N 0.1398°W | 1916 | Robert Anning Bell | John Francis Bentley | Tympanum mosaic | Grade I (building) | Based on a sketch by Bentley dated to 1895–96 and later worked up in colour by his assistant John Marshall, [6] Bell's mosaic was criticised for its background of white tiles instead of the traditional gold. [7] | |
More images | Rifle Brigade War Memorial | Grosvenor Gardens 51°29′53″N0°08′49″W / 51.4980°N 0.1470°W | 1924–1925 | John Tweed | — | Memorial with sculpture | Grade II* | Unveiled 25 July 1925. The rifleman in contemporary uniform in the centre is flanked by an officer (on the left) and a private in early 19th-century uniform. [8] |
More images | Statue of Ferdinand Foch | Grosvenor Gardens 51°29′47″N0°08′43″W / 51.4964°N 0.1453°W | 1930 | Georges Malissard | P. Lebret | Equestrian statue | Grade II* | Unveiled 5 June 1930. [9] A replica of a statue erected outside Marshal Foch's headquarters in Cassel. [10] The choice of an existing work by a French sculptor caused some dissatisfaction. The site was chosen so that the statue would be seen by French visitors arriving in London at Victoria station. [11] |
Speed Wings Over the World | National Audit Office building (formerly Imperial Airways building) | 1939 | Eric Raymond Broadbent | A. Lakeman | Architectural sculpture | Grade II | ||
Saint Francis | 47 Francis Street | 1961 | Arthur Fleischmann | Henry Astley Darbishire | Architectural sculpture | [12] | ||
Cameo of Queen Victoria | Victoria station, Victoria line platforms | 1968 | Edward Bawden after Benjamin Pearce | — | Tiled pattern | — | Bawden produced an original linocut of the Queen's profile for this scheme but it was rejected; [13] the final design is based on a silhouette by Pearce. [14] | |
More images | Suffragette Memorial | Christchurch Gardens 51°29′54″N0°08′05″W / 51.4982°N 0.1348°W | 1970 | Lorne McKean and Edwin Russell | Paul Edward Paget | Sculpture | — | Unveiled 14 July 1970. A bronze scroll in the shape of the letter S balancing on a conical pedestal. Part of the inscription notes that NEARBY CAXTON HALL WAS/ HISTORICALLY ASSOCIATED/ WITH WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE/ MEETINGS & DEPUTATIONS/ TO PARLIAMENT. [15] |
Split Form No. 9 | 10 Dean Farrar Street | 1983–1984 | Michael Marriott | Michael Lyell Associates | Architectural sculpture | [16] | ||
More images | Statue of Harold Alexander, 1st Earl Alexander of Tunis | Outside the Guards Chapel, Wellington Barracks, Birdcage Walk 51°30′00″N0°08′09″W / 51.500°N 0.1358°W | 1985 | James Butler | — | Statue | — | Unveiled 9 May 1985 by the Queen Mother. Alexander had a particular affection for the old Guards Chapel (almost completely destroyed by bombing in 1944), having spent much time there as a subaltern. [17] |
Planned Growth | Rowan House, Greycoat Street | 1986–1987 | Peter Thursby | Renton Howard Wood Levine | Relief | — | The Royal Society of British Sculptors awarded its silver medal for this sculpture in 1987. [18] | |
Chalice | 123 Buckingham Palace Road 51°29′35″N0°08′47″W / 51.4931°N 0.1465°W | 1991 | William Pye | — | Fountain | — | Unveiled 24 June 1991 by Lord St John of Fawsley (according to the pavement plaque). A stainless steel basin, its circumference bounded by cables suspended from above which define a cylindrical shape in the air. The idea was suggested to the sculptor by the hanging lamps in the Sultan Hassan Mosque in Cairo. [19] | |
More images | The Flowering of the English Baroque Henry Purcell | Christchurch Gardens 51°29′53″N0°08′03″W / 51.4980°N 0.1342°W | 1995 | Glynn Williams | — | Sculpture | — | Unveiled 22 November 1995, the tercentenary of Purcell's death, by Princess Margaret. The sculptor described the design as "a rising explosion of activity, a tree to the musical evolution of the 17th century". This was the first major sculptural commission by Westminster City Council. [20] |
More images | Big Painting Sculpture | Cardinal Place 51°29′52″N0°08′30″W / 51.4977°N 0.1418°W | 1996–1998 | Patrick Heron | Julian Feary | Sculpture | — | Commissioned when the complex was still known as Stag Place. Based on several gouache studies by Heron of brightly coloured floating shapes connected by linear patterns. Neon tubes light up the work at night. [21] |
More images | Lioness and Lesser Kudu | Grosvenor Gardens 51°29′52″N0°08′50″W / 51.4979°N 0.1473°W | 1998 | Jonathan Kenworthy | — | Sculptural group | — | Installed on this site in 2000; another cast already stood in the grounds of Eaton Hall, the Duke of Westminster's estate in Cheshire. [22] |
More images | Cypher | Outside the Asticus Building, 21 Palmer Street 51°29′56″N0°08′07″W / 51.4990°N 0.1352°W | 2003 | Tim Morgan | — | Sculpture | — | The sculpture, commissioned by the Cass Sculpture Foundation, consists of thousands of glass rods bound together within a circular steel belt. [23] |
Stacked Glass Sculpture | Cardinal Place 51°29′51″N0°08′28″W / 51.4975°N 0.1411°W | 2005 | Tony Burke | Jane Wernick Associates (engineer) | Sculpture | — | The work comprises one twisting wall of stacked green glass and another curving; these are set on a cylindrical plinth. [24] | |
Route | Cardinal Place 51°29′49″N0°08′26″W / 51.4970°N 0.1406°W | 2005 | Joy Gerrard | — | Panels set in pavement | — | Nine discs of varying sizes set in the pavement of the Cardinal Place development at various points in a pedestrian's route; they are inlaid with smaller coloured discs. [25] | |
LP4 | Cardinal Place 51°29′52″N0°08′29″W / 51.4978°N 0.1415°W | 2005 | Nathaniel Rackowe | — | Kinetic sculpture | — | Two slabs of oblong welded steel panels (with a gap at the top of the grid forming a "machicolation") hold in place a thin cathode light tube; the whole structure is set into a rotating turntable flush with the pavement. [26] | |
Statue of Anna Pavlova | Victoria Palace Theatre | 2006 | Harry Franchetti | Frank Matcham | Architectural sculpture | Grade II* | ||
Statue of Queen Victoria | Victoria Square 51°29′52″N0°08′42″W / 51.4977°N 0.1449°W | 2008 | Catherine Anne Laugel | — | Statue | — | Victoria is portrayed as a young woman of 20, the age she would have been when construction on the square began. [27] | |
Back-lit fused glass boxes | InterContinental London Westminster hotel, Broadway 51°29′58″N0°07′59″W / 51.4994°N 0.1330°W | 2012 | Andrew Moor Associates | Dexter Moren Associates | Back-lit fused glass boxes | — | [28] | |
More images | Memorial to Victims of Violence | Christchurch Gardens 51°29′54″N0°08′02″W / 51.4982°N 0.1340°W | 2013 (unveiled) | Jim Martins | — | Commemorative stone with plaque | — | Unveiled 5 June 2013. [29] [30] |
Wind Sculpture | Howick Place 51°29′48″N0°08′14″W / 51.4968°N 0.1371°W | 2014 | Yinka Shonibare | — | Sculpture | — | Unveiled 7 April 2014. The work simulates a piece of batik fabric (a signature material for Shonibare) billowing in the wind. [31] | |
More images | Flanders Fields 1914–2014 | Outside the Guards Chapel, Wellington Barracks, Birdcage Walk | 2014 | — | Piet Blanckaert | Memorial | — | The memorial garden, a gift from Belgium, was opened on 6 November 2014 by Elizabeth II; the Belgian king Philippe was also present. [32] A low circular wall, within which is planted soil from the war cemeteries of Flanders, is inscribed with the poem "In Flanders Fields" by John McCrae. [33] |
Underline | Victoria tube station | 2015 | Giles Round, Design Work Leisure | — | Ceramic mural | — | [34] | |
More images | Power over Others is Weakness Disguised as Strength | Orchard Place | 2023 | Nick Hornby | — | Sculpture | — | Unveiled 22 June 2023. [35] Incorporates visual quotations from the equestrian statue of Richard I outside Parliament and a curling line which interrupts the text of Laurence Sterne's Tristram Shandy . [36] |
Endangered Species Triptych | Saga House, Allington Street | Barry Baldwin | Sidell Gibson and Associates | Architectural sculpture | [37] |
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates | Date | Artist / designer | Architect / other | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Day and Night | 55 Broadway | 1929 | Jacob Epstein | Charles Holden | ||||
North Wind | 55 Broadway | 1928 | Alfred Horace Gerrard | Charles Holden | ||||
North Wind | 55 Broadway | 1928 | Eric Gill | Charles Holden | ||||
East Wind | 55 Broadway | 1928 | Eric Gill | Charles Holden | ||||
East Wind | 55 Broadway | 1928 | Allan G. Wyon | Charles Holden | ||||
South Wind | 55 Broadway | 1928 | Eric Gill | Charles Holden | ||||
South Wind | 55 Broadway | 1928 | Eric Aumonier | Charles Holden | ||||
West Wind | 55 Broadway | 1928 | Samuel Rabinovitch | Charles Holden | ||||
West Wind | 55 Broadway | 1928 | Henry Moore | Charles Holden | ||||
Angels of History | St James's Park tube station | 2024 | Hannah Quinlan, Rosie Hastings | Mosaic | [38] |
Parliament Square is a square at the northwest end of the Palace of Westminster in the City of Westminster in central London, England. Laid out in the 19th century, it features a large open green area in the centre with trees to its west, and it contains twelve statues of statesmen and other notable individuals.
The equestrian statue of Ferdinand Foch stands in Lower Grosvenor Gardens, London. The sculptor was Georges Malissard and the statue is a replica of another raised in Cassel, France. Foch, appointed Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces on the Western Front in the Spring of 1918, was widely seen as the architect of Germany's ultimate defeat and surrender in November 1918. Among many other honours, he was made an honorary Field marshal in the British Army, the only French military commander to receive such a distinction. Following Foch's death in March 1929, a campaign was launched to erect a statue in London in his memory. The Foch Memorial Committee chose Malissard as the sculptor, who produced a replica of his 1928 statue of Foch at Cassel. The statue was unveiled by the Prince of Wales on 5 June 1930. Designated a Grade II listed structure in 1958, the statue's status was raised to Grade II* in 2016.