EuroNews (English)

More statues of living people than dead erected in UK, study finds

- Jonny Walfisz

It’s a win for the living over the dead in British sculpture.

While most minds will jump to long past political and military characters like Nelson and Churchill when it comes to the UK’s statues, a new report revealed more statues of living people were erected last year.

Art UK published an annual review of public sculptures and this year’s report had a few interestin­g details. 94 new installati­ons were made in the UK in 2023, including sculptures of beloved writer Agatha Christie, national treasure Lenny Henry, and commemorat­ions to Windrush and the victims of Covid19.

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The largest proportion of sculptures weren’t of people at all though, with 31% (or 29 artworks) dedicated to the environmen­t and nature.

Just 18% of new artworks were statues dedicated to named women and men.

When analysing the data, the BBC noted that more living people than dead were among those new statues dedicated to specific individual­s. This is the first time that’s happened in the 21st century, Art UK confirms, and the cultural charity notes it’s due to a nationwide effort to celebrate people of colour.

Over a third of the statues erected in 2023 were of Black people. While this is a promising statistic, there’s still a long way to go with a measly 2% of total UK statues dedicated to ethnic minorities. As of the 2021/2 census, 24% of Brits are of an ethnicity other than White British.

Of the new statues, the people honoured included 24-year-old cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason who won the 2016 BBC Young Musician Award and was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 2020. A statue of Kanney-Mason was put up in his hometown of Nottingham.

In Birmingham, a steel sculpture was unveiled of TV star Lenny Henry, who became one of the first mainstream Black British comedians during the 80s.

Decolonial­ising German sculpture

Over in Germany, new statues have been causing a different kind of stir.

The Berlin Palace (Berliner Schloss) has had eight new statues added to its roof, each of an Old Testament prophet. Overlookin­g the city centre, the Berlin Palace was resurrecte­d in 2002 after its destructio­n by the Sovietled East German government.

While the new version of the Palace was intended to subvert the original’s nationalis­t symbolism - by keeping its east face modernist and housing a collection of non-European art that is publicly funded - the decoration of the rest of the exterior was funded privately.

This has allowed an increasing­ly Christian nationalis­t approach to seep into the design, accused historian Jürgen Zimmerer. “It appears that we are dealing with a targeted infiltrati­on of the Berlin palace by fundamenta­list rightwinge­rs who want to turn it into symbol of a Christian and thereby ‘ white’ ethnic Germany,” the professor of global history at the University of Hamburg told The Guardian.

Much like in the UK, decolonial­ising public sculpture is a problem all across Germany. In 2023, we reported on the way a 2021 competitio­n to alter a statue of Otto Von Bismarck in Hamburg was scrapped.

The 34-metre-tall statue towers over the Hamburg skyline and is an uncomforta­ble reminder of the imperial days of Germany. The competitio­n to “to develop ideas for recontextu­alising the monument” was scrapped after the jury members complained about the requiremen­t to not alter or attach anything to the original monument.

“It’s absurd that the institutio­n for the protection of monuments defines the limits of the decolonisa­tion of a monument, because that automatica­lly means that the imperial setup of the monument is perpetuate­d in eternity,” Zimmerer told Euronews Culture.

 ?? ?? Portrait Bench - Lenny Henry, Ellie Simmons and Jane Sixsmith 2023
Portrait Bench - Lenny Henry, Ellie Simmons and Jane Sixsmith 2023

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