Macclesfield Express

Work of art that sticks out like a sore thumb

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AGIANT bronze thumbs up is the latest piece to grace London’s Fourth Plinth - its long thumb raised to unnatural heights.

But it’s fair to say the latest addition to Trafalgar Square, created by Macclesfie­ld-born David Shrigley, has been met on social media by both thumbs pointed up and thumbs pointed down.

The seven-metre high, 4.5 tonnes bronze work, called Really Good, is the 11th original commission to grace the space - and four metres of it are just thumb.

Shrigley, who was born in Macclesfie­ld but now lives in Glasgow, is a master of satire, known for his quick-witted drawings and his tragicomic take on the everyday.

He has applied this in the wider world already, most notably in his unforgetta­ble design for Partick Thistle FC’s unconventi­onal mascot Kingsley.

Not everyone is on board. But commission­ing artist Jeremy Deller and the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, are among those who have given the work a massive thumbsup.

David, 45, has described the work as “slightly satirical but also serious at the same time” and said he hoped the positivity of the thumb gesture would become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Explaining Really Good, the informatio­n panel offers: “Shrigley’s ambition is that this simple gesture will become a selffulfil­ling prophecy: that things considered ‘bad’ such as the economy, the weather, and society, will benefit from a change of consensus towards positivity.”

The sculpture is considered a savagely modern work using a most common symbol of affirmatio­n on most social media platforms, yet which still pays tribute to the past, cast in the same dark patina as the other statues on the square.

The commission­ing panel behind the art on the plinth are used to causing a stir, having already given a temporary home to Katharina Fritsch’s bright blue chicken Hahn/Cock, Hans Haacke’s skeletal and political Gift Horse, Marc Quinn’s controvers­ial Alison Lapper Pregnant, and Antony Gormley’s living work One & Other - a group of 2,400 people who each stood alone on the plinth for an hour.

 ??  ?? ●● David Shrigley and the Mayor of London Sadiq Khan in front of the new Fourth Plinth sculpture, ‘Really Good,’ in Trafalgar Square
●● David Shrigley and the Mayor of London Sadiq Khan in front of the new Fourth Plinth sculpture, ‘Really Good,’ in Trafalgar Square

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