The Guardian (USA)

Edinburgh suffragist statue put on hold after bitter row over sculptor

- Severin Carrell Scotland editor

Proposals to honour one of Edinburgh’s most famous feminists with a statue on the Royal Mile have been put on hold after a bitter row about the choice of sculptor.

Campaigner­s planned to erect a bronze statue to Dr Elsie Inglis, a suffragist and medical pioneer who establishe­d hospitals for poor women and children in Edinburgh, near the site of a maternity hospital she founded.

But they have suspended the plans after a furious backlash when it emerged this week they had selected the royal sculptor Alexander Stoddart to produce the work.

“The reaction to our decision has comprised both positive support and negative but what’s concerning is the level of vitriol directed by some of the contributo­rs, which is bordering on the defamatory,” the trustees said in a statement.

“Given this position, the trustees have taken the decision to pause the process and reflect on both the positive and negative feedback received, particular­ly from our supporters to date, to consider our options and will make further comment after this period of reflection.”

Their Twitter account and Facebook pages, both the focus of angry complaints, have been deleted.

Anger erupted after the trustees suspended their open call for designs and instead commission­ed Stoddart, the King’s sculptor in ordinary in Scotland, even though he had not originally applied. The competitio­n was intended to promote an emerging artist who was inspired by Inglis’s life and work.

Natasha Phoenix, a sculptor and ceramicist from East Lothian who estimates she invested 650 hours on her proposal for the statue, said that given the controvers­y and now the project had been put on hold, the trustees should hand it over to external experts to oversee. The commission­ing process should then begin afresh.

“They should step aside,” she said. “They’ve done excellent fundraisin­g and they’ve obviously got good links and lots of people involved.”

Phoenix was not critical of Stoddart’s

appointmen­t because of his gender, but she said the trustees lacked artistic expertise and knowledge of how to commission. “It’s a group of five people who don’t know anything about contempora­ry sculpture.”

The trustees said their approach changed after seeing television pictures of the Queen’s funeral cortege and the lying at rest ceremonies at St Giles’ Cathedral last month, close to the site of the proposed statue. Those images led them to believe “the statue needed to meet with the historical consciousn­ess of the Royal Mile”.

In late September, they tweeted: “The call to artists has been suspended indefinite­ly owing to considerat­ions that have been brought to the attention of the trustees in recent weeks. This informatio­n has therefore rendered the brief as published suboptimal to ensure the successful outcome of the project at design scheduling and budgetary levels.”

The furore has brought fresh attention to the absence of female statuary in Edinburgh, which has dozens of monuments to male soldiers, kings, intellectu­als and physicians. Those include one of Stoddart’s best-known works, a large bronze of the philosophe­r David Hume outside the high court near St Giles’.

Stoddart, who has been approached for comment, also has a sculpture of Adam Smith further down the Royal Mile. At present, the only women immortalis­ed in sculpture in the city are Queen Victoria and Mary Queen of Scots.

Sara Sheridan, the Edinburgh-based author of a book on the lack of female statues, Where are the Women?, said she could not understand why the competitio­n was cancelled or why Stoddart was “parachuted in”. His work was already over-represente­d in the city, she said. “I’ve supported this campaign since it started. Sadly I am no longer able to do so with authentici­ty.”

She said there were other notable, exceptiona­l women who also deserved statues in Edinburgh, including Sophia Jex-Blake. She became the first female doctor in Edinburgh who then donated her home to become a hospital after helping force the university to allow her and six other women to study medicine.

Sheridan suggested Eliza Wigham, a Quaker anti-slavery campaigner; Muriel Spark, the author of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; or Mary Brunton, a novelist from Orkney whose work more than 200 years ago helped redefine femininity.

Sheridan said it was essential to memorialis­e female success. “We’re not short of amazing foremother­s – we just forget that history,” she said. “Therefore young women don’t realise that they come from amazing and therefore they can achieve amazing.”

 ?? ?? Dr Elsie Inglis was a suffragist and medical pioneer who establishe­d hospitals for poor women and children in Edinburgh. Photograph: IWM
Dr Elsie Inglis was a suffragist and medical pioneer who establishe­d hospitals for poor women and children in Edinburgh. Photograph: IWM

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