Trafalgar Square art
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One of the Rolf Harris team of artists working on the Hanns Holbien Henry V111
Marc Quinn "Alison Lapper Pregnant"
Its difficult to be negative about this ART - You really need to view the statue
in person, as pictures don't really capture the size, the setting or the hordes
of tourist craning their necks in bemusement. I have never met Alison, so how
much artistic licence Marc Quinn used is hard to tell, all I can say is Alisons
head and neck are very classical and would not have looked out of place on an
armoured Roman emperor or Greek warrior from the Trojan
period .When I first heard about it, I did grumble about ultra PC and that
Chimp
Ken Livingstone, but credit where credit is due, its a fine peice of thought
provoking art.. The editor: editor@artsmarket.co.uk
A statue of a naked, pregnant woman with no arms has been unveiled on Trafalgar
Square's fourth plinth.
The 12ft (3.6m) marble sculpture, "Alison Lapper Pregnant", is already
dividing opinion among art critics and disability campaigners.
Artist Marc Quinn said he had sculpted his friend Ms Lapper because disabled
people were under-represented in art.
The Disability Rights Commission called it "powerful and arresting",
but one critic dismissed it as "rather ugly".
Ms Lapper, from Shoreham, West Sussex, sat for the artist when she was eight
months pregnant.
She has called it a "modern tribute to femininity, disability and motherhood".
Alison's statue could represent a new model of female heroism
Artist Marc Quinn
A modern Venus de Milo
But she added: "It still daunts me now. I'm going to be up in Trafalgar
Square. Little me."
Mr Quinn spent 10 months working on the statue in Italy from a single piece of white marble.
"I felt the square needed some femininity, linking with Boudicca near the Houses of Parliament," Mr Quinn told BBC News.
"Alison's statue could represent a new model of female heroism."
But Robert Simon, editor of the British Art Journal, said: "I think it is horrible.
Public debate
"Not because of the subject matter I hasten to add. [I have a] lot of time for Alison Lapper. I think she is very brave, very wonderful but it is just a rather repellent artefact - very shiny, slimy surface, machine-made, much too big... "
Bob Niven, chief executive of the Disability Rights Commission, said the statue at the heart of London would raise public debate on disability.
Other plinths in London's most famous square are occupied by equestrian statues
of British Empire heroes.
New statue unveiled at London's Trafalgar Square
The fourth was intended for a King William IV statue, but a lack of funds meant it remained empty.
Experts gave up trying to find a permanent fixture for it in the early 1990s, because no-one could agree on what was appropriate.
Some sculptures, such as Rachel Whiteread's Monument - a transparent resin cast of the inside of the granite plinth itself, were put up temporarily.
But in 2003, mayor Ken Livingstone had backed a review group's suggestions that it should be used as an ever-changing display of artworks.
The mayor, who has had the square partly pedestrianised and wants it to become a cultural focus for London, commissioned six artists to come up with ideas for the plinth.
Alison Lapper Pregnant is one of two works selected from the shortlist.
It will be displayed until April 2007 when it will be replaced by Thomas Schutte's Hotel for the Birds.
Images by Marcus Geiger ©2005