Giant cherry with cream, fly and drone unveiled on London's Fourth
Plinth
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[July 30, 2020]
By Ben Makori
LONDON (Reuters) - A 9-tonne sculpture of a
giant swirl of whipped cream with a cherry on top, as well as a fly and
a drone, was unveiled on Trafalgar Square's Fourth Plinth in London on
Thursday.
The sculpture by Heather Phillipson, entitled "THE END", is the latest
in a series of contemporary artworks to be displayed on the plinth over
the past two decades.
Phillipson told Reuters that she got the idea for the work in 2016, when
Britain had just voted to leave the European Union and Donald Trump was
campaigning for the U.S. presidency.
"Cream is this slightly impossible substance when wet, it's full of air
so it means it's always on the verge of collapse, which is a state I
felt we were in," she said, adding that some of those unsettling
feelings had been heightened by recent events such as the coronavirus
pandemic.
The sculpture depicts a fly crawling up the side of an enormous swirl of
cream, which is topped by a glossy cherry on which a drone rests. The
drone's camera transmits a live feed of a small patch of Trafalgar
Square to the website http://www.theend.today .
At more than 9 metres in height, THE END is the tallest work to date to
be displayed on the plinth. Phillipson said she wanted the cherry's
stalk to be very tall to rival Nelson's Column, the centrepiece of the
square.
Phillipson said she had attended both festivals and protest marches in
Trafalgar Square, and also often walked through the square in her daily
life, and she wanted to reflect those different dimensions in her
sculpture.
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A piece of a sculpture is seen in front of Heather Phillipson's
sculpture ''THE END'' (left) after it was unveiled on Trafalgar
Square's Fourth Plinth, in London, Britain, July 30, 2020.
REUTERS/John Sibley
"It kind of speaks to ideas of celebration, but also something very
uneasy at the same time. You know, that there's something
potentially imploding," she said.
The unveiling of the work was delayed by four months because of the
impact of the coronavirus outbreak. It will remain in place until
the spring of 2022.
Previously, the plinth in the northwest corner of the square in
central London lay empty for more than 150 years after funds ran out
to erect an equestrian statue as originally planned.
(Writing by Estelle Shirbon; Editing by Mike Collett-White)
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