Trafalgar Square
Aug. 31st, 2004 10:06 amTrafalgar Square is lot nicer since they pedestrianized the north side. And thanks to Mayor Livingstone’s ban on peanut vendors there are fewer pigeons than there used to be. It’s not a favourite space of mine. None of the architecture is quite grand and/or interesting enough. The dome of the National Gallery is a silly little pepper pot which fails to dominate as it should.
All the statues are of nineteenth century military heroes- mostly long-forgotten ones. Sic transit. There’s one empty plinth and we’ve got an ongoing national debate about who should be stuck on top of it. I’d vote for leaving it empty. We’ve lost the knack of creating convincing public sculpture. We know too much about human nature to have heroes in the old sense. What we have in their place are celebrities- who are part wet dream, part ducks in a shooting gallery.
We had afternoon tea in the crypt of St Martin in the Fields- the church at the north-east corner of the square. They do a mean gooseberry and rhubarb crumble. And the floor is paved with 18th century gravestones.
All the statues are of nineteenth century military heroes- mostly long-forgotten ones. Sic transit. There’s one empty plinth and we’ve got an ongoing national debate about who should be stuck on top of it. I’d vote for leaving it empty. We’ve lost the knack of creating convincing public sculpture. We know too much about human nature to have heroes in the old sense. What we have in their place are celebrities- who are part wet dream, part ducks in a shooting gallery.
We had afternoon tea in the crypt of St Martin in the Fields- the church at the north-east corner of the square. They do a mean gooseberry and rhubarb crumble. And the floor is paved with 18th century gravestones.
no subject
Date: 2004-08-31 03:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-08-31 09:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-08-31 12:02 pm (UTC)A statue of her, exhibited in the Guildhall I think, recently had its head knocked off. Any public statue of her would be likely to share its fate.
no subject
Date: 2004-08-31 02:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-08-31 02:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-08-31 05:47 pm (UTC)When I first went to Trafalgar Sq. and learned that St Martin in the Fields is named such because when it was built the surrounding area was a lonely field away from the actual city of the time, reconciling London's long history of growth becomes impossible for me to imagine. How can anyone stand in Trafalgar Sq. and imagine that the city that surrounds it hasn't always been there?
no subject
Date: 2004-09-01 01:12 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-09-01 08:59 am (UTC)Alas.
It's strange to thing that 18th century London- the London of Dr Johnson- was no bigger than a modern country town.