Inauguração da estátua "The Queen of Time", 1931, Selfridges, Oxford Street, Londres, Inglaterra
Londres - Inglaterra
Estátua
In the days
before mobile phones it was common practice to arrange a rendezvous beneath
some well-known clock and in October 1931 Selfridges unveiled what one writer
called ‘London’s newest meeting place’. Other commentators hailed it as ‘one of
the sights of London’ and a ‘horological masterpiece’. Nowadays most Oxford Street shoppers barely notice it.
Several
reputable websites claim the clock was created as early as 1908 but even the
first (the eastern) part of the building wasn’t completed until 1909 and at
that time Harry Gordon Selfridge envisaged an entirely different central
feature, with a large dome crowning the storefront.
The western
and (ultimately domeless) central sections both had to wait until after the
First World War, opening in 1920 and 1926 respectively, by which time the
architect Albert D Millar had conceived the idea of a clock and sculpture
grouping.
The statue of
the Queen of Time standing on the prow of the Ship of Commerce and attended by
nymphs was the work of Gilbert Bayes, a leading exponent of the New Sculpture
movement, which influenced Alfred Gilbert’s statue of Eros in Piccadilly Circus.
Bayes at first
planned to create his 11-foot-tall queen in terracotta but he eventually chose
to use bronze, decorated with gilding, blue faience and Doulton stoneware.
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