The bright red work of art (and 40 others) now protected
By Paul KerleyBBC News Magazine
They were designed to bring public spaces
back to life after World War Two - it was art for everyone. Now dozens
of post-war sculptures are being given listed status.
The
bright red, welded steel structure above - at Milton Keynes in
Buckinghamshire - appears to defy gravity and the rules of balance.
It
was created in 1970 by Bernard Schottlander. He fled Nazi Germany in
1939 for Leeds, where he worked in a factory as a welder while attending
evening classes in sculpture.
Working with Historic England, the government has now given his sculpture added protection. Scroll down and see the 40 other artworks granted Grade II or Grade II* status across England. Knife Edge Two Piece by Henry Moore, 1967 Westminster, London This piece is typical of the monumental abstract
bronze sculptures that characterised the late career of Moore - one of
England's most important avant-garde artists. Untitled [Listening] by Antony Gormley, 1983-84 Maygrove Peace Park, north-west London
It shows a human figure cupping its ear to listen.
Rooted
to a huge granite boulder, it embodies the relationship between the
interior world of the human body and its surroundings. Revolving Torsion by Naum Gabo, 1975 St Thomas' Hospital, central London
South of the River by Bernard Schottlander, 1975-76 Lambeth, south London These sweeping curves of stainless steel - south of
Waterloo Station - are said to be based on a pair of large, twisted
bronze earrings worn by Fulani women in Africa as part of their marriage
rituals. Father Courage by FE McWilliam, 1960 University of Kent in Canterbury 3B Series No 1 by Bernard Schottlander, 1968 University of Warwick
Its name refers to the play Mother Courage by Berthold Brecht, which denounced the horrors of war.
Schottlander's 3B Series No 1 is a large scale abstract collection of bright red geometric shapes.
The
university's architects Yorke, Rosenberg and Mardall commissioned art
to complement their buildings. Rosenberg felt his "white tile buildings
needed colour and visual stimulus". Declaration by Phillip King, 1961 Beaumanor Hall, Leicestershire
Winston Churchill Statue by David McFall, 1958-59 Woodford, east London Relief of Boys Playing Football by Peter Laszlo Peri, 1951-52 Following the Leader by Peter Laszlo Peri, 1949 Relief of Mother and Children Playing by Peter Laszlo Peri, 1951-52 Vauxhall, south London Hungarian Peri was largely ignored by the 20th
Century British art establishment, which some have attributed to his
communist leanings.These three works were commissioned in the
austerity years after WW2 on a social housing estate, with Following the
Leader created as a poignant dedication to children who lost their
lives in the Blitz. The Miner by Arthur Fleischmann, 1964 St Helens, Merseyside Construction in Aluminium by Kenneth Martin, 1967 University of Cambridge
A Celebration of Engineering Sciences by Allen Johnson, 1963 University of Leeds
The Story of Wool by William Mitchell, 1968 Ilkley, West Yorkshire
Made from glass-reinforced plastic, this is a
stylised flock of sheep complete with careful detailing of their curled
horns, cloven hooves and thick fleeces.It was commissioned for
the new Technical Centre of the International Wool Secretariat, an
organisation established to promote the use and trade of wool in
response to the increased use of synthetic fibres in the mid 20th
Century. The Symbol of Discovery by John Skelton, 1963 Chichester, West Sussex The Leaning Woman by Karel Vogel, 1959 Hammersmith, west London The Preacher by Peter Laszlo Peri, 1961 Forest Gate, east London Lesson by Franta Belsky, 1956-57 Bethnal Green, east London Gorilla by David Wynne, 1962 Crystal Palace Park, south London Rosewall (Curved Reclining Form) by Barbara Hepworth, 1960-62 Chesterfield, Derbyshire Winged Figure by Barbara Hepworth, 1963 Oxford Street, central London Single Form (Memorial) by Barbara Hepworth, 1961-62 Battersea Park, south London Zemran by William Pye, 1971 South Bank, central London London Pride by Frank Dobson, 1951 South Bank, central London Horse and Rider by Elisabeth Frink, 1975 Piccadilly, central London Donkey by Willi Soukop, 1955 Harlow, Essex Help! by FE McWilliam, 1976 Portrait of Elisabeth Frink by FE McWilliam, 1956 Wild Boar by Elisabeth Frink, 1970 Harlow, Essex Sigmund Freud Statue by Oscar Nemon, 1970 Hampstead, north London Statue of Artist Augustus John by Ivor Robert-Jones, 1964-67 Fordingbridge, Hampshire Ritual by Antanas Brazdys, 1968-69 City of London Ventilation Shaft Cover by Eduardo Paolozzi, 1982 Pimlico, central London The Spirit of Electricity by Geoffrey Clarke, 1961 Westminster, central London Witch of Agnesi by FE McWilliam, 1959 University of Greenwich, south-east London St Thomas a Becket by Edward Bainbridge Copnall, 1973 St Paul's Cathedral , City of London Pan Statue by Jacob Epstein, 1958-59 Knightsbridge, London Eagle Squadrons Memorial by Elisabeth Frink, 1985 Mayfair, central London Prisoner of War Memorial by Fred Kormis, 1967-69 Dollis Hill, north London