In today’s post, I am continuing to track down the works listed in the 1994 booklet published by the Department of Planning of the Corporation of London with the title of “Late 20th Century Sculpture in the City of London”.
The full list was in the original post, and to identify the location of the works covered in today’s post, I have included the maps with numbers for each work which were included in the booklet:


Art was considered an important addition to the public space, particularly as part of the many developments taking place in the City in the later years of the 20th century, and the booklet includes the following statement of the City of London Corporation’s approach:
“The Corporation considers that art can contribute significantly to the quality of the environment. It will therefore encourage the incorporation of art and artworks into the urban scene, in appropriate locations. To this end it is important that the integration of art and artworks into developments and the local environment is considered at an early stage in their design.”
In the last post, I finished with Icarus near Old Change Court, so for today’s post, I made the short walk towards St. Paul’s Cathedral, to find:
13. Cannon Street, Festival Gardens, Young Lovers, Georg Erlich
To the immediate south east of St. Paul’s Cathedral, you will find Festival Gardens, created during and named after the 1951 Festival of Britain:

The gardens consist of a central green space, surrounded by walkways and seating, along with flower beds, and a water feature, and at the western end of Festival Gardens, Georg Erlich’s Young Lovers can be found:

Although the gardens were created for the 1951 Festival of Britain, the “Young Lovers” was not installed until 1973, eight years after Erlich’s death in 1966.
Georg Erlich was born in Austria where he had studied art, but for much of his life he lived in London, from where he had a very successful career, and was exhibited widely in the UK, as well as Europe and North America.
I cannot find out why it took several years after his death to install the Young Lovers, given that the Festival Gardens had been completed in 1951. I suspect it was after a reconfiguration of the gardens in the early 1970s. The original configuration of the gardens is shown in the following photo, and they were later extended to cover the area in the upper part of the photo:

I also cannot find out whether the Young Lovers was originally displayed at a different location, or whether the City of London Corporation intended to install the work at a different location prior to installation at the Festival Gardens.
The work does add a focal point to the western end of the gardens:

Although he did not take any photos of the gardens in 1951, my father did take a photo of the flags on the gardens at the time of the Festival of Britain – one of those times when it is a shame he was relying on a limited amount of film, rather than the almost unlimited number of photos we can take today with digital cameras:

As I left Festival Gardens, I walked past One New Change where there is a modern piece of sculpture. This is Nail, a 12 metre bronze sculpture by Gavin Turk:

“Nail” was installed in 2011, so much later than the works covered in the City of London booklet, however I have included it in the post simply as an example of the continuing use of sculpture to enhance the public realm, and hopefully so that when walking the streets, we stop for a moment to stop and think.
I was walking down New Change to reach my next destination, which was:
14. 20 Cannon Street, The Leopard, Jonathan Kenworthy
The following photo shows the latest version of 20 Cannon Street:

The Leopard, by Jonathan Kenworthy should be just to the right of the corner entrance to the building.
Using Google Street View, I did find the Leopard in 2008, when the side of the building along Friday Street (the street to the right), had larger gardens than we see today.
As well as 2008, Google Street View shows the area in 2009, the following year, and the Leopard has disappeared, as it had by then been relocated to the construction company Wates’ headquarters at Station Approach, Leatherhead, directly opposite the station entrance.
A quick search on Google Street View shows the Leopard can still be found in Leatherhead.
There are also versions of the Leopard by Jonathan Kenworthy in Chester, as well as outside the Lord Beaverbrook Art Gallery in Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada.
Although not in its original location in the City of London, at least the Leopard was not lost, and for commuters from Leatherhead to London, the Leopard will be part of their daily entrance and exit from the station.
15. Barbican, Ben Jonson Place, Dolphins
The ordering of the list of sculpture is rather strange for a walking route, so from 20 Cannon Street, I then headed to the Barbican, to find the Dolphins:

Ben Jonson Place is a large raised plaza which runs above Beech Street, on the northern side of the Barbican Estate, and the Dolphins is a small work in the middle of a water feature along the southern side of the plaza, as shown in the above photo, and with a close up below:

The Dolphins are not part of the early build of the Barbican Estate, but were added in 1990, and in the City of London booklet on late 20th Century Sculpture, the Dolphins is one of only two where there is no name listed for the creator of the work.
The Dolphins was created by John Ravera, a Surrey born sculptor who trained at the Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts between 1954 and 1962.
He was based in Bexleyheath, Kent, where he had his own bronze foundry, and from where he created a wide range of works including water features, family groups, architectural reliefs, and was known for creating works that demonstrated the freedom of movement of their subjects, as can be seen by the dolphins leaping up from the central ring of small jets of water.
Ben Jonson Place along with the surrounding buildings are built of materials of a very similar colour, so the Dolphins also provides a splash of colour that attracts the eye whilst walking through the estate.
The next work in the list was a very short distance away, at the end of Ben Jonson Place:
16. Barbican, Series of Silver Metal Pipes, Mayer

Working through the list of 20th century sculpture in the City of London raises some interesting questions about the preservation of knowledge about public sculpture.
The City of London booklet did not list the sculptor for the Dolphins, and for this work, it is listed as a “series of silver metal pipes”, with just the last name of the sculptor.
The description is though accurate as it is just a series of silver metal pipes, with their different lengths forming what looks to be a sort of spiral staircase that wraps around the work.
This gives a clue as to its proper name, which is “Ascent”, by Charlotte Mayer, who was born in Czechoslovakia in 1929, and moved to the UK in 1939 with her mother to escape the Nazi occupation.
She trained in London, and lived in the city until her death in 2022.
Many of her works were based on spiral forms, as demonstrated by Ascent at the Barbican. I have no idea as to whether it was mirroring the towers at the Barbican, the tallest residential blocks in London at the time of their construction, but with Cromwell Tower behind, as shown in the above photo there is a possible link.
As far as I could see, there is no reference to either Charlotte Mayer or the name “Ascent” next to the sculpture, as the proper name of the work, which is a shame, as it would be good to have some background to the work and the sculptor on display to add more meaning to the work, rather than being, as described in the booklet as a “series of silver metal pipes”.
17. Barbican, Carmarque Horses, Enzo Plazzotta
The Carmarque Horses by the Italian born sculptor Enzo Plazzotta should be by the waterside terrace in the Barbican:

However despite walking up and down both sides of the terrace, I could not find the work, and cannot remember if and when I last saw it.
One of the things I have realised with writing the blog is that it is easy to take the street scene for granted, and often the buildings, landmarks, statues, plaques etc. that you walk past, just do not register, particularly these days when so many people are walking whilst looking at their mobile phones.
If it has moved, I cannot find a record of where to, although there do seem to be several versions of Plazzotta’s Carmarque Horses to be found in both public and private collections.
Enzo Plazzotta was an Italian born sculptor, who spent the majority of his working life in London, and whilst I cannot find the Carmarque Horses, there are a number of his works remaining across the city.
Despite the rather obscure location, I did have better luck with finding the following work:
18. 125 London Wall, Unity, Ivan Klapez
Hidden away at the end of one of the walkways alongside London Wall, is Ivan Klapez’s Unity:

Ivan Klapez is a Croatian figurative sculptor, who has been based in London for almost four decades.
Unity dates from 1982, and was part of the overall office development of Alban Gate which sits above the junction of London Wall and Wood Street.
The work is at the edge of an alcove, part of which can be seen to the right of the above photo, and looking directly at the alcove, we can see the location of Unity, which is above Wood Street, seen through the windows of the alcove:

Unity is an example of how the surroundings of a public work of art can change. Whilst this was probably once an area of higher footfall, during my visit I did not see another person, and nearby building work has shuttered off part of the space which does not help.
Probably intended as a focal point, Unity is now just a chance find for anyone straying into this part of the walkway alongside London Wall and Wood Street.
The next work on the list is very much in a busy place:
19. Bow Churchyard, Captain John Smith, Charles Renick
The majority of the sculpture listed in the City of London booklet is abstract or figurative. Unlike the first half of the 20th century, and the 19th century, very few are of real people, however in Bow Churchyard there is an exception. This is Captain John Smith:

Text on the plink explains why Captain John Smith has a statue in the City:
“Captain John Smith, Citizen and Cordwainer, 1580 – 1634. First among the leaders of the settlement at Jamestown, Virginia, from which began the overseas expansion of the English speaking peoples.”
Cordwainers were among the first of the craft organisations having received ordinances from the Mayor of London in 1271, and the name is derived from the early English word “cordwaner” meaning a worker in “cordwane” which was leather from the town of Cordova in Spain and the name dates back to around the 12th / 13th Century.
The statue is Grade II listed, and is in the old churchyard (now a paved public space next to the church of St. Mary-le-Bow), as Captain John Smith was a parishioner at the church, although after his death in London in 1634, he was buried in St Sepulchre-without-Newgate.
The statue is based on an early 20th century statue at Jamestown, and the origins of the version next to St. Mary-le-Bow is also explained on the plinth:
“This statue presented to the City of London by the Jamestown Foundation of the Commonwealth of Virginia was unveiled by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother on Monday 31st October 1960.”
The statue was installed in 1960 to commemorate the 350th anniversary of Captain John Smith’s return to England in the winter of 1609 – 1610.
From St. Mary-le-Bow, I then headed to:
20. Guildhall Plaza, Glass Fountain, Allen David

Allen David was born in Bombay, India in 1926, and moved to Melbourne, Australia in 1948, where he studied drawing and architecture.
By the end of the 1960s he had moved to London, and in 1969 he received the commission for the Glass Fountain from a Mrs Edgar, who was the wife of Gilbert H. Edgar CBE, a City of London Sheriff between 1963 and 1964.
I have not seen the fountain working for some time, but when it does, it is flooded with water from multiple clear pipes across the whole of the sculpture giving the impression of covering it in water.
I think the Glass Fountain was installed during a remodelling of the area, as the next work in the list is also in the Guildhall Plaza and dates from 1972, so close to the 1969 date of Glass Fountain. It is:
21. Guildhall Plaza, Beyond Tomorrow, Karin Jonzen
Beyond tomorrow is a very short walk from Glass Fountain, and is close to the 1958 northern wing of the Guildhall:

Karin Jonzen was born in London to Swedish parents in 1914, and studied at the Slade School of Art, and during the war, she worked as an ambulance driver.
After the war, she made the decision to concentrate on figurative sculpture, and in 1951, one of her works was included in the Festival of Britain exhibition.
I had a look in the guide book for the South Bank festival site, and under “New Sculpture, Painting and Design”, is listed:
“Karin Jonzen – Sculpture. At the end of Waterways, near the Waterloo Bridge Gate”, so it was somewhere to the left of the southern approach to Waterloo Bridge.
The guide book did not include a name for the work, there are some references to it being a “standing figure”, but I can find no photos or references as to what happened after the Festival of Britain. Works for the Festival were often made quickly and cheaply, and out of temporary materials (even papier mache), so it may not have survived.
The commission for Beyond Tomorrow was as a result of three works that Jonzen entered into the 1968 Sculpture in the City exhibition, which led to the Corporation of London commissioning two works, one of which was Beyond Tomorrow, the second I will hopefully find in the final post of this series.
Hard to see in the following photo, which was taken in the dark shadow of the northern wing of the Guildhall, but there is a plaque recording the name Beyond Tomorrow, and the date of 1972. It also records that it was given by Lord Blackford and created by Karin Jonzen:

The reference to Lord Blackford is that the first casting of the work was made whilst Karin Jonzen was travelling. On her return she was not happy with the result, so she paid for a new version, created using bronze resin.
Lord Blackford was apparently so impressed with the work, that he paid for a new bronze casting to be made, which is the version we see today, and is why Lord Blackford is recorded as having “given” the sculpture.
22. Bassinghall Street, Woolgate House, Ritual, Antanas Brazdys
With Ritual by Antanas Brazdys, I was really not sure if I had found the right work, in the right place. I knew I was at Woolgate House, but it is a new development, not the Woolgate house that was here in 1969, when Ritual was installed.
Approaching the latest version of Woolgate House along Bassinghall Street:

It is interesting how buildings in the City of London frequently have the name during several decades of demolition and rebuilding, but that is not the subject of today’s post as I was here to find the statue, which today sits beside the street, a bike park, and the building:

The sculpture I found seemed to be too bright and shiny for a 1969 work, as the majority of the late 20th century sculpture featured in the City of London guide was of either stone or bronze, but here ii was, in all its shiny glory:

I was able to confirm it is the work Ritual, as whilst the City of London booklet on late 20th century architecture only has a few photos of the works listed. It does include Ritual, and here it is, outside one of the earlier versions of Woolgate house:
When originally installed, it appears to have been within the concrete approach to the entrance to Woolgate house. Today, it is within a small water feature and an area of planting which looks to be a good improvement from its original position.
Antanas Brazdys was born in Lithuania in 1939. he studied in Chicago and London, and become a senior sculpture lecturer at Cheltenham College of Art, and had works exhibited in many sculpture exhibitions, including the 1966 Open-air Sculpture Exhibition, at Battersea Park.
Many of his works are of the same materials and style as with Ritual.
It is interesting as I have worked through the the City of London booklet on late 20th century sculpture in the City of London, how many of the sculptors were from foreign born sculptors – Austria, Czechoslovakia, Italy, Croatia, Swedish parents, India and Lithuania, just in the selection in this post.
I do not know if that was a conscious decision of the City of London Corporation, or whether it was people with different origins and backgrounds who were bringing the creativity to the streets of the City during the later half of the 20th century.
I still have the remaining works in the list to track down, so will feature these in a post later in the year.
I wonder who was responsible for the commissioning of these works and over what period?
I wonder who was responsible for the commissioning of these works. Was it part of a percent for art initiative?
Another fine sculpture you have yet to cover was Barbara Hepworth’s Meridian outside State House (the former Patent Office) in High Holborn. Following the building’s demolition in 1990 this was sold and moved to the PepsiCo HQ in Purchase, New York.
Ker-ching!
https://thesculpturepark.com/sculpture-for-sale/subject/figurative/camargue-horses-by-enzo-plazzotta/
This is such an interesting post and worthwhile project.
Public sculpture for all its physical substance, seems sadly to remain so fragile.
I am thinking of the significant 20th century sculptures in South London that have
mysteriously gone missing, such as Lyn Chadwick from Roehampton, Barbara Hepworth from
Dulwich Park to name but two.
Living now in Folkestone, on the South Coast, we are priviledged to have many
fine public sculptures, by renowned artists like Cornelia Parker, Mark Wallinger, Tracey Emin, AK Dolven, David Shrigley, Anthony Gormley and others which are part of an Art trail that has been
evolving since 2008 as part of our Triennial.
These do not exist without careful maintenance and monitoring.
Today, the sculpture is on display at The Sculpture Park in Churt, Surrey, UK. There, it continues to draw admiration from visitors and collectors alike.
I want to let you knowthat I truly enjoy your posts. My wife and I have made nine trips to the UK and stayed pretty much in London on all visits there. I look forward to getting your postings and greatly enjoy all the photos you include in them. I especially like the comparisons of the images your father collected along with your more contemporary photos of the same locations. Your research on the locations is also another pleasant benefit to me. Best wishes and please keep posting your work. Best regards.
Regarding Karin Jonzen, about 1min walk from the aforementioned statue, she has another! ‘The gardener’ in front (or the back of) the Brewers Hall, ie the building of the Brewers Livery Company.
https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/the-gardener-292824