Opinion

The Buck Stops In Trafalgar

Trafalgar Square, one of London’s main tourist attractions and protest sites, will soon display a sculpture symbolising Britain’s complex colonial ties and an artwork featuring the faces of 850 transgender people

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The Buck Stops In Trafalgar
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A sculpture symbolising Britain’s complex colonial ties and an artwork featuring the faces of 850 transgender people are set to go on display in Trafalgar Square, one of London’s highest-profile venues for public art. City officials have announced the next two works to occupy the “fourth plinth,” a large stone pedestal in the central London square, reports the Associated Press.

From 2022 to 2024 the plinth will display Malawi-born artist Samson Kambalu’s Antelope, a sculpture of Pan-Africanist leader John Chilembwe beside European missionary John Chorley. Based on a 1914 photograph, it depicts Chilembwe as the much larger figure, “revealing the hidden narratives of under-represented peoples in the history of the British Empire in Africa and beyond,” City Hall said. Mexican artist Teresa Margolles’s 850 Improntas (850 Imprint), featuring casts of the faces of transgender people from around the world, will be installed in 2024. City Hall said “the life masks will be arranged round the plinth in the form of a Tzompantli, a skull rack from Mesoamerican civilisations” of what is now Central America and Mexico.

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Photograph by Shutterstock

One of London’s main tourist attractions and protest sites, Trafalgar Square was named for Admiral Horatio Nelson’s 1805 victory over the French and Spanish fleets. A statue of the one-armed admiral stands atop Nelson’s Column at the center of the square, and statues of other 19th-century military leaders are nearby. The fourth plinth was erected in 1841 for a never-completed equestrian statue, and since 1999 has been occupied by a series of artworks for about 18 months at a time. The current occupant is Heather Phillipson’s sculpture The End— a giant swirl of whipped cream topped with a cherry, a fly and a drone. It’s due to stay on display until September 2022.

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Meghdhoot: The Cloud Messenger

Ah, the poetic charm of the Indian monsoon! Who could have waxed more lyrical than the exiled yaksha of Kalidasa’s Meghaduta. This monsoon, the National Centre for the Performing Arts is holding a workshop—an eight-session virtual series titled Monsoon with Meghaduta—designed to focus on interpreting selected verses from one of the greatest Sanskrit poets. The workshop, the NCPA hopes, will help up-and-comer poets understand the thoughts of Kalidasa as well as broaden their perception about the poem through interpretation of select, translated verses in Hindi.

Curated for poetry lovers, the workshop starts on July 7, a Wednesday, and ends on the final Wednesday of August—on the 25th. The one-and-half-hour weekly sessions will muse on Kalidasa’s creative skills that morphed the monsoon into beautiful verse. Dr Rishiraj Pathak, a poet, musician, and dance litterateur, conducts the sessions along with guest speakers Piyal Bhattacharya, Subodh Poddar and Sandhya Raman.

—Lachmi Deb Roy

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