Your go-to source for new
ideas and inspiration
Look Up: Ornamental Passions

Look Up: Ornamental Passions

By Piers Fawkes on July 23, 2009

Ornamental Passions is a blog by freelance journalist Chris Partridge that documents the various statues, engravings and other smaller design aesthetics he finds on older buildings in London. When investigates reliefs he likes and posts his findings to the site. About the relief on a Bank of Scotland building pictured above, he says:

The current building was designed in 1902 for the British Linen Bank by Scottish architect John Macvicar Anderson. He designed the grumpy-looking Neptune on the keystone of the arch, with cornucopia pouring money over his head.

Above that is a charming relief showing two sailors lounging on the dockside, one with navigational implements including a telescope, a lead line and a chronometer. The other sits next to bales of exotic south seas produce. A forest of masts rises behind.

Anderson said he recovered the work from the studio of the sculptor John Bacon Junior, who died in 1859. Apparently, the South Sea Company had commissioned it but never paid up, so Bacon held on to it.

It is a wonderful bit of propaganda, hinting at the boundless riches that the company would bring to London’s docks. It is ironic that the building should have become the London HQ of HBOS, considering the pivotal role that company had in the recent property bubble.

Ornamental Passions

Piers Fawkes

Recent Articles By Piers Fawkes Follow Piers Fawkes via RSS

Piers Fawkes is the founder and editor-in-chief of PSFK, a daily news site that acts as the go-to source of new ideas and inspiration.

Comments

TOPICS: Design & Architecture
TAGS: