Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Paul Day (sculptor)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Paul Day


Role
  
Sculptor

Paul Day (sculptor) Paul Day Solo Show 26 March 3 May 2014 Plus One Gallery


Sculptures on king s cross st pancras london paul day meeting place


Paul Day (born 1967) is a British sculptor. His high-relief sculptures in terracotta, resin, and bronze have been exhibited widely in Europe and his work is known for its unusual approach to perspective.

Contents

Paul Day (sculptor) itelegraphcoukmultimediaarchive01181artsgr

Major works include:

Paul Day (sculptor) St Pancras sculpture gets 39offensive39 skeleton train

  • Brussels — An Urban Comedy, a 25 m (82 ft) long terracotta frieze in the Royal Galleries of Saint-Hubert in Brussels
  • The Battle of Britain Monument on the Victoria Embankment in London
  • The Meeting Place, a 9 m (30 ft) tall bronze statue inside St Pancras railway station in London, surrounded by a frieze (see below).
  • Iraq and Afghanistan Wars Memorial (2017), in Victoria Embankment Gardens

  • Paul Day (sculptor) Paul Day sculptor Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

    In 2008 a high-relief frieze was added to the base of the Meeting Place sculpture as part of refurbishments at St Pancras, featuring images from the history of the Tube and train: people queuing on platforms or travelling in carriages; soldiers departing for war and returning injured, and repair works following the 7 July 2005 London bombings. The work was the object of controversy when first erected, as one panel depicted a commuter falling into the path of a train driven by the Grim Reaper. However, following discussions with London and Continental Railways (LCR), this panel was replaced with another.

    Paul Day (sculptor) Paul Day sculptor Wikipedia

    Day studied at art schools in the UK at Colchester and Dartington, and completed his training at Cheltenham in 1991. He now lives in a village near Dijon, France, with his French wife, Catherine. Their Anglo-French relationship is an explicit and repeated theme in his works.

    The Meeting Place, which is modelled on an embrace between Paul and Catherine, stands as a metaphor for St Pancras's role as the terminus of the rail link between England and France. Another contemporary sculptor and critic, Antony Gormley, singled out The Meeting Place when he condemned the current public art works across the UK, stating: "there is an awful lot of crap out there". Day admitted that "Some will say it is a chocolate box sculpture."

    Paul day bronze sculpture kings cross st pancras


    References

    Paul Day (sculptor) Wikipedia