Rhinestone Rhino Unveiled In The City's Gay Quarter Ahead Of Birmingham Pride
BIRMINGHAM’S bronze bull statue now has a new sparkly glamorous
cousin!
The life-sized sculpture is set to become another iconic piece of
artwork for the city along with the famous bronze bull statue which
stands under the Rotunda.
It stands atop a roof at the junction of Hurst Street and Bromsgrove
Street at the entrance to the Southside, gay village, Chinatown and
theatre district.
The project is a joint collaboration between the city council,
Birmingham Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender community, GB Training
Ltd and the Southside Business Improvement District (BID)...
It was made out of a polystyerene mould, carved into a rhino shape
and then coated in fibreglass.
Its “bling” was created out of 80 pieces of smashed mirror and
dozens of fake diamonds..
There is a memory stick put inside the statue containing music,
photos, videos and stories from the city’s lesbian and gay community.
Southside BID manager, Julia Chance, said a rhino was chosen because
it was the symbol of the gay rights movement in the United States in
the 1960s.
Birmingham Mail.
Although I haven't seen it in the fibreglass flesh yet, I'm quite the fan of this.
Art in public spaces is a good thing - and the odder the better, I say.
Rather than statues of "great men" of war and empire, let's have more stuff like the Milton Keynes cows, the Cerne Abbas Giant, the Angel Of The North, and, well, anything by Henry Moore.
They should give Grayson Perry a grant to create endless public erections to add to the gaiety of the nation.
The Rhinestone Rhino reminds me of a personal favourite; the wonderfully literal Elephant And Castle statue in Elephant & Castle.
But can we stop this nonsense that its makers often advanced about it - that the rhino "was the/a symbol of the gay rights movement."
Eh?
Can you show me one person who thinks that it was?
Or knew that it was?
Or who knows what it is without Googling?
A purple rhino appeared on some gay pride posters in Boston in 1974 - chosen it was said as the animal was gentle til provoked.
It soon faded from view - end of (very minor footnote to our) story.
Claiming the rhinocerous as some great gay rights symbol is quite daft.
Which, for me, just makes this Rhinestone Rhino statue all the better.
All art is quite useless and that.
Monday, 4 June 2012
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Nope.
ReplyDeleteAny idea what the hell Nazir Bhat ( the only guy to make a comment under the 1974 link ) was talking about?
I can't see any comments, but there's a thing that looks like it's trying to load something (which never does)...
ReplyDeleteGive the "link" another try please, since the comment is either - homophobic - really intelligent and different or they are taking the piss.
ReplyDeleteRe. The rhino - a symbol of aggresion when pushed from what realistically is a sweet natured animal - out-with the tough skin it needs to have.
I can read it now!!
Delete"most regrettablly; u find it pride in something which is un-natural;even; socially recognised being non-racist factor in sex;it has inherent demerits medicallly and clinically known bringing even; dreaded diseases.one can eat even using foot; but;eating thru hand looks a natural process ;thus; being acceptable is also suitable."
Can I sleep on this one, please?
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