Poured Lines is a 2006 painting by the British painter Ian Davenport. It is the largest painting to be publicly displayed outdoors in the United Kingdom.[1] It is situated under the rail bridge at the western end of Southwark Street in London SE1.[2]
Description
editThe painting is 48 x 3 metres (157 x 10 ft) and made from fluid enamel painted on 48 individual steel panels measuring 1 x 3 metres each.[3] The work took two years to make including six months spent researching materials and three and a half months to apply the 300 different colours to the panels with syringes.[2]
It is designed to withstand the elements of a busy London street including rain, pigeons and the threat of vandalism. The metal panels were manufactured in a factory in Germany and baked in a furnace.[2]
The panels can be swung out from the wall like doors so the bridge can be inspected by rail engineers. The piece was funded by the property developers Land Securities and Southwark Council at a cost of £290,000.[2]
Reception
editWriting in the Telegraph in 2006 upon the paintings unveiling, Serena Davies described the individual panels as "some bright, some pastel some frenetic, some calm" that produce a "wave-like effect across the trajectory of the painting".[1]
Richard Thomas, a councillor for Southwark said at the unveiling of Poured Lines that it would help to "reinforce the emergence of Bankside as the leading cultural quarter of London" and foresaw people "walking past it every day will be able to see subtleties and colour and textures".[2]
References
edit- ^ a b Serena Davies (19 August 2006). "Dance to the music of lines". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 9 October 2018.
- ^ a b c d e "The big picture". BBC News. 5 September 2006. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
- ^ Joyce Hill Stoner; Rebecca Rushfield (15 February 2013). Conservation of Easel Paintings. Routledge. p. 110. ISBN 978-1-136-00042-3.
External links
editMedia related to Ian Davenport at Wikimedia Commons 51°30′24.25″N 0°6′12.43″W / 51.5067361°N 0.1034528°W