This is a list of public art in Kensington Gardens, one of the Royal Parks of London.
When the contemporary sculptor Anish Kapoor held an exhibition of his work in the gardens in 2010 he remarked that they are "the best site in London for a piece of art, probably [the best] in the world".[1]
Map of public art in Kensington Gardens
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Architect / other | Type | Designation | Notes |
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Coalbrookdale Gates | South Carriage Drive 51°30′08″N 0°10′29″W / 51.5022°N 0.1748°W |
1851 | John Bell | Charles Crookes | Gates, cast iron | Grade II | Made in Coalbrookdale for the Great Exhibition of 1851. Installed at the entrance to Lancaster Walk in 1852 and moved to their present location in 1871, during construction of the Albert Memorial.[2] | |
Queen's Gate | Queen's Gate 51°30′06″N 0°10′49″W / 51.501635°N 0.180378°W |
1858 | ? | — | Gates and piers, cast iron | Grade II* | [3]
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Statue of Edward Jenner | Italian Gardens, Kensington Gardens 51°30′38″N 0°10′31″W / 51.510602°N 0.175156°W |
1858 | William Calder Marshall | James Pennethorne | Statue | Grade II | Unveiled by Prince Albert in Trafalgar Square in 1858. After pressure from anti-vaccinationists the statue was moved in 1862 to the Italian Gardens at Kensington,[4] which were conceived by Albert and laid out by Pennethorne. The rest of the sculpture in the ensemble is by John Thomas.[5] |
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Speke's Monument John Hanning Speke |
Junction of Lancaster Walk and Budges Walk, Kensington Gardens 51°30′32″N 0°10′45″W / 51.5090°N 0.1792°W |
1864 | — | Philip Hardwick | Obelisk | Grade II | A red granite obelisk, an appropriate form of commemoration for an explorer so associated with the River Nile. The pedestal inscribed IN MEMORY OF/ SPEKE/ VICTORIA NYANZA/ AND THE NILE/ 1864. The phrasing avoids crediting Speke with the discovery of the Nile's source, as this was a contentious point.[6] |
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Physical Energy | Junction of Lancaster Walk and several other walkways, Kensington Gardens 51°30′24″N 0°10′42″W / 51.5068°N 0.1783°W |
1907 (installed) | George Frederic Watts | — | Equestrian statue | Grade II | Installed 24 September 1907. Developed by Watts from his equestrian bronze Hugh Lupus (1870–1884) for the Duke of Westminster. Gifted to the nation on Watts's death in 1904, though the cast had not yet been made from the gesso model (now in the Watts Gallery). An earlier bronze cast was incorporated into the Rhodes Memorial (1906–1912) in Cape Town, South Africa.[7] |
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Statue of Peter Pan | West of the Long Water, Kensington Gardens 51°30′31″N 0°10′34″W / 51.5086°N 0.1760°W |
1912 | George Frampton | — | Statue | Grade II* | Unveiled in secret on May Day 1912. The character's creator, J. M. Barrie, commissioned the sculpture and chose the site, which is Peter's landing point in the book Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens. Questions were raised in Parliament about the propriety of an author promoting his work in this way.[2][8] |
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Memorial to Esme Percy | Palace Gate 51°30′07″N 0°11′02″W / 51.502008°N 0.183887°W |
1961 | Silvia Gilley | — | Drinking fountain with sculpture | — | A small bronze figure of a terrier on a platform rising from the centre of a shallow circular pool.[9] |
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Two Bears | Junction of North Flower Walk and Budges Walk, near the Italian Gardens, Kensington Gardens 51°30′39″N 0°10′35″W / 51.510972°N 0.176251°W |
1970 | ? | — | Drinking fountain with sculpture | — | Statue of two embracing bears originally placed in 1939 to commemorate 80 years of the Metropolitan Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association. The original was stolen but was replaced with a copy in 1970.[10] |
St Govor's Well | Off the Broad Walk, Kensington Gardens 51°30′12″N 0°11′04″W / 51.503449°N 0.184426°W |
1976 | ? | — | Drinking fountain | — | Inscribed: "This drinking fountain marks the site of an ancient spring, which in 1856 was named St Govor's Well by the First Commissioner of Works, later to become Lord Llanover. Saint Govor, a sixth-century hermit, was the patron saint of a church in Llanover which had eight wells in its churchyard."[11] The spring's name also appears as "St Gover's Well". It was thought to have medicinal properties.[12] | |
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The Arch 1979–1980 | North bank of the Long Water, Kensington Gardens 51°30′27″N 0°10′24″W / 51.507605°N 0.173237°W |
1979–1980 | Henry Moore | — | Sculpture | — | Presented by Moore to the nation for installation in Kensington Gardens in 1980, two years after his 80th birthday exhibition in the nearby Serpentine Gallery. Dismantled in 1996 due to structural instability; re-erected in 2012.[13] |
Memorial to Diana, Princess of Wales | Forecourt of the Serpentine Gallery, Kensington Gardens 51°30′16″N 0°10′31″W / 51.504467°N 0.175184°W |
1997 | Ian Hamilton Finlay | Peter Coates and Andrew Whittle (lettering) | Floor plaque, tree plaque and eight stone benches | — | Pastoral poetry is inscribed on each element of the work. The plaque at the entrance of the gallery is inscribed with the names of trees found at Kensington Gardens and a quotation from the 18th-century philosopher Francis Hutcheson.[14] Diana was a patron of the Serpentine Gallery.[15] | |
Trumpet (or the Tiffany Drinking Fountain) | Junction of the Broad Walk and Mount Walk, Kensington Gardens 51°30′17″N 0°11′07″W / 51.504631°N 0.185291°W |
2012 | — | Ben Addy (of Moxon Architects) | Drinking fountain | — | The winner, alongside Watering Holes in Green Park, of a RIBA-judged design competition; it was commended for its "formal clarity and elegance".[16] Of the two designs this was thought to be the more "design-led" and Watering Holes the more "art-led".[17]
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Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Architect / other | Type | Designation | Notes |
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Frieze of Parnassus | Podium of the Albert Memorial | 1864–1872 | Henry Hugh Armstead and John Birnie Philip | George Gilbert Scott | Relief sculpture | Grade I | Portrays 169 individual architects, composers, painters, poets, and sculptors from history.[18] |
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Asia | Albert Memorial 51°30′08″N 0°10′39″W / 51.502206°N 0.177383°W |
1865–1871 | John Henry Foley | George Gilbert Scott | Sculptural group | Grade I | A personification of the continent, seated on an Indian elephant, removes a veil to reveal herself. Flanking her are an Indian soldier, a Persian poet, a Chinese potter and a Turkish merchant.[19] |
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Africa | Albert Memorial 51°30′09″N 0°10′39″W / 51.502560°N 0.177454°W |
1865–1871 | William Theed | George Gilbert Scott | Sculptural group | Grade I | A figure in Egyptian costume, representing the continent, rests on a camel. Beside her are an Arabian merchant, a figure sometimes identified as a Nubian, a female European and a tribesman.[20] |
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America | Albert Memorial 51°30′09″N 0°10′41″W / 51.502516°N 0.178030°W |
1865–1871 | John Bell | George Gilbert Scott | Sculptural group | Grade I | The personification of America rides a bison charging forward, guided by the sceptre of the United States, identified by her starry sash. The other figures represent Canada, Mexico and South America.[21] |
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Europe | Albert Memorial 51°30′08″N 0°10′41″W / 51.502156°N 0.177962°W |
1865–1871 | Patrick MacDowell | George Gilbert Scott | Sculptural group | Grade I | Europa, seated on a bull, carries an orb and sceptre signifying her continent's imperial dominance in the nineteenth century. Around her sit Britannia with a trident, France with a sword and laurel wreath, Germany with an open book and Italy with a lyre and palette.[22] |
Agriculture | Albert Memorial | 1865–1871 | William Calder Marshall | George Gilbert Scott | Sculptural group | Grade I | A husbandman, flanked on either side by figures representing livestock farming (a shepherd boy with a lamb and an ewe) and cereal production, looks up to a female personification of Agriculture.[23] | |
Commerce | Albert Memorial | 1865–1871 | Thomas Thornycroft | George Gilbert Scott | Sculptural group | Grade I | The group consists of Commerce, bearing a cornucopia, a young merchant in "Anglo-Saxon" dress (said to be modelled on the sculptor's son Hamo), an Eastern merchant and a rustic with a sack of corn.[24] | |
Engineering | Albert Memorial | 1865–1871 | John Lawlor | George Gilbert Scott | Sculptural group | Grade I | The presiding genius of engineering directs three workers: an engineer with plan in hand, a mechanical engineer with a cogwheel, and a navvy. The two bridges over the Menai Strait are represented at the back of the group.[25] | |
Manufactures | Albert Memorial | 1865–1871 | Henry Weekes | George Gilbert Scott | Sculptural group | Grade I | A female personification of manufactures, accompanied by a blacksmith, looks down on two child labourers, one a factory girl and the other a young potter, representing art manufactures.[26] | |
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Mosaics | Tympana, spandrels and vault of the canopy, Albert Memorial | 1866–1868 | John Richard Clayton with Salviati and Co. | George Gilbert Scott | Mosaics | Grade I | The enthroned female figures in the tympana are identified by their inscriptions as Pictura, Poesis, Sculptura and Architectura; the last displays the design of the Albert Memorial itself.[27] |
Virtues | Flèche of the Albert Memorial | 1867–1870 | James Redfern | George Gilbert Scott | Statues | Grade I | Personifications of the seven virtues along with an eighth, Humanity. Redfern's plaster models were electroformed in copper by Francis Skidmore's ironworking firm in Coventry. The resulting figures were gilded after being mounted on the memorial.[28][29] | |
Sciences | Corners of the Albert Memorial | 1868 | c.Henry Hugh Armstead and John Birnie Philip | George Gilbert Scott | Statues | Grade I | In niches on a level with the spandrels are Armstead's Rhetoric and Medicine and Philip's Philosophy and Physiology. Below them, standing on column shafts, are Philip's Geometry and Geology and Armstead's Astronomy and Chemistry.[30] | |
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Statue of Albert, Prince Consort | Albert Memorial 51°30′09″N 0°10′39″W / 51.502560°N 0.177454°W |
1871–1876 | John Henry Foley and Thomas Brock | George Gilbert Scott | Statue | Grade I | Foley was given the commission in 1868 after the death of Carlo Marochetti. Working in the open on the model gave Foley the sickness which ultimately killed him in 1874, and the work was completed by his pupil Brock.[18]
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Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Architect / other | Type | Designation | Notes |
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Elfin Oak | Kensington Gardens 51°30′31″N 0°11′17″W / 51.5087°N 0.1880°W |
1930 | Ivor Innes | — | Sculptures | Grade II | [31]
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Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Architect / other | Type | Designation | Notes |
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Lion and Unicorn | Kensington Palace (entrance) 51°30′09″N 0°11′15″W / 51.5026°N 0.1876°W |
Probably 18th century | ? | — | Statues | Grade II | [32] | |
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Statue of Queen Victoria | Kensington Palace 51°30′19″N 0°11′10″W / 51.5054°N 0.1861°W |
1893 | Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll | — | Statue | Grade II | Sculpted by the Queen's daughter, the statue portrays Victoria aged 18 and wearing her coronation robes. The statue was a gift from the Kensington Golden Jubilee Memorial Executive Committee.[33] |
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Statue of William III | Kensington Palace 51°30′17″N 0°11′15″W / 51.5046°N 0.1874°W |
1907 | Heinrich Baucke | Aston Webb | Statue | Grade II | A gift from Kaiser Wilhelm II.[34] |
Statue of Diana, Princess of Wales | Sunken Garden | 2017 | Ian Rank-Broadley | — | Sculptural group | — | Unveiled 1 July 2021, which would have been Diana's 60th birthday, by her sons Princes William and Harry, who commissioned the work.[35]
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