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Trafalgar Square: The people's plinth - a portrait of our time

A soupbox in Trafalgar Square will give anyone who fancies it a chance to do whatever they like for an hour. Arifa Akbar discovers the idea behind it and gets a taste of what may be in store

Tuesday, 24 June 2008

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The Mayor of London Boris Johnson poses for photographs with Antony Gormley and Yinka Shonibare during the announcement of winning artists of the next two commissions for the Fourth Plinth in Trafalgar Square

Prepare for chaos. The latest work of art to adorn Trafalgar Square's Fourth Plinth will be a giant soapbox, which will give anyone who fancies it the chance to do whatever they want for an hour at a time.

After months of discussion, Antony Gormley's "haven for a certain degree of anarchy" became the latest joint winner of the Fourth Plinth project yesterday. The sculptor's One and Other soapbox project will go live next spring, although the costs of policing the platform – with "performers" replaced every hour, 24 hours a day – is as yet unknown.

"It's an opportunity to perform an act of collective creativity, people contributing one hour of their lives that represents Britain now," said Gormley, 57, adding that the exercise will present a national "portrait of this time".

Originally scheduled to run for 365 days, the Gormley project – which will incorporate a safety net around the plinth to prevent people falling off and will necessitate six curators to guard it day and night – has since been scaled back to 100 days. The hydraulic stairs he first proposed to transport people on to the plinth have also been replaced; now a crane will lift people up for maximum theatrical impact.

"I'm favouring a crane because it will be a moment of theatre, someone lifted from common ground and made into an image when they are on top of the plinth ... It will be a spectacle, but I'm also concerned about the subjects, what they learn about themselves, exposed in a public arena," he said.

Members of the public who wish to take part in the project will be able to apply online, with organisers saying they hope to avoid legal problems from impromptu speeches inciting racial hatred or violence by vetting applicants beforehand.

Gormley's artwork will be replaced by Nelson's Ship in a Bottle, a sculpture created by the second of yesterday's winners, Yinka Shonibare. The artist, born in London in 1962 but raised in Nigeria, has created a five-metre-scale replica of Nelson's ship, HMS Victory, in a giant glass bottle which will be lit up internally at night. Its sails are made from textiles bought from Brixton market in south London that reflect "the journey of the Empire".

Boris Johnson, the new Mayor of London who announced the winner yesterday, a day after his senior adviser, James McGrath, resigned after making offensive comments about Britain's black community, said he welcomed the multiculturalism of both artistic projects.

Shonibare said: "My win is extremely important. We all work in the interest of this nation, we pay taxes here. Multiculturalism is not divisive at all. It's about being one nation, being tolerant towards people who are different from us."

Mr Johnson said he continued to support the idea of a temporary statue of the RAF commander Sir Keith Park on the plinth in the run-up to the 70th anniversary of the Battle of Britain in 2010. He said he also supports a permanent statue of the former Air Chief Marshal elsewhere in the square.

But, Gormley said: "Trafalgar Square is a place of valedictory celebration of military heroes. We now live in a multicultural and less nationalistic time. The fact that Trafalgar Square is becoming a place of ethnic celebration, it seems necessary to register that change within the furniture of the square."

Gormley did have one new, and slightly unusual, suggestion: a statue of the Mayor himself. "The idea of Boris Johnson not saying anything but simply standing there, with his hair blowing in the wind, looking at the city which he has come to be Mayor of might be a very nice thing," he said.

What would you do on the plinth? We asked celebrities and members of the public for their thoughts

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23 Comments


Dress up as Admiral Lord Nelson and stand in the same pose facing the back of the great man himself

Posted by Joe Poulton | 14.07.08, 11:46 GMT

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I would stand Antony Gormley up there for a year and let people throw rotten fruit & veg at him - what a rubbish idea,
How much money is he being paid to do nothing -I bet he's laughting all the way to the bank.
what will the rest of the world think -these people make our country look very silly.
We already had Tony Blair build a tent for the Millennium- which then stood empty for years -what credibility do we really have.

Posted by MOK | 04.07.08, 15:59 GMT

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I would explain to anyone prepared to listen essentially how we live, how we could live and who we are, for who we believe ourselves to be conditions what we want. So it follows that if we common folk of this world, who do all the socially creative work that makes this extraordinary society function, have been conditioned to think of ourselves as "ordinary" people, then all we're going to want is an ordinary life. This is a tragedy when we consider the extraordinary human potential wating to be unchained from the 'no profit, no production' economic system we toil under.
See www.world socialism.org

Posted by danny | 03.07.08, 00:52 GMT

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I want to stand there and do ironing for people

Posted by june | 26.06.08, 18:07 GMT

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Perform a one-act, one-character play, in which a teacher of French rehearses the task of meeting a guest from Paris at Waterloo station, takes her to Trafalgar Square to see the sights, realises what a gaffe he has made on both counts, and so changes the subject to a discussion on how to persuade the Italian Embassy to erect a monument to Napoleon, which will serve as an example to British school-children that even a native Italian can learn to speak French fluently.

Posted by Edmund Burke | 25.06.08, 23:32 GMT

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Dress in 1940's cloths and play sax to my wife, who will be dressed in cloths from the 40's.
My Nan would love it!

Posted by Terence j Sullivan | 25.06.08, 19:09 GMT

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I would authentically dress as English Civil war pikeman.

Posted by Terry | 25.06.08, 19:05 GMT

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I would talk about my wish for this competition, which chooses a work of art for the 4th plinth, to be retained, rather than adopting Boris's dreadfully boring idea of erecting instead, a statue of yet another military character.

Posted by Brenda | 25.06.08, 17:37 GMT

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" A soupbox in Trafalgar Square will give anyone who fancies it a chance to do whatever they like for an hour. Arifa Akbar discovers the idea behind it and gets a taste of what may be in store."

What flavour of soup will we be able to taste ?

Posted by Ron | 25.06.08, 16:18 GMT

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Demonstrate the art of Ho Ho Chi Drumming

Posted by Chaparral Andrew Hodges | 25.06.08, 12:23 GMT

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