How you can use this image
This image can be used for non-commercial research or private study purposes, and other UK exceptions to copyright permitted to users based in the United Kingdom under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, as amended and revised. Any other type of use will need to be cleared with the rights holder(s).
Review the copyright credit lines that are located underneath the image, as these indicate who manages the copyright (©) within the artwork, and the photographic rights within the image.
The collection that owns the artwork may have more information on their own website about permitted uses and image licensing options.
Review our guidance pages which explain how you can reuse images, how to credit an image and how to find images in the public domain or with a Creative Commons licence available.
Notes
Add or edit a note on this artwork that only you can see. You can find notes again by going to the ‘Notes’ section of your account.
The sculpture represents Seacole marching defiantly forward into an oncoming wind, as if confronting head-on some of the personal resistance she had constantly to battle. She carries her bag of medications and poultices towards the scene of battle. Though she would normally have worn a bonnet or straw hat and liked to sport ribbons and bright colours, these have been pared away to leave her marching bareheaded into the fray. Behind the figure stands a vertical bronze disc, cast from an image of the earth on or near the site where she established the British Hotel in the Crimea. The disc performs both practical and symbolic functions. The disc works symbolically in a number of ways. Not only does its startling verticality and comparative blankness communicate to the viewer that this is clearly a sculpture from our own time rather than a mere pastiche of nineteenth-century statuary, it also works to put Mary Seacole in the context of her time and place.
Title
Mary Seacole (1805–1881)
Date
2016
Medium
bronze, Cumbrian black slate & Portland stone
Measurements
H 490 x W (?) x D (?) cm
Accession number
SE1_CRH_S164
Acquisition method
commissioned by the Mary Seacole Trust
Work type
Statue
Owner
The Mary Seacole Trust
Custodian
The Mary Seacole Trust
Work status
extant
Unveiling date
30th June 2016
Access
at all times
Inscription description
inscribed into a slate panel set into the floor in front of the statue: MARY SEACOLE / Nurse of the Crimean War / 1805-1888 / Wherever the need arises / on whatever distant shore / I ask no higher or greater privilege / than to minister to it.; inscribed into a slate panel set into the floor behind the disc: THIS BRONZE DISC BEARS AN IMPRESSION / OF THE GROUND TAKEN FROM THE SITE IN CRIMEA / WHERE JAMAICAN NURSE MARY SEACOLE MINISTERED / TO BRITISH SOLDIERS DURING THE WAR OF 1853 – 1856 / I trust that England will not forget one who nursed her sick, / who sought out her wounded to aid and succour them and who / performed the last offices for some of her illustrious dead / SIR WILLIAM HOWARD RUSSELL, WAR CORRESPONDENT, THE TIMES 1857; inscribed into the stone base of the disc: Sculptor MARTIN JENNINGS / Founder PANGOLIN EDITIONS / 2016