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Notes
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In October 2012 artists Winstanley and Nadin won the commission to design and build a commemorative sculpture in the new city centre of Stoke-on-Trent, Hanley. The sculpture was to have two functions; to clad an ugly but necessary electrical substation next to the new bus station development and to commemorate the link between the location and the Czech village and population of Lidice. Lidice was by the Nazi’s in 1942 in retaliation for the assassination of Nazi Lieutenant General and Deputy Reich Protector of Bohemia and Moravia Reinhard Heydrich. Hitler is said to have exclaimed ‘Lidice shall die’, and hundreds of men, women and children were killed – either executed or transported to concentration camps. The destruction of Lidice inspired the then Stoke-on-Trent City Councillor Sir Barnett Stross and hundreds of the city’s miners to pledge a day's pay per week to rebuild the village.
The resulting sculpture, 'Unearthed', is an abstract sculpture, made up of straight and swooping walls of tags that can all be seen from ground level. The sizes and finishes of the tags run in layers, following the upward motion of the piece, as if projecting out of the ground – suggesting that the sculpture, as well as the story, is being unearthed. Planted on site in February 2018, is also a pear tree grafted from the single living thing that survived the Lidice atrocity. It is commemorated as a gift of friendship from the Bohemian villagers in recognition of the 'Lidice Shall Live' international fundraising campaign conceived in Stoke-on-Trent. The tree is known as 'The Messenger of Hope'.
Title
Unearthed (Lidice)
Date
2013
Medium
steel
Measurements
H 579 x W (?) x D (?) cm
Accession number
ST1_IB_S012
Acquisition method
commissioned by Stoke on Trent City Council
Work type
Sculpture
Owner
Stoke on Trent City Council
Custodian
Stoke on Trent City Council
Work status
extant
Access
at all times
Inscription description
a quote from Sir Barnett Stross is etched into the surface of the piece: IT CAN ALSO SEND A RAY OF LIGHT ACROSS THE SEA TO THOSE WHO STRUGGLE IN DARKNESS Sir Barnett Stross