art.wikisort.org - SculptureThe Australian War Memorial in London is a memorial dedicated in 2003 to the 102,000 Australian dead of the First and Second World Wars. It is located on the southernmost corner of Hyde Park Corner, on the traffic island that also houses the Wellington Arch, the New Zealand War Memorial, the Machine Gun Corps Memorial and the Royal Artillery Memorial.
Not to be confused with the Australian War Memorial in Canberra.
Australian War Memorial |
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For Australia's military personnel who died during the First and Second World Wars |
Unveiled | 11 November 2003; 18 years ago (2003-11-11) |
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Location | Hyde Park Corner London, W1United Kingdom |
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Description
The memorial comprises a semicircular curved wall of grey-green granite slabs from Western Australia (Verde Laguna granite from Jerramungup), cut in Australia before being shipped to London. The granite stones are inscribed with the names of 23,844 towns in which the Australian soldiers were born, in Australia, the UK and elsewhere. Parts of some town names are picked out in bolder type, creating the names of 47 battles in which Australia was involved in a larger font. In summer months, water runs down over the names, intended to evoke "memories of service, suffering and sacrifice".[1] The curved wall is set facing a downwards slope of grass, forming an amphitheatre.
Four blocks bear the crest of Australia and the insignia of the three branches of the Australian armed services, and three other blocks bear dedicatory inscriptions: "Whatever burden you are to carry we also will shoulder that burden (Robert Menzies, Prime Minister of Australia, 1941). // Australia – United Kingdom // 1914 – 1918 // 1939 – 1945". Three seating blocks are placed in front of the wall.
It is under the care of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
History
The proposal to create an Australian war memorial in London was announced in July 2000, during the centenary of the Australian Federation. The memorial was designed for the Office of Australian War Graves at the Australian Department of Veterans' Affairs by Tonkin Zulaikha Greer Architects and the artist Janet Laurence.[2] It cost an estimated £3m, funded by the Australian Government. It won the Australian Stone Architectural Award for Best International Project in 2006.
The work was commissioned at the beginning of 2003, and the memorial was unveiled on 11 November (Armistice Day) 2003, the 85th anniversary of the armistice to end the First World War, by Queen Elizabeth II in her role as Queen of Australia. In attendance was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Tony Blair and the Australian Prime Minister John Howard. And also present were Simon Crean, Leader of the Opposition in Australia; Alexander Downer, Australian Foreign Minister; Danna Vale, Australian Minister for Veterans' Affairs; General Peter Cosgrove, Chief of the Australian Defence Force; the three principal chaplains for the Australian Army, Navy and Air Force; former UK Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher; and Geoff Hoon, UK Secretary of State for Defence. Around 3,000 people were present at the ceremony, including 27 Australian veterans and it ended with a flypast of Jaguars from No. 54 Squadron RAF.
A metal plaque from the memorial was stolen in May 2013, but recovered and replaced before 11 November 2013.
See also
Military of Australia portal
Detail of town names, forming in larger type the name of
Gallipoli
Wreath laying in 2008
Notes
References
External links
Public art and memorials in London |
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Portrait sculpture |
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British/English royalty | |
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Arts | |
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Explorers | |
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Merchants | |
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Military | |
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Nurses | |
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Politics | British | Prime ministers | |
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Other politicians | |
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International | |
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Religion | |
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Science and engineering | |
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Social reformers and humanitarians | |
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Sport | |
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Fictional characters | |
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See also | |
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Other monuments and memorials |
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War memorials | Pre-C20 | |
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Boer Wars | |
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WWI · WWII | Regimental | |
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Local | |
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Corporate | |
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Holocaust | |
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Post-WWII | |
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Blue plaques |
- Camden
- Kensington and Chelsea
- City of Westminster
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Other works |
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Sculptures | Elisabeth Frink | |
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Barbara Hepworth | |
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Henry Moore | |
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Eduardo Paolozzi | |
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The Line | |
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Fountains | |
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Murals |
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Land art | |
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See also |
- Art on the Underground
- Commission for Diversity in the Public Realm
- London Mural Preservation Society
- Metropolitan Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association
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By location |
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City of Westminster |
- Belgravia1
- Covent Garden2
- Green Park
- Hyde Park
- Kensington1
- Kensington Gardens1
- Knightsbridge1
- Mayfair
- Millbank
- Paddington
- Pimlico
- St James's
- St Marylebone
- Soho
- Strand
- Trafalgar Square
- Victoria
- Victoria Embankment3
- Westminster
- Whitehall
- 1 Partly in Kensington and Chelsea
- 2 Partly in Camden
- 3 Partly in the City of London
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- City of London
- Barking and Dagenham
- Barnet
- Bexley
- Brent
- Bromley
- Camden
- Croydon
- Ealing
- Enfield
- Greenwich
- Hackney
- Hammersmith and Fulham
- Haringey
- Harrow
- Havering
- Hillingdon
- Hounslow
- Islington
- Kensington and Chelsea
- Kingston
- Lambeth
- Lewisham
- Merton
- Newham
- Redbridge
- Richmond
- Southwark
- Sutton
- Tower Hamlets
- Waltham Forest
- Wandsworth
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Key:  No longer extant, on public display or in London (see List of public art formerly in London) |
Australian war memorials |
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Major national monuments (capital cities) |
- Anzac Memorial (Sydney)
- Australian Army Memorial (Canberra)
- Australian Merchant Navy Memorial (Canberra)
- Australian Peacekeeping Memorial (Canberra)
- Australian Service Nurses National Memorial (Canberra)
- Australian War Memorial (Canberra)
- The Cenotaph (Hobart)
- Kings Park War Memorial (Perth)
- National War Memorial (Adelaide)
- Remembrance Driveway (Sydney to Canberra)
- Royal Australian Navy Memorial (Canberra))
- Shrine of Remembrance (Brisbane)
- Shrine of Remembrance (Melbourne)
- Vietnam Forces National Memorial (Canberra)
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On foreign soil |
- Australian War Memorial (London, England)
- Australian Soldier Park (Beersheba, Israel)
- Lae War Cemetery (Lae, Papua New Guinea)
- Lone Pine Memorial (Gallipoli, Turkey)
- V.C. Corner Australian Cemetery and Memorial (Fromelles, France)
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Regional monuments |
- ACT Memorial (Canberra)
- Ex-Prisoners of War Memorial (Ballarat)
- Monument Hill (Fremantle)
- Victory Memorial Gardens (Wagga Wagga)
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Boer War memorials | |
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World War I memorials |
- Arch of Victory (Ballarat)
- Avenues of Honour
- The Cenotaph (Sydney)
- Johnstone Park Memorial (Geelong)
- Light Horse Interchange (Sydney)
- Mount Macedon Memorial Cross
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World War II memorials |
- Australian–American Memorial (Canberra)
- Avenues of Honour
- Albany
- Armadale
- Bacchus Marsh
- Ballarat
- Booroopki
- Buchan South
- Cowra
- Hobart
- Lakes Entrance
- Lysterfield
- Macedon
- O'Connell
- Woodend North
- Military Museum and Bombing Memorial (Darwin)
- El Alamein Fountain (Sydney)
- Hellenic Memorial (Canberra)
- Rats of Tobruk Memorial (Canberra)
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Korean War memorials |
- Korean War Memorial (Canberra)
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Campaigns |
- Regimental Square (Sydney)
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Branch |
- Rockingham Naval Memorial Park (RAN)
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