Tripomatic

The Barbican Muse

The Barbican Muse is a sculpture of a woman, holding tragedy and comedy masks, by Matthew Spender, and was installed on a wall near the… Read more…

Tags artwork·sculpture
 

The Barbican Muse is a sculpture of a woman, holding tragedy and comedy masks, by Matthew Spender, and was installed on a wall near the Silk Street entrance to the Barbican Centre in the City of London, England, in 1994.

The 20 feet long illuminated sculpture called Muse was cast in fibreglass and then gilded. It was commissioned, in 1993, by architect Theo Crosby to 'float, glow and point the way' to visitors arriving at the centre on the walkway from Moorgate Station.

As part of the 1993–1994 refurbishment, Crosby also commissioned nine gilded fibreglass muses by British sculptor Sir Bernard Sindall, but these were removed in April 1997, and sold to Dick Enthoven in 1998.

Source: Wikipedia

More information and contact

Address 908 Frobisher Crescent, City of London EC2Y 8, United Kingdom
Coordinates 51°31'10.581" N, 0°5'34.763" W
QR code
Scan to download the app

Plan Your Perfect Trip

Create day-by-day itineraries, discover top attractions, and navigate with ease — on any device.

Or search for Tripomatic in the App Store or Google Play.

More interesting places