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<< Our Photo Pages >> The One and The Many - Modern Stone Circle etc in England in Greater London

Submitted by Andy B on Saturday, 12 November 2016  Page Views: 5393

Modern SitesSite Name: The One and The Many Alternative Name: Fitzroy Place, Pearson Square
Country: England
NOTE: This site is 1.645 km away from the location you searched for.

County: Greater London Type: Modern Stone Circle etc
Nearest Town: London  Nearest Village: Fitzrovia
Map Ref: TQ2926981650
Latitude: 51.518986N  Longitude: 0.138276W
Condition:
5Perfect
4Almost Perfect
3Reasonable but with some damage
2Ruined but still recognisable as an ancient site
1Pretty much destroyed, possibly visible as crop marks
0No data.
-1Completely destroyed
5 Ambience:
5Superb
4Good
3Ordinary
2Not Good
1Awful
0No data.
4 Access:
5Can be driven to, probably with disabled access
4Short walk on a footpath
3Requiring a bit more of a walk
2A long walk
1In the middle of nowhere, a nightmare to find
0No data.
4 Accuracy:
5co-ordinates taken by GPS or official recorded co-ordinates
4co-ordinates scaled from a detailed map
3co-ordinates scaled from a bad map
2co-ordinates of the nearest village
1co-ordinates of the nearest town
0no data
5

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The One and The Many
The One and The Many submitted by Andy B : Peter Randall-Page: The One and The Many at Fitzroy Place, London Carved from a 25 ton, 3.5 metre high granite boulder, the sculpture is inscribed with early and modern systems of writing (Vote or comment on this photo)
In 2015 a new public sculpture The One and The Many by artist Peter Randall-Page was commissioned for the recently opened Fitzroy Place in London. It comprises a 3.5-metre high, 25-tonne naturally eroded granite boulder, inscribed over its entire surface with marks carved in low relief.

The carving incorporates writing systems from the earliest Cuneiform script from ancient Mesopotamia to modern languages; the marks conveying creation stories from various cultures around the world. Creation and origin stories are common to all human societies and one of the earliest uses of written language was almost certainly to set down these stories by making marks on clay, papyrus and vellum. The One and The Many is an exploration of the ways in which we have mused, through a wealth of poetic musings and epic narratives, on the problem ‘In the beginning’, as well as a celebration of human ingenuity and imagination.

It is almost impossible for us to imagine a world without writing systems, a world where the only form of communication and dissemination of knowledge and ideas was through face-to-face contact. Our ability to convey meaning to one another through time and space, by making marks has revolutionized human culture.

In Peter’s words “These myths and legends have been distilled by a kind of ‘cultural natural selection’ over countless generations and as such they often tell us more about the human condition; our hopes and fears, than about literal cosmology”.

The naturally eroded boulder chosen for the sculpture is a fragment of solidified magma, the material our planet is made of, its overall form being the result of innumerable chance events over a geological timescale stretching back to the creation of the Earth itself.

The human desire to make the world meaningful seems to be ubiquitous and intrinsic to our very nature. An inevitable result of human consciousness is an awareness of our own mortality and endings imply the existence of beginnings. ‘The One and The Many’ is an exploration of the ways in which we have mused on the problem “in the beginning”.

Peter was elected as a Royal Academician in the category of sculpture in June 2015. The One and The Many is his largest project, following his monumental granite sculpture Seed, at the Eden Project, Cornwall in 2007. Further Commissions include ‘Give and Take’ in Newcastle, which won the 2006 Marsh Award for Public Sculpture; ‘Mind’s Eye’ a large ceramic wall mounted piece for the Department of Psychology at Cardiff University (2006); and a commemorative sculpture for a Mohegan Chief at Southwark Cathedral (2006). Recent projects include a major one-person exhibition in and around the Underground Gallery at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park (June 2009 – April 2010), ‘Walking The Dog’, Dulwich Picture Gallery (2010), ‘Metamorfoz’, Eskisehir, Turkey (2011), ‘Ridge and Furrow’, University of Iowa, USA (2011), ‘Harmonic Solids’, Karlsruhe University, Germany (2013), ‘Theme and Variation’, University of Birmingham (2014) and facades at the new Laboratory Building at Dulwich College designed in collaboration with Grimshaw Architects (2015).

Official Web Site: http://theoneandthemany.co.uk accompanies the work where more information about the project and English translations of the inscribed texts can be found.

“Our ability to convey meaning to one another, through time and space, by making marks has revolutionised human culture and society.” Peter Randall-Page
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The One and The Many
The One and The Many submitted by Andy B : Peter Randall-Page: The One and The Many at Fitzroy Place, London Carved from a 25 ton, 3.5 meter high granite boulder the sculpture is inscribed with early and modern systems of writing (Vote or comment on this photo)

The One and The Many
The One and The Many submitted by Andy B : The One and The Many, Fitzroy Place, London In the background (see also nearby Geograph photos) is the Chapel of the Middlesex Hospital, Mortimer Street, a Grade II-listed chapel which acted as a quiet place for prayer and reflection for staff and patients at The Middlesex Hospital. While the hospital has been flattened and turned into a residential development, the chapel has undergone a £2... (Vote or comment on this photo)

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Nearby Images from Geograph Britain and Ireland:
TQ2981 : Chapel of the Middlesex Hospital, Mortimer Street - Altar by John Salmon
by John Salmon
©2013(licence)
TQ2981 : Chapel of the Middlesex Hospital, Mortimer Street - Ambo by John Salmon
by John Salmon
©2013(licence)
TQ2981 : Chapel of the Middlesex Hospital, Mortimer Street - Chancel by John Salmon
by John Salmon
©2013(licence)
TQ2981 : Chapel of the Middlesex Hospital, Mortimer Street - East end by John Salmon
by John Salmon
©2013(licence)
TQ2981 : Chapel of the Middlesex Hospital, Mortimer Street - Font by John Salmon
by John Salmon
©2013(licence)

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Nearby sites listing. In the following links * = Image available
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"The One and The Many" | Login/Create an Account | 1 comment
  
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Re: The One and The Many by Andy B on Saturday, 12 November 2016
(User Info | Send a Message)
Links:
http://www.theoneandthemany.co.uk

http://www.exemplar.co.uk/2014/one-many/

http://www.stone-ideas.com/2015/12/11/peter-randall-page-the-one-and-the-many-at-fitzroy-place-london/
"The global magazine for architecture, art and design with natural stone"
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