Public Monument and Sculpture Association National Recording Project
Galatea Photograph
Region ID | UEL | |
Work ID | 213 | |
Manual Reference | GR027 | |
Type | Sculpture | |
Title | Galatea | |
Sculptor | Ansiglioni, Leopoldo | |
Date of design | 1882 | |
Year of unveiling | ||
Unveiling details | ||
Road | Bexley Road | |
Precise Location | In Winter Garden, part of University of Greenwich Mansion Site, on south side of main building.Visible through windows from park and open to public | |
A to Z Ref | 96 5A | |
OS Ref | TQ443744 | |
Postcode | SE9 | |
Work is | Extant | |
Listing Status | Don't know | |
Duty of Care | ||
Commissioned by | ||
Notes | ||
Nude figure of a woman, Galatea, reclining on a dolphin’s back. The statue is set in a circular pool in the centre of the Winter Garden attached to the house. The dolphin’s tail is lifted up and she is lying back against it with her arms above her head entwined with the tip of the tail. She has flowing hair and a drape over her left thigh. The white marble figure and base are set on a separate slab of grey marble. This stands on an oval shaped, moulded dark grey marble plinth which has four cartouches around it, two of which are inscribed, with scallop shells above them. Four bronze birds standing on tortoises or turtles are ranged round the plinth with their wings outstretched against the marble, and beneath this is a pink marble slab of similar shape, standing on a stone base which holds the whole structure out of the water. | ||
Colonel John Thomas North 1842-96 was a coal merchant’s son, born in Yorkshire. He went to Peru as an engineer in 1869 at the age of 27, and made a huge fortune in South America mining nitrates which were used for artificial fertilisers. On his return to England in 1882 he became known as the ‘Nitrate King’. He was one of the wealthiest men in Britain, a public benefactor, an extrovert and popular personality, becoming a ‘colonel’ because he financed a regiment in the Territorial Army. When he died in 1896 thousands lined his funeral route. When he returned to England he leased a house at Avery Hill in June 1883, within easy reach of the City, however he soon required a house that was both more impressive and would provide space to display his collection of paintings and sculptures. He bought the house and estate at Avery Hill and commissioned the architect Thomas W. Cutler to ‘make additions and alterations’ to the cost of £40,000 while he was away on a trip to Chile. He was given an estimate of £65,000, but when this became a projected £100,000, North dismissed Cutler and hired his assistant J.O. Cooke. The result, in 1891, was a magnificent 50 room mansion in Italianate style, which included a sculpture gallery, picture gallery, a large winter garden which still remains, electric light and central heating. The Eltham to Bexley road was re-routed so that it ran further away from the house. When the mansion was put up for sale after North’s death no buyer was found. It was eventually sold, for £40,000, but was not lived in again and in 1902 the London County Council bought it, together with some of the parkland, for £25,000. They opened the park to the public in 1903 and later some of the rooms. In 1904 (?1906) it became the first women’s residential teacher training college. In 1908 the college acquired Southwood House to the south of the park, where North had lived while his mansion was being built, and built halls of residence. In the 1970s other subjects began to be taught at the college and the site is now the Mansion Site of the University of Greenwich. Most of the house was destroyed during the Second World War and most of the current buildings on the site are postwar. The gatehouse, entrance hall to the mansion, picture and sculpture galleries (now the library) remain, also the Winter Garden, which is open to the public, and the public park surrounding it. | ||
Galatea was a sea-nymph who was wooed by the Cyclops Polyphemus but was in love with the youth Acis. On finding them together, Polyphemus threw a rock at them, killing Acis. Galatea made him into a river bearing his name and herself returned to the sea. Sea nymphs were often depicted with sea creatures as in this case, a dolphin. | ||
circa | ||
raw year | ||
Condition | Good | |
At risk | No known risk | |
Inscriptions | In cartouche on north side, (figure's right side): ROMA 1882 In cartouche on west side, (below feet of figure): GALATEA | |
Signatures | On north side of grey marble slab, figure's right side, incised letters: LEOPOLDO ANSIGLIONI ROMA 1882 | |
Elements
Element Details
Part of work | Material | Dimensions |
|---|---|---|
Sculpture and plinth | Marble | 170cm high approx x 65cm wide approx x 160cm deep approx |
Assessment of Condition
Surface Character
Detail | Comment |
|---|---|
Accretions | Verdigris on birds and turtles |
Bird guano | Slight bird guano |
Biological growth | A little green growth around base of plinth and some water marks |
Metallic staining | Verdigris on birds and turtles |
Structural Condition
Structural Condition | Comment |
|---|---|
Cracks, splits, breaks, holes | Crack across tip of flipper at back of dolphin beneath tail where may have been repaired. Crack across white marble base of statue on south side, statue's left side |