ABOUT THE BOOK Post-war public art encompasses a wide range of intriguing, curious and colourful artworks that can be seen in urban and rural locations throughout Britain. From traditional figurative sculptures to the Angel of the North, these works further the aim of 'bringing art to the people'. Artworks could be found in the new towns and schools of the 1950s and 1960s, and in redeveloped town centres, where abstract or historical murals were often integrated with new buildings. During the 1980s local authorities and ...
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ABOUT THE BOOK Post-war public art encompasses a wide range of intriguing, curious and colourful artworks that can be seen in urban and rural locations throughout Britain. From traditional figurative sculptures to the Angel of the North, these works further the aim of 'bringing art to the people'. Artworks could be found in the new towns and schools of the 1950s and 1960s, and in redeveloped town centres, where abstract or historical murals were often integrated with new buildings. During the 1980s local authorities and large corporations began to appreciate the value of art in offices and shopping developments, although these works could be controversial. The landmark sculptures of the 1990s and early twenty-first century ensured that public art became a tourist attraction. This beautifully illustrated book reveals the history of post-war public art and provides a detailed guide to nearly two hundred of the most interesting and accessible works in England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Lynn F. Pearson is an independent architectural historian and photographer, specialising in unheralded structures and forms, particularly seaside architecture and post-1950 decorative arts. Other titles for Shire by this author are: Lighthouses Discovering Famous Graves Mausoleums Piers and other Seaside Architecture
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