91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Statue

George Orwell statue

Erection date: 7/11/2017

Inscription

{On the plinth:}
George Orwell

{On the wall behind:}
If liberty means anything at all it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.

At 6' 2" Orwell was a tall man, but this statue is 2.5 metres (over 8'). He struggled with ill-health most of his life and died of tuberculosis. The constant smoking was surely a contributory factor but at that time the dangers of smoking were not recognised. It's odd that this and the only other 4 smoking statues we can think of, in London, have all been erected since the acquisition of this knowledge: Oscar Wilde (by that pro-smoking sculptor Maggi Hambling), Sherlock Holmes and Churchill in 50 years of Peace. And a relief portrait of Brunel at Paddington Station depicts him with an insouciant cigar in his mouth.

The informs that this statue was privately funded "through a trust founded by the late Labour MP Ben Whitaker." It's said to be the only statue to Orwell.

Site: George Orwell statue (1 memorial)

W1, Hallam Street, o/s BBC

Orwell worked at the BBC during WW2 but, also relevant, his views on language and verbal clarity explain the BBC providing a home for his statue. The name of the BBC show 'Room 101' is inspired by a room of torture in Orwell's novel '1984'. Orwell is said to have named that after a room in which he worked during WW2, in Broadcasting House, outside which this statue is sited.

2020: The  quoted Billy Bragg commenting on the inscription here: "...whenever I walk past this effigy of the English writer that I most admire, it makes me cringe. Surely the author of Nineteen Eighty-Four would understand that people don’t want to hear that 2+2=5?  For Orwell’s quote is not a defence of liberty; it’s a demand for licence, and has become a foundational slogan for those who wilfully misconstrue one for the other. Over the past decade, the right to make inflammatory statements has become a hot button issue for the reactionary right, who have constructed tropes such as political correctness and virtue signalling to enable them to police the limits of social change while portraying themselves as victims of an organised assault on liberty itself."

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
George Orwell statue

Subjects commemorated i

George Orwell

George Orwell was born in Bengal as Eric Arthur Blair, his father was a Briti...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
George Orwell statue

Created by i

Nearby Memorials

Austin Friar statue

Austin Friar statue

EC2, Austin Friars

The Austin Friars house, built in 1253, used to occupy this area.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Laurence Olivier statue

Laurence Olivier statue

SE1, South Bank, National Theatre waterfront

Unveiled by Sir Richard Attenborough, Larry‘s son, Tarquin and widow, Joan Plowright. The list of "principal contributors" has some surpr...

1 subject commemorated, 45 creators
V&A façade - Hogarth

V&A façade - Hogarth

SW7, Cromwell Road

Excluding the allegories (such as Knowledge) there are 36 statues on the two public façades of the V&A Museum, on Exhibition Road and...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Hodge the Cat

Hodge the Cat

EC4, Gough Square

Hodge is sitting on a leather-bound book ("A Dictionary of the English Language", what else?) with empty oyster shells at his paws, a ref...

3 subjects commemorated, 4 creators
St Augustine statue

St Augustine statue

EC2, Austin Friars, Augustine House, 6a

Note the bee on the wall below his feet. Bees are associated with Saint Ambrose who had a notable influence on Augustine. That's the only...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator