Showing posts with label People's Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label People's Museum. Show all posts

18 September 2014

British Isles Friday


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Joy's Book Blog is hosting this weekly meme.

May 2010 - Glasgow Scotland

On a wet dull day...



We visited the People's Palace in Glasgow.




The Doulton Fountain, gifted to Glasgow as part of the International Exhibition of 1888, was moved to the Green in 1890. Designed by architect Arthur E. Pearce, the 48 ft tall fountain was built by the Royal Doulton company to commemorate Queen Victoria's reign. It featured a 70 ft wide basin, with a slightly larger than life-size statue of Queen Victoria, surrounded by four life-size statues of water-carriers representing Australasia, Canada, India and South Africa.










A lightning strike in 1891 destroyed the statue of Victoria, and rather than let the city replace the statue with an urn, Doulton paid for a second hand-made statue to be produced. In the 1960s the fountain was allowed to fall into a state of disrepair with the water supply being turned off. However in 2002 a £2 million restoration program was started that restored the fountain to its original condition. As of 2004, the fountain has been placed in a new location, in front of the People's Palace

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16 April 2012

Mellow Yellow Monday

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I'm posting over here today.
Taken in Glasgow Scotland at the People's Museum, a delightful museum dedicated to the people of Glasgow and the changing times.

The caption displayed beside the boots in the museum:
‘Glasgow pop artist Edmund Smith designed and made these boots for Billy Connolly in 1975. Billy ordered a pair of size 9 ‘bananas’. When the first one was made the artist remarked that the second one would not be identical, as bananas never are, and so it was given the Fyffes label. The boots made their first appearance on stage at the Music Hall, Aberdeen, in August 1075. The documentary ‘Big Banana Feet’ was filmed in the same year. It took its title from the boots that almost became Billy Connolly’s trademark at the time.’
If you've never listened to Billy Connolly here's a clip but be warned he uses offensive language.

Words