• 2 days ago
40 metre Statue of Destiny proposed for Perth

The huge statue 'Destiny" would be taller than the Statue of Liberty and a rival to the much loved Kelpies.

Sculpter David J Mitchell has put forward the exciting proposal for the Perth site and hopes the statue would have visitors flocking to the area to marvel at the art work.
Transcript
00:00My name is David Mitchell, I am a sculptor.
00:17Yeah, so this is a wee proposal that I've been putting together for a statue going up
00:24in, just north of Perth.
00:28The idea is that it's going to be a figure of destiny, 40 metres from ground to the top
00:34of her head, which would make her bigger than the Statue of Liberty.
00:40He'd walk up inside her and up into the crown and down the other arm, and then there'd be
00:45a wee viewing platform up here from which you'd be able to see the city.
00:51The guys that are doing all the bridges and this whole revitalisation of the area, they
00:59want a central piece of work for it.
01:01I think they were wanting something on the same scale as the Kelpies.
01:06What sort of timescale are you talking for, from start to finish?
01:09It would take about two years.
01:11The proposal was full bronze, with a weathered Statue of Liberty colour to it.
01:21And the crown would be gold.
01:23What would it mean for you to get this commission, David?
01:25It'd probably be the highlight of my entire career, to be honest.
01:29It would ensure lots more work in the future, it would ensure a bigger studio, and really
01:39it would give me a space to create more work for Scotland, and to give more work away as
01:47well to councils that would like work but couldn't afford it.
01:54It would let me start a gallery to show work, it would probably mean everything.
02:03There's not many statues like this in the world, never mind Scotland.
02:08The idea is that in the long term this will bring money in, this will bring tourism in,
02:14this will bring visitors to Perth, it will more than make up for the money spent on it.
02:21The Kelpies I think took about £5 million to make, the amount of time over the ten years
02:27or so they've been up, they've brought in over £120 million.
02:32And would you expect the same to happen?
02:34I would expect the same to happen, yeah, easily, easily.
02:38It's not one of these kind of statues that's going to go out of fashion, it's not going
02:42to get rusty, people aren't going to look at it in ten years and think it's ugly or
02:48be sick of it.
02:49It's an established form, it will only become more valuable the longer it's been there.
03:00The closest thing you can compare it to is the Statue of Liberty, or something like Christ
03:04the Redeemer, it becomes a symbol of the city.
03:08This figure is called Destiny and I think it's for Scotland, it's sort of presenting
03:16this crown of destiny to the future.
03:20So this would be a commission for a new development in Perth.
03:25So there's a new road network being built called the Cross-Tailinks Road Network, which
03:30includes a bridge and some revitalisation of the road network, along with some grasslands
03:38and scenery and some smaller works of art.
03:41And then this would be ideally the piece de resistance, the central piece of work which
03:47you should be able to see as you drive along the road.
03:50This here would be built from bronze in a thousand or so sections, which would be welded
03:55together and put up on site.
03:57So it would get put together in pieces, welded and then patinated, and bronze is the perfect
04:02medium for it, especially in Scotland with our climate.
04:05Stone statues fall to pieces, you know the rain that batters Scotland destroys a stone
04:13statue in 100 years, 200 years, but a bronze statue like this would last a thousand years.
04:22So this proposal went in the tail end of last year, probably won't find out until next
04:27year.
04:28The height of this statue would be 40 metres from the base to the top of the head.
04:35There would be a walkway around the back and an entrance just at the bottom of the base
04:40here behind the foot.
04:42You'd walk in, up some stairs up inside, along the arm, up to a wee viewing platform from
04:51where you could look straight down, or you could look out towards Perth, because this
04:57should be facing south towards Perth, and then you'd walk around here, take your photos,
05:04and come down the other arm, and then down some stairs this way, and then back out.

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