Futurecity has worked in partnership with Mount Anvil to curate and deliver a series of public art commissions across three of their new developments in London: Untitled by fine jewellery designer Jo Hayes Ward at Queen’s Wharf (Riverside Studios), Ecliptical Spheres by contemporary artist James Hopkins at Dollar Bay and Column by artist-architect collective Studio Swine at Lexicon, City Road.
Column is the third artwork by Studio Swine curated by Futurecity. In 2016 the collective created a series of public realm furniture Shirt, Tie, Pipe and Shoe Bench at St. James’s Market as part of a wider public art programme commissioned by The Crown Estate, curated by Futurecity. Following this, Futurecity worked with Eden Project in Cornwall and curated the delivery of Studio Swine’s immersive 20-tonne installation ∞ Blue (Infinity Blue) for the centrepiece of the Eden Project’s Invisible World’s 5-year programme.
Read the interview with Studio Swine below.
FC: Can you tell us what it was like working at a different scale and in a new location / context for this commission?
SS: We were really interested in the feeling a built environment gives you, the material fabric of the city, its relation to the human and the symbols represented. The scale isn’t so big, but we wanted to create the sense of monumental through the proportions. When you think of Stonehenge, it’s not big in comparison to the buildings we’re used to, but there’s a sense of weight resting above your head and a feeling for the materials that makes one very aware of the physical ‘thingness’ of it.




