We’ve
all been discouraged from sitting on benches during the lockdown but, when this
pandemic is finally over (or at least controlled to the point where we are able
to resume some semblance of normal life), these lovely benches will be there
for the good folks of Cardiff and its visitors to rest their weary legs while
out walking.
The aptly named Ship in a bottle bench was installed at the top of the meadow
overlooking Cardiff Bay Wetland Reserve in 2004. This bottle bench is the work of
artist Melissa Gibbs who, according to her profile on London’s Artist Quarter website, is ‘a professional artist and art tutor living and working in London’.
Gibbs makes ‘sculpture and installations for public and private commissions and
exhibitions’.
World-renowned
author Roald Dahl was born in Cardiff in 1916 so it’s probably not surprising
that Cardiff likes to celebrate its famous son in diverse ways in various
locations around the city. Cardiff Bay already had Roald Dahl Plas (Square)
when, in August 2016, as part of the Roald Dahl centenary celebrations, a 10-metre-long
crocodile sculpture became the latest addition to the Dahl memorabilia.
The
Croc in the Dock sculpture, located
near the Sails on the Barrage, was based on the character in the book The Enormous Crocodile. It is supposed
to be a bench but it’s really too low for comfort so it’s become a fun sculpture
for kids to clamber on.
And that is probably why there is now an actual bench
right next to the crocodile. Appropriately enough, the bench is shaped like a book, the back of the bench is painted with the book's front cover illustration, and it
too is named The Enormous Crocodile.
If you choose to walk from Cardiff Bay back
in to the city along the Taff Trail, then you might rest your sore feet awhile
(but not during lockdown) with a seat on one of four similar wrought-iron
benches positioned alongside the River Taff. I haven’t been able to uncover any
information about their creator but I quite like the paddle steamer and lighthouse that have been
incorporated into the design.
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