I've called this blog 'Blue Beacon' but I've also seen this artwork called 'Lighthouse' and 'Blue Light' – I'm not sure which is correct.
According to his website, this piece was designed by British sculptor Mark Renn (1952–2019), with assistance in the design development and fabrication management from Mick Thacker.
The 60-foot-tall stainless steel construction is the work of 'A1 Stainless, South Wales Monuments, Richard Williams', and there's also an LED lighting system that produces a pulsing blue light at night.
The granite base of the structure is inscribed with a poem, 'The Ballast Bank', from the publication Zen Cymru, by Peter Finch.
You can read the poem in full on Finch's website, which offers the following explanation for the piece and its relevance to the location:
The Ballast Bank
is a poem by Peter Finch which has been incorporated into Renn and Thackers'
Blue Light public artwork at the entrance to the South Wales Police
Headquarters on James Street, Cardiff. This station is built very near where in
the early days of Cardiff as a trading port stood a quarter mile bank of
off-loaded ballast. This had been dumped by arriving ships making space for
their outgoing cargoes of iron and coal. The Bank is clearly visible on John
Wood's late 1830s map of the town.
The artwork puts some of that ballast bank back. The poem delineates the races,
language groupings, trades and ideas which flowed in and out of the burgeoning
industrial town as it exponentially developed. In its original form the poem
circled Renn and Thacker's silver tower to run across the station entrance
steps, in through the doors, up across reception finishing on the reception
desk's surface.
According to the newspaper Wales Online, there seems to have been some controversy and criticism about the erection of this artwork, not surprising when you consider that upwards of £70,000 of taxpayers' money was used to pay for it in 2013.
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