1, 3, 4 Tracey Emin (born 1963, UK) Distance of Your Heart cast bronze, 60 pieces
A www.cityartsydney.com.au/artwork As my artwork I would like to make a counter site in Sydney for the young, the old, the backpackers, the tourists and the businessmen and women; somewhere else they can have their image taken to send back to the loved ones that they miss, that conveys the feelings of distance and homesickness. Tracey Emin, 2014
At the city’s northern end on Bridge and Grosvenor streets and through the refurbished Kent Street underpass, The Distance of Your Heart will be made up of many delicate handmade bronze bird sculptures, designed by acclaimed British artist Tracey Emin. The bird sculptures will perch on poles, above doorways and on awnings, enticing walkers along the thoroughfare.
Emin describes her work for Sydney as, ‘simple, straightforward and accessible to everybody’. The work which will be handmade by Emin will exist on a human scale and is the opposite of monumental and overpowering.In conceiving of a work for Sydney, Emin wanted to address Australia’s distance from the rest of the world. The question she asked herself was, ‘How does one express the feeling of loneliness without words?’ Her answer was, in the form of a bird – lonely, modest in scale in the way birds are, and thoughtful-looking.
Emin intends to have the words “With your thoughts in my mind, the distance of your heart” inscribed on a large bronze plinth in Macquarie Place. On top of the plinth she will have just a lone small bird. She sees this as a place to be photographed, to let the people you love know you are missing them. The artist observes that in today’s age of technology it is easy to send an image of where you are and what you are doing but it is very hard to send a message of how you are actually feeling.
Emin chose Macquarie Place because this is the site of the Obelisk of Distances designed by Francis Greenway from which the distance to various locations in New South Wales are measured, along the earliest roads developed in the colony. She saw this as “…the perfect site to measure the distance of my heart” Like a treasure hunt comprised of scattered elements to create an experience associated with the thrill of discovery, Emin’s work of art is assured to be one both adults and children will love.
WATCH https://www.cityartsydney.com.au/artwork/the-distance-of-your-heart/
READ https://osullivanconservation.com.au/the-distance-of-your-heart-tracey-emin-city-of-sydney/
B traceyeminstudio.com The City of Sydney has announced that it will commission a new public artwork by Tracey Emin.
Titled The Distance of Your Heart the proposed work will be installed by 2017 and is part of a project to install contemporary artworks across the city centre. “The artworks … will cement Sydney’s reputation as a capital of culture and creativity,” Sydney mayor Clover Moore said.
Comprised of 60 handmade sculptures of bronze birds that will be installed throughout the thoroughfare of Bridge Street, Grosvenor Street, and the Kent Street underpass. They will be perched on poles, above doorways and awnings, “enticing walkers along the thoroughfare”.
2 Francis Greenway (1777-1837) UK Obelisk of Distances (1818) sandstone Macquarie Place, Sydney
cityofsydney.com.au/artwork The Obelisk of Distances was erected in 1818 as an official starting point for measuring all the road distances in New South Wales, and it continues to perform this function today. Also known as the Macquarie Obelisk, it was erected by Governor Macquarie in what was then the geographic centre point of Sydney.
The monument was also the ‘symbolic peg’ indicating the furthest extent of the British Empire in the early 1800s. From a contemporary perspective it also reflects the process of superimposing European notions of time and space on the antipodean environment.
The Obelisk is apparently the earliest surviving monument in the colony, probably built by convict labour.
The monument it is a tall, tapering shaft of sandstone approximately six metres high on a rectangular base and pedestal. It is set below street level, approached on both sides by flights of steps, and surrounded by a ring of wrought iron railing.
The once prominent position of the Obelisk has been been eroded over time by the encroachment of roads. There was originally a surrounding wall which had design elements reflecting those on the Obelisk itself.
Francis Greenway (1777-1837) was an English architect transported to Australia for the crime of forgery, arriving in Sydney in 1814. In New South Wales he worked for the Governor, Lachlan Macquarie, as Australia’s first Government architect and is well known for buildings such as St James’ Church (1824) Sydney, Hyde Park Barracks (1817-19), Sydney and the 1816 portico to Old Government House, Parramatta.









