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词条 List of public art in Whitehall
释义

  1. Foreign and Commonwealth Office

  2. Old War Office Building

  3. References

  4. Bibliography

{{Use British English|date=December 2018}}{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2018}}{{GeoGroup}}

This is a list of public art in Whitehall, a district in the City of Westminster, London.

Whitehall is at the centre of the highest concentration of memorials in the City of Westminster, in which 47% of the total number of such works in the borough are located.[1] It includes the eponymous street of Whitehall and Horse Guards Parade, both important ceremonial spaces, and Horse Guards Road, which forms its western boundary with St James's Park. The area's monuments are mainly military in character, foremost among them being the Cenotaph, which is the focal point of the national Remembrance Sunday commemorations held each year.[2]

{{Public art header|show_architect=yes|show_material=no|show_dimensions=no|show_owner=no}}{{Public art row
| image = Banqueting House - bust of King Charles I.jpg
| subject = {{sort|Charles 1|Bust of Charles I}}
| location = Banqueting House
| date = {{circa|1800|sortable=yes}}
| artist = Anon.
| architect =
| type = Bust
| designation = {{sort|A|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1357353 Grade I]}}
| notes = One of three busts of Charles I found in a builder's yard in Fulham by Hedley Hope-Nicholson, Secretary of the Society of King Charles the Martyr, in 1945.{{sfn|Matthews|2012|p=20}} Installed here in 1950.{{sfn|Kershman|2013|p=39}} The plaque below is inscribed HIS MAJESTY KING CHARLES I/ PASSED THROUGH THIS HALL AND/ OUT OF A WINDOW NEARLY OVER/ THIS TABLET TO THE SCAFFOLD/ IN WHITEHALL WHERE HE WAS/ BEHEADED ON 20TH JANUARY 1649.
}}{{Public art row
| image = Cádiz Memorial, London.jpg
| subject = {{sort|Cádiz|Memorial to the Siege of Cádiz}}
| commonscat = Cádiz Memorial, London
| type = Memorial
| location = Horse Guards Road
| coordinates = {{coord|51.5042|-0.1273|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1814 (base)
| artist = {{sortname|Robert|Shipster|nolink=1}}
| architect = {{n/a}}
| notes = Unveiled 12 August 1816.[3] A French mortar from the siege, presented by Spain in thanks for Wellington's lifting of the siege. The mortar is mounted on a figure of the mythological monster Geryon and (at the back) his two-headed dog Orthrus.[4] The support was made by the Carriage Department of the Royal Arsenal to Shipster's design.[5]
| designation = {{sort|C|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1357126 Grade II]}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Red Lion, Parliament St, London (3rd floor details).jpg
| subject = {{sort|Dicken|Bust of Charles Dickens}}
| location = The Red Lion, Parliament Street
| date = 1900
| artist = Anon.
| architect =
| type = Architectural sculpture
| designation = {{sort|C|[https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1226437 Grade II]}}
| notes = {{sfn|Kershman|2013|p=46}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Duke of Cambridge statue Whitehall.jpg
| subject = {{sort|Cambridge|Statue of Prince George, Duke of Cambridge}}
| commonscat = Statue of Prince George, Duke of Cambridge, Whitehall, London
| type = Equestrian statue
| location = Whitehall, opposite the Old War Office Building
| coordinates = {{coord|51.505243|-0.126614|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1907
| artist = {{sortname|Adrian|Jones|dab=sculptor}}
| architect = {{sortname|John|Belcher|dab=architect}}
| notes = Unveiled 15 June 1907.[6] Jones was appointed a Member of the Royal Victorian Order for this work.[7] In 2012 the sword was broken off by a man who had stripped naked and mounted the statue in what was described as a "psychotic episode".[8]
| designation = {{sort|C|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1066108 Grade II]}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = King Charles Street closed entry - panoramio.jpg
| commonscat = King Charles Street Archway, London
| subject = Archway
| location = King Charles Street
| date = 1908
| artist = {{sortname|Paul Raphael|Montford}} and William Silver Frith
| architect = {{sortname|John|Brydon|nolink=1}} and Henry Tanner
| type =
| designation = {{sort|C|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1066103 Grade II*]}}
| notes = {{sfn|Bradley|Pevsner|2003|p=270}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Statue of the Duke of Devonshire in Whitehall (cropped).jpg
| subject = {{sort|Devonshire|Statue of Spencer Cavendish, 8th Duke of Devonshire}}
| commonscat = Statue of Spencer Cavendish, 8th Duke of Devonshire, Whitehall, London
| type = Statue
| location = Junction of Horse Guards Avenue and Whitehall
| coordinates = {{coord|51.5048|-0.1262|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1909–1910
| artist = {{sortname|Herbert|Hampton}}
| architect = {{sortname|Howard|Ince|nolink=1}}
| notes = Unveiled 14 February 1911. The statue of the Duke in his Garter robes stands on a pedestal of Darley Dale stone. Edward VII, as a close friend of the Duke, took a personal interest in the memorial, asking Hampton to bring the modello to Buckingham Palace for his inspection.[9]
| designation = {{sort|C|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1224271 Grade II]}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Statue of Robert Clive, King Charles Street, London.jpg
| subject = {{sort|Clive|Statue of Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive}}
| commonscat = Statue of Clive of India, London
| type = Statue
| location = King Charles Street, facing Horse Guards Road
| coordinates = {{coord|51.502311|-0.129242|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1912
| artist = {{sortname|John|Tweed}}
| architect = {{sortname|George Somers|Clarke|link=Somers Clarke}}
| notes = Erected 1912 in the gardens of Gwydyr House; moved to present site in 1916. The statue was the brainchild of Lord Curzon, who felt that Clive had been insufficiently honoured for his role in establishing the British Empire in India. A marble version was also created for erection in Calcutta.[10]
| designation = {{sort|C|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1221431 Grade II]}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = S F-E-CAMERON LONDON CENOTAPH.JPG
| subject = {{sort|Cenotaph|Cenotaph}}
| commonscat = Cenotaph, London
| type = Memorial
| location = Whitehall
| coordinates = {{coord|51.502711|-0.126107|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1920
| artist = {{sortname|Francis Derwent|Wood}}
| architect = {{sortname|Edwin|Lutyens}}
| notes = Unveiled 11 November (Armistice Day) 1920 by George V. Lutyens's temporary cenotaph in wood and plaster, designed and built in two weeks in July 1919, proved so popular that this permanent version of the same design was erected the following year. It commemorates the dead of both world wars.[11]
| designation = {{sort|A|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1357354 Grade I]}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Statue of Viscount Wolseley, London.jpg
| subject = {{sort|Wolseley|Statue of Garnet Wolseley, 1st Viscount Wolseley}}
| commonscat = Equestrian statue of the Viscount Wolseley
| type = Equestrian statue
| location = Horse Guards Road
| coordinates = {{coord|51.5050|-0.1275|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1920
| artist = {{sortname|William Goscombe|John|link=Goscombe John}}
| architect = {{sortname|Richard|Allison|dab=architect}}
| notes = Unveiled 25 June 1920 by the Duke of Connaught. Goscombe John was awarded this commission on the strength of his equestrian bronze of Lord Tredegar in Cathays Park, Cardiff. Trafalgar Square was initially considered as the location for this statue. It was stored for safekeeping at Berkhamsted Castle, Hertfordshire, between 1941 and 1949.[12]
| designation = {{sort|C|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1357125 Grade II]}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Statue of the Earl Roberts, London.jpg
| subject = {{sort|Roberts|Statue of Frederick Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts}}
| commonscat = Equestrian statue of the Earl Roberts in Horse Guards Parade, London
| type = Equestrian statue
| location = Horse Guards Road
| coordinates = {{coord|51.5045|-0.1274|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1924
| artist = {{sortname|Henry|Poole|dab=sculptor}} after Harry Bates
| architect = {{sortname|Richard|Allison|dab=architect}}
| notes = Unveiled 30 May 1924 by the Duke of Connaught.[13] A scaled-down replica of Bates's 30-foot high bronze of Lord Roberts, erected in Calcutta in 1896. Another, earlier replica by Poole is in Kelvingrove Park, Glasgow.[14]
| designation = {{sort|C|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1231292 Grade II]}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Earth and Water Statues on MoD Main Building in London MOD 45152995.jpg
| commonscat = Earth and Water by Charles Wheeler
| subject = Earth and Water
| location = Horse Guards Avenue, outside Ministry of Defence Main Building
| date = 1924
| artist = {{sortname|Charles|Wheeler|dab=sculptor}}
| architect = {{sortname|Vincent|Harris}}
| designation = {{sort|C|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1278223 Grade II]}}
| notes = [15]
}}{{Public art row
| image = London, UK (August 2014) - 147.JPG
| subject = {{sort|Royal Naval Division|Royal Naval Division War Memorial}}
| commonscat = Royal Naval Division Memorial
| type = Fountain with obelisk
| location = Horse Guards Road
| coordinates = {{coord|51.5054|-0.1290|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1925
| artist = {{sortname|Eric|Broadbent|nolink=1}} and F. J. Wilcoxson
| architect = {{sortname|Edwin|Lutyens}}
| notes = Unveiled 25 April 1925 by Winston Churchill.[16] Inscribed with words from the poem "1914. III. The Dead" by Rupert Brooke, who served in the RND.[17] Put into storage 1939, re-erected outside the Old Royal Naval College at Greenwich in 1959, and returned to its original site in 2003.[16]
| designation = {{sort|B|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1392454 Grade II*]}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Statue of the Earl Kitchener, London - closeup.jpg
| subject = {{sort|Kitchener|Statue of Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener}}
| commonscat = Statue of Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener, London
| type = Statue
| location = Horse Guards Road
| coordinates = {{coord|51.5039|-0.1280|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1926
| artist = {{sortname|John|Tweed}}
| architect = {{n/a}}
| notes = Unveiled 9 June 1926 by the Prince of Wales (the future Edward VIII).[18] Set against a stone screen abutting the garden wall of 10 Downing Street.[19] A larger national memorial to Kitchener, the tomb designed by William Reid Dick, had been erected in St Paul's Cathedral the previous year.[18]
| designation = {{sort|C|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1231295 Grade II]}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Guards Division War Memorial.jpg
| subject = Guards Division War Memorial
| commonscat = Guards Memorial, London
| type = Memorial with sculpture
| location = Horse Guards Parade
| coordinates = {{coord|51.504502|-0.12954|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1926
| artist = {{sortname|Gilbert|Ledward}}
| architect = {{sortname|H. Chalton|Bradshaw}}
| notes = Unveiled 16 October 1926. The bronze figures represent five individual soldiers from the Grenadier, Coldstream, Scots, Irish and Welsh Guards; they were cast from captured German guns. After it sustained bomb damage in the Blitz, Ledward asked that some of the "honourable scars of war" be left on the memorial.[20]
| designation = {{sort|A|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1231315 Grade I]}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Earl Haig Memorial, Whitehall, London.jpg
| subject = {{sort|Haig|Statue of Douglas Haig, 1st Earl Haig}}
| commonscat = Earl Haig Memorial, Whitehall, London
| type = Equestrian statue
| location = Whitehall
| coordinates = {{coord|51.5043|-0.1263|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1937
| artist = {{sortname|Alfred Frank|Hardiman}}
| architect = {{sortname|Stephen Rowland|Pierce}}
| notes = Unveiled 10 November 1937. The statue aroused great controversy, comparable even with the reaction to Epstein's early works. The depiction of the horse was deemed to be unnatural; Country Life noted that its legs were in the position for urinating.[21]
| designation = {{sort|B|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1066109 Grade II*]}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = London 074 Dept of Energy 3 Whitehall Place (9185416307).jpg
| subject = Agriculture and Sea and Fisheries
| location = 3 Whitehall Place
| date = {{circa|1952|sortable=yes}}
| artist = {{sortname|James|Woodford}}
| architect = {{sortname|C. E.|Mee|nolink=1}}
| type = Architectural sculpture
| designation = {{sort|B|[https://www.historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1066106 Grade II*]}}
| notes = [22]
}}{{Public art row
| image = Bernard Montgomery Statue, Whitehall, London.jpg
| subject = {{sort|Montgomery|Statue of Bernard Montgomery, 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein}}
| commonscat = Statue of Bernard Montgomery, Whitehall, London
| type = Statue
| location = Whitehall, outside the Ministry of Defence
| coordinates = {{coord|51.503364|-0.125809|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1980
| artist = {{sortname|Oscar|Nemon}}
| architect = {{n/a}}
| notes = Unveiled 6 June 1980 by the Queen Mother. The texture of the lower parts of the statue was achieved by mixing old plaster from the studio floor with fresh plaster at the modelling stage. Another cast stands in Brussels,[23] at a traffic intersection called Montgomery Square.
| designation = {{n/a}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Statue of Lord Mountbatten (29378962570) (cropped).jpg
| subject = {{sort|Mountbatten|Statue of Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma}}
| commonscat = Statue of Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma
| type = Statue
| location = Mountbatten Green, off Horse Guards Road
| coordinates = {{coord|51.503607|-0.12866|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1983
| artist = {{sortname|Franta|Belsky}}
| architect = {{sortname|Charles|Pollard|nolink=1}} (Lettering by David Kindersley)
| notes = Unveiled 2 November 1983 by Elizabeth II. The statue stands on a pedestal at the centre of a low stepped pyramid, a scheme much reduced in ambition from Belsky's competition-winning design which included fountains representing the four seas. The financial constraints and "a very restrictive brief" resulted in a finished work which dissatisfied the sculptor.[24]
| designation = {{n/a}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Field Marshal The Viscount Slim.jpg
| subject = {{sort|Slim|Statue of William Slim, 1st Viscount Slim}}
| commonscat = Statue of William Slim, 1st Viscount Slim, Whitehall, London
| type = Statue
| location = Whitehall, outside the Ministry of Defence
| coordinates = {{coord|51.503803|-0.125853|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1990
| artist = {{sortname|Ivor|Roberts-Jones}}
| architect = {{sortname|David|Kindersley}} (lettering)
| notes = Unveiled 28 April 1990 by Elizabeth II. Roberts-Jones had fought in the Burma Campaign of World War II, in which Slim was a commander.[25]
| designation = {{n/a}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Statue of Lord Alanbrooke (8281927746).jpg
| subject = {{sort|Alanbrooke|Statue of Alan Brooke, 1st Viscount Alanbrooke}}
| commonscat = Statue of Alan Brooke, 1st Viscount Alanbrooke, Whitehall, London
| type = Statue
| location = Whitehall, outside the Ministry of Defence
| coordinates = {{coord|51.503587|-0.125815|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1993
| artist = {{sortname|Ivor|Roberts-Jones}}
| architect = {{sortname|David|Kindersley}} (lettering)
| notes = Unveiled 25 May 1993 by Elizabeth II. For the installation of this, the last of the statues of Field Marshals on what was formerly called Raleigh Green, the area was re-configured by the landscape architects RMJM and the statue of Sir Walter Raleigh removed to Greenwich.[26]
| designation = {{n/a}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Gurkha Soldier Monument, London - April 2008.jpg
| subject = {{sort|Gurkhas|Memorial to the Brigade of Gurkhas}}
| commonscat =The Gurkha Soldier, London
| type = Statue
| location = Horse Guards Avenue
| coordinates = {{coord|51.505098|-0.125007|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 1997
| artist = {{sortname|Philip|Jackson|dab=sculptor}} after Richard Reginald Goulden
| architect = {{sortname|Cecil Denny|Highton|nolink=1}}
| notes = Unveiled 3 December 1997 by Elizabeth II. Modelled on a 1924 sculpture by Goulden in the Foreign Office. The Hong Kong Handover transferred the Gurkhas' headquarters to the United Kingdom, which until that point had no memorial to the brigade.[27]
| designation = {{n/a}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Royal Tank Regiment Memorial, Whitehall Place, London.jpg
| subject = Royal Tank Regiment Memorial
| commonscat = Royal Tank Regiment Memorial, Whitehall Place
| type = Sculptural group
| location = Whitehall Court
| coordinates = {{coord|51.506129|-0.124442|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 2000
| artist = {{sortname|Vivien|Mallock}} after George Henry Paulin
| architect = {{sortname|Christopher|Rainsford|nolink=1}} for HOK International
| notes = Unveiled 13 June 2000 by Elizabeth II. The group depicts the five-man crew of a World War II-era Comet tank; it is an enlarged version of Paulin's statuette of 1953 in the Tank Museum, Bovington, Dorset. Mallock's husband had been an officer in the RTR in the 1960s.[28]
| designation = {{n/a}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = UK-2014-London-Monument to the Women of World War II (1).jpg
| subject = Monument to the Women of World War II
| commonscat = Monument to the Women of World War II, Whitehall, London
| type = Plinth with reliefs
| location = Whitehall
| coordinates = {{coord|51.5035|-0.1262|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 2005
| artist = {{sortname|John W.|Mills}}
| architect = {{sortname|Giles|Quarme|nolink=1}}
| notes = Unveiled 9 July 2005 by Elizabeth II. Around the plinth are reliefs of servicewomen's clothing and protective costumes, appearing as if they have been hung up at the end of a working day.[29]
| designation = {{n/a}}
}}{{Public art row
| image = Bali bombing memorial in London, Horse Guard Road.JPG
| subject = {{sort|Bali|Memorial to the 2002 Bali bombings}}
| commonscat = Bali Memorial in London
| type = Memorial
| location = Horse Guards Road, rear of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office
| coordinates = {{coord|51.502410|-0.129572|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-WSM}}
| date = 2006
| artist = {{sortname|Martin|Cook|nolink=1}}
| architect = {{sortname|Gary|Breeze|nolink=1}}
| notes = Unveiled 12 October 2006, the fourth anniversary of the bombings, by the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall. The memorial consists of a granite globe carved with 202 doves{{em dash}}one for each individual killed in the bombings{{em dash}}and a wall inscribed with their names.[30]
| designation = {{n/a}}
}}{{Public art footer}}

Foreign and Commonwealth Office

{{Main|Foreign and Commonwealth Office}}{{Public art header|show_architect=yes|show_material=no|show_dimensions=no|show_owner=no}}{{Public art row
| image = America Whitehall.jpg
| subject = America
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (spandrel on first storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}}
| architect =
| notes = [31]
}}{{Public art row
| image = Australasia Whitehall.jpg
| subject = Australasia
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (spandrel on first storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}}
| architect =
| notes = [32]
}}{{Public art row
| image = Africa Whitehall.jpg
| subject = Africa
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (spandrel on first storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}}
| architect =
| notes = [33]
}}{{Public art row
| image = Asia Whitehall.jpg
| subject = Asia
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (spandrel on first storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}}
| architect =
| notes = [34]
}}{{Public art row
| image = Europe Whitehall.jpg
| subject = Europe
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (spandrel on first storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}}
| architect =
| notes = [35]
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = {{sort|Cook|Captain James Cook}}
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (roundel in lunette on second storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}} or John Birnie Philip
| architect =
| notes =
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = {{sort|Franklin|Sir John Franklin}}
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (roundel in lunette on second storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}} or John Birnie Philip
| architect =
| notes =
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = {{sort|Wilberforce|William Wilberforce}}
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (roundel in lunette on second storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}} or John Birnie Philip
| architect =
| notes =
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = {{sort|Livingstone|David Livingstone}}
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (roundel in lunette on second storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}} or John Birnie Philip
| architect =
| notes =
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = {{sort|Drake|Sir Francis Drake}}
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (roundel in lunette on second storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}} or John Birnie Philip
| architect =
| notes =
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = {{sort|Elizabeth|Elizabeth I}}
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (roundel in lunette on second storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}} or John Birnie Philip
| architect =
| notes =
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = {{sort|Alfred|Alfred the Great}}
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (roundel in lunette on second storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}} or John Birnie Philip
| architect =
| notes =
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = {{sort|Edward|Edward the Confessor}}, an Angel and Christianity
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (roundel in lunette and surrounding spandrels on second storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}} or John Birnie Philip
| architect =
| notes =
}}{{Public art row
| image = Æthelbert statue.JPG
| subject = {{sort|Æthelberht|Æthelberht of Wessex}}
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (roundel in lunette on second storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}} or John Birnie Philip
| architect =
| notes =
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = {{sort|Smith|Adam Smith}}
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (roundel in lunette on second storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}} or John Birnie Philip
| architect =
| notes =
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = Sinclair
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (roundel in lunette on second storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}} or John Birnie Philip
| architect =
| notes =
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = {{sort|Bacon|Sir Francis Bacon}}
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (roundel in lunette on second storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}} or John Birnie Philip
| architect =
| notes =
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = {{sort|Reynolds|Sir Joshua Reynolds}}
| type = Relief
| location = Whitehall façade (roundel in lunette on second storey)
| artist = {{sortname|Henry Hugh|Armstead}} or John Birnie Philip
| architect =
| notes =
}}{{Public art row
| image = The Foreign Office - Downing Street Entrance - geograph.org.uk - 1186804.jpg
| subject = {{sortname|Edward Grey, 1st Viscount Grey of|Fallodon}}
| type = Relief
| location = North façade
| date = 1937
| artist = {{sortname|William Reid|Dick}}
| architect = {{sortname|Edwin|Lutyens}}
| notes = [36]
}}{{Public art footer}}

Old War Office Building

{{Main|Old War Office Building}}{{Public art header|show_architect=yes|show_material=no|show_dimensions=no|show_owner=no}}{{Public art row
| image = Old War Office, Whitehall, London 02.jpg
| subject = Sorrow of Peace and Winged Messenger of Peace
| location = Whitehall façade
| date =
| artist = {{sortname|Alfred|Drury}}
| architect = {{sortname|William|Young|dab=architect}} and Clyde Young
| type =
| designation =
| notes = {{sfn|Bradley|Pevsner|2003|p=239}}
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = Horrors of War and Dignity of War
| location = Whitehall façade
| date =
| artist = {{sortname|Alfred|Drury}}
| architect = {{sortname|William|Young|dab=architect}} and Clyde Young
| type =
| designation =
| notes = {{sfn|Bradley|Pevsner|2003|p=239}}
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = Truth and Justice
| location = Whitehall Place façade
| date =
| artist = {{sortname|Alfred|Drury}}
| architect = {{sortname|William|Young|dab=architect}} and Clyde Young
| type =
| designation =
| notes = {{sfn|Bradley|Pevsner|2003|p=239}}
}}{{Public art row
| image =
| subject = Victory and Fame
| location = Horse Guards Avenue façade
| date =
| artist = {{sortname|Alfred|Drury}}
| architect = {{sortname|William|Young|dab=architect}} and Clyde Young
| type =
| designation =
| notes = {{sfn|Bradley|Pevsner|2003|p=239}}
}}{{Public art footer}}

References

1. ^{{Harvnb|Westminster City Council|p=10}}
2. ^{{citation |url=http://www.britishlegion.org.uk/remembrance/how-the-nation-remembers/memorials |title=Memorials |publisher=The Royal British Legion |accessdate=8 February 2014 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140131034727/http://www.britishlegion.org.uk/remembrance/how-the-nation-remembers/memorials |archivedate=31 January 2014 |df=dmy-all }}
3. ^{{Harvnb|Hughson|1817|pages=224–6}}
4. ^{{citation|url=http://www.alastorrarebooks.com/files/cat-24-running-pages.pdf|title=Catalogue Twenty Four|publisher=Alastor Rare Books|page=4|date=2013|location=Lymington|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150208114527/http://www.alastorrarebooks.com/files/cat-24-running-pages.pdf|archivedate=8 February 2015|df=dmy-all}}
5. ^{{Harvnb|Bradley|Pevsner|2003|p=256}}
6. ^{{Harvnb|Ward-Jackson|2011|p=413}}
7. ^{{citation|first=Sarah |last=Crellin|title=Jones, Adrian (1845–1938) |work=Oxford Dictionary of National Biography |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2004 |url=http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/34220 |accessdate=6 January 2013 |subscription=yes}}
8. ^{{citation|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/9703491/Naked-man-who-climbed-statue-of-Duke-of-Cambridge-had-psychotic-episode.html |title=Naked man who climbed statue of Duke of Cambridge had 'psychotic episode' |work=The Telegraph |date=26 November 2012 |accessdate=6 January 2013}}
9. ^{{Harvnb|Blackwood|1989|p=212}}
10. ^{{Harvnb|Ward-Jackson|2011|pp=108–11}}
11. ^{{citation |url=http://www.veterans-uk.info/remembrance/cenoptaph.html |title=The Cenotaph |publisher=Veterans UK |accessdate=23 January 2015 |archiveurl=http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20140805133045/http://www.veterans-uk.info/remembrance/cenoptaph.html |archivedate=5 August 2014}}
12. ^{{Harvnb|Ward-Jackson|2011|pp=67–8}}
13. ^{{Harvnb|Ward-Jackson|2011|pp=68–70}}
14. ^{{citation|url=http://193.132.104.136/index.php?title=Bates,_Harry_(1850-1899),_Sculptor |title=Bates, Harry (1850–1899), Sculptor |work=Your Archives |publisher=The National Archives |archiveurl=http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20111204143126/http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=Bates,_Harry_(1850-1899),_Sculptor |archivedate=4 December 2011}}
15. ^WHEELER, SIR CHARLES {{webarchive|url=https://archive.is/20111006063430/http://www.drawpaintsculpt.com/artist-biographies/sir-charles-wheeler/ |date=2011-10-06 }} Accessed 23 August 2010
16. ^{{NHLE|num=1392454|desc=Royal Naval Division War Memorial|fewer-links=x|accessdate=19 December 2015}}
17. ^{{citation |url=http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=Royal_Naval_Division_Memorial |title=Royal Naval Division Memorial |work=Your Archives |publisher=The National Archives |accessdate=12 September 2011}}
18. ^{{Harvnb|Ward-Jackson|2011|pp=72–4}}
19. ^{{NHLE|num=1231295|desc=Statue of Lord Kitchener|accessdate=21 November 2013|fewer-links=x}}
20. ^{{citation |url=http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=Ledward,_Gilbert_(1888-1960)_Sculptor |title=Ledward, Gilbert (1888–1960) Sculptor |work=Your Archives |publisher=The National Archives |accessdate=1 January 2010}}
21. ^{{citation |first=Nicholas |last=Watkins |year=2008 |url=http://www.henry-moore.org/docs/a_kick_in_the_teeth_1.pdf |title=A Kick in the Teeth. The equestrian monument to 'Field Marshal Earl Haig, Commander-in-Chief of the British Armies in France 1915–1918' by Alfred Hardiman |publisher=Henry Moore Institute |accessdate=14 October 2011 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120331220915/http://www.henry-moore.org/docs/a_kick_in_the_teeth_1.pdf |archivedate=31 March 2012 |df=dmy-all }}
22. ^{{citation|url=http://sculpture.gla.ac.uk/view/person.php?id=msib2_1208277486|title=James Arthur Woodford RA, OBE|work=Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Briatin & Ireland 1851–1951}}
23. ^{{Harvnb|Ward-Jackson|2011|pp=423–5}}
24. ^{{Harvnb|Ward-Jackson|2011|pp=77–9}}
25. ^{{Harvnb|Ward-Jackson|2011|pp=425–6}}
26. ^{{Harvnb|Ward-Jackson|2011|pp=426–8}}
27. ^{{Harvnb|Ward-Jackson|2011|pp=66–7}}
28. ^{{Harvnb|Ward-Jackson|2011|pp=430–2}}
29. ^{{Harvnb|Ward-Jackson|2011|p=428}}
30. ^{{Harvnb|Ward-Jackson|2011|pp=79–80}}
31. ^{{citation|url=http://www.victorianweb.org/sculpture/armstead/1.html|title=America by Henry Hugh Armstead (1828–1905)|first=Jacqueline|last=Banerjee|work=The Victorian Web|date=12 August 2011|accessdate=14 April 2013}}
32. ^{{citation|url=http://www.victorianweb.org/sculpture/armstead/2.html|title=Australasia by Henry Hugh Armstead|first=Jacqueline|last=Banerjee|work=The Victorian Web|date=6 June 2011|accessdate=14 April 2013}}
33. ^{{citation|url=http://www.victorianweb.org/sculpture/armstead/3.html|title=Africa by Henry Hugh Armstead|first=Jacqueline|last=Banerjee|work=The Victorian Web|date=6 June 2011|accessdate=14 April 2013}}
34. ^{{citation|url=http://www.victorianweb.org/sculpture/armstead/4.html|title=Asia by Henry Hugh Armstead|first=Jacqueline|last=Banerjee|work=The Victorian Web|date=December 1999|accessdate=14 April 2013}}
35. ^{{citation|url=http://www.victorianweb.org/sculpture/armstead/5.html|title=Asia by Henry Hugh Armstead|first=Jacqueline|last=Banerjee|work=The Victorian Web|date=6 June 2011|accessdate=14 April 2013}}
36. ^{{Harvnb|Bradley|Pevsner|2003|p=266}} and {{Harvnb|Smith|2015}}, passim

Bibliography

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|accessdate = 7 July 2018
}}{{Refend}}{{Public art in London}}{{Portal bar|Lists|London|Visual arts}}

2 : Lists of public art in the City of Westminster|Whitehall

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