It is thirty years since Pamela Irving's sculpture, Larry Latrobe, was installed on the footpath in Swanston Street. In August 1992, John Stevens, writing in The Age newspaper described Larry as a slightly larger than life-size bronze dog, a grinning bitzer of a beast, which will be mounted where it will take pedestrians by surprise (1). Larry spent three years watching activity in the City Square (2) until August 1995 when he was stolen, in spite of being tethered to the ground by 30 cm long bolts.
A new Larry was recast by the foundary owner, Peter Kolliner, although Pamela Irving slightly altered the new Larry's colouring to give him an individual look. New Larry was unveiled on 16 September, 1996. In 2017, due to the Metro Tunnel works Larry was removed from his City Square home and the next year re-located outside the Melbourne Town Hall.
Larry was based on Pamela Irving's own dog, Lucy, and named for her uncle, Larry. Larry the dog still delights Melburnians, but where is the original Larry?
Footnotes and Sources
(1) Echoes of art along the Walk by John Stevens. The Age, 15 August 1992, p. 2
(2) Street sculpture finally turns the corner by John Schauble. The Age, 31 July 1994, p. 5
Other references
Larry Latrobe City of Melbourne City Collection https://citycollection.melbourne.vic.gov.au/larry-latrobe/
Pamela Irving website https://www.pamelairving.com.au/
Viginia Trioli column in The Age, 18 September, 1996, p.17
No comments:
Post a Comment