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Michael Rakowitz: A Winged Bull for Trafalgar Square

Anthea Gerrie meets the man whose statue - covered in date syrup cans - is on Trafalgar Square's fourth plinth

May 24, 2018 12:04
GettyImages-939084202
2 min read

It’s fair to say that the fourth plinth at Trafalgar Square has hosted some of the most startling pieces of public art in the UK. And artist Michael Rakowitz, reponsible for the latest incumbant, has carried on with that tradition inspired by his grandmother’s Iraqi-Jewish recipes. His art work, a recreation of Iraq’s lost, lamented Winged Bull of Nineveh entitled The Invisible Enemy Should Not Exist, is clad in more than 10,000 empty date syrup cans.

“The fate of the country’s date industry symbolises how much Iraq has lost since it was ravaged by war,” he explains. “Now there are only 3 million trees left instead of 30 million in the 1970s.”

The trees represent prosperity and optimism in a country where newborns are given a taste of date to encourage a sweet life, and Rakowitz feels his Lamassu, as the winged bull is known, gives something back to a London which was suffering harsh economic losses of its own at the time of Trafalgar Square’s construction.

“The fourth Plinth was left empty in 1841 because money ran out to erect a statue on it,” he explains. When he entered the competition to fill it in 2016, he was already building the Lamassu for a site in Chicago.