This is a list of public art in the English town of Reading. This list applies only to works of art accessible in an outdoor public space. For example, this does not include artwork visible inside a museum.
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Material | Dimensions | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Abbey Gateway Heads |
Abbey Gateway 51°27′23.2″N 0°58′00.5″W / 51.456444°N 0.966806°W |
1900 | Andrew Ohlson | Sculpture | Stone | A series of heads, attached to the medieval former inner gateway of
Reading Abbey.
[1]
[2]![]() | ||
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l'Armour, or the Armoured Heart |
The Oracle Riverside 51°27′12.38″N 0°58′12.83″W / 51.4534389°N 0.9702306°W |
2023 | Stuart Melrose | Sculpture | Metal | Sculpture constructed by the Reading Amnesty Art Project and incorporating reclaimed weapons from knife amnesty bins. ![]() | ||
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Balls Head / Interpretation of Ruins |
Reading Abbey 51°27′21″N 0°57′55″W / 51.455920°N 0.965399°W |
2000 | Jens-Flemming Sørensen | Sculpture | Bronze | A sculpture based on an interpretation of the adjacent ruins of the abbey. It has no formal name, but is sometimes referred to as either the Balls Head or the Interpretation of Ruins.
[3]![]() | ||
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Black History Mural | Mill Lane 51°27′10″N 0°58′08″W / 51.4528°N 0.969°W |
1988 | Alan Howard with members of Reading Central Club | Mural | Mural illustrating the roles black people have played throughout history.
[4]![]() | |||
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Cartwheeling Boys | Civic Centre 51°27′12″N 0°58′34″W / 51.45339°N 0.976029°W |
Brian Slack | Sculpture | Erected to mark the thirtieth anniversary of the link between Reading and
Düsseldorf established by
Phoebe Cusden in 1947.
[5] It was toppled by
Storm Eunice on 18 February 2022.
[6]![]() | ||||
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Caversham Village Sign |
Caversham 51°28′03″N 0°58′29″W / 51.467565°N 0.974626°W |
Stuart King | Village sign | Erected in 2003 to commemorate the
Golden Jubilee of HM Queen Elizabeth II and repaired and conserved by the original artist in 2019.
[7]![]() | ||||
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Caversham War Memorial |
Christchurch Meadows,
Caversham 51°27′55″N 0°58′32″W / 51.465362°N 0.97543°W |
1928 | Memorial column | Stone | Commemorates the dead of Caversham in the
First World War,
Second World War and
war in Afghanistan.
[8]
[9]![]() | |||
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Central Piazza Water Feature | Kennet Island 51°25′51″N 0°58′32″W / 51.430908°N 0.975615°W |
Fountain |
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Compleat Angler | Chocolate Island in
River Kennet 51°27′22″N 0°57′41″W / 51.455999°N 0.961520°W |
1992 | Kevin Atherton | Statue | Statue of an angler placed on Chocolate Island in the River Kennet, where that river once flowed through the
Huntley & Palmers factory. The statue was erected when the factory closed to commemorate the people of Reading who worked there.
[5]![]() | |||
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Cows | Regent Court 51°27′31″N 0°58′41″W / 51.458554°N 0.977980°W |
Mural | Mural of cows situated close to the Reading Cattle Market.![]() | |||||
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Edward VII | Station Square 51°27′28″N 0°58′21″W / 51.45773°N 0.9724°W |
1902 | George Edward Wade | Statue | Bronze | Grade II | Celebrates the coronation of
King Edward VII.
[10]![]() | |
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Escaping convict on Reading Gaol |
Reading Gaol 51°27′24″N 0°57′49″W / 51.456710°N 0.963530°W |
2021 | Banksy | Graffiti | Paint on brickwork | The mural of an escaping prisoner - possibly resembling famous inmate
Oscar Wilde - appeared on the walls of the disused Reading jail on Monday 01 March 2021. Reading prison famously housed Irish writer Wilde between 1895 and 1897 and was immortalised by his poem Ballad of Reading Gaol, which reflected on the brutality of the Victorian penal system.![]() | ||
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Frederick Potts Memorial | The Forbury 51°27′24″N 0°58′02″W / 51.456552°N 0.967194°W |
2015 | Tom Murphy |
Memorial Sculpture |
Bronze | Commemorates and depicts the rescue of Trooper Arthur Andrews by
Trooper Frederick Potts, both men having been wounded during the
Gallipoli campaign of
World War I, and for which Potts was awarded the
Victoria Cross. Adjacent is a
roll of honour to the 426 men of the Berkshire Yeomanry, the regiment to which both Potts and Andrews belonged, who lost their lives in the wars of the 20th Century. Both are mounted on plinths faced in
Portland stone.
[11]![]() | ||
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Gateway | Reading International Business Park 51°24′58″N 0°58′26″W / 51.416°N 0.974°W |
2000 | Clare Bigger | Sculpture | At the entrance to the Reading International Business Park.
[12]![]() | |||
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George Palmer |
Palmer Park 51°27′07″N 0°56′19″W / 51.451946°N 0.938628°W |
1891 | George Blackall Simonds | Statue | Bronze | Grade II | Commemorates
George Palmer, the founder of the biscuit manufacturers
Huntley & Palmers. Originally sited in
Broad Street, but relocated to Palmer Park in 1930.
[13]![]() | |
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Girl and Swan | Kings Road 51°27′17″N 0°57′53″W / 51.4548°N 0.9647°W |
1984 | Lorne McKean | Statue | Bronze | Depicts a young girl reaching up to touch a swan flying overhead.
[14]![]() | ||
Hexham Road Tree | Community Centre, Hexham Road 51°26′15″N 0°57′33″W / 51.437429°N 0.959145°W |
1998 | Bhajan Hunjan | Three dimensional mural on the wall of Hexham Road Community Centre. [5] | |||||
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Hugh de Boves and Hugh of Faringdon Memorials |
Reading Abbey 51°27′23″N 0°57′54″W / 51.456363°N 0.964878°W |
1911 | William Silver Frith | Relief | Limestone | Two stone reliefs, showing the first and the last abbot of Reading Abbey and flanking the east end of the ruined chapter house of the abbey.
[15]
[16]![]() | ||
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Inner Light | Kings Road 51°27′21″N 0°57′42″W / 51.455736°N 0.961695°W |
1992 | Liliane Lijn | Sculpture | Overlooks the
River Kennet behind the offices of
Prudential in Kings Road, Reading
[5]![]() | |||
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International Brigade Memorial |
Forbury Gardens 51°27′25″N 0°57′57″W / 51.456816°N 0.965834°W |
1990 | Eric Stanford |
Memorial Statue |
Memorial to the Reading members of the
International Brigade in the
Spanish Civil War. Originally sited at Reading Civic Centre but relocated to Forbury Gardens in 2015.
[17]![]() | |||
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Jubilee Fountain |
St Mary's Butts 51°27′15″N 0°58′27″W / 51.454233°N 0.974229°W |
1887 | George W Webb | Fountain | Stone | Commemorates
Queen Victoria's
golden jubilee. In
Red Mansfield and
Portland stone and
Peterhead granite. The fountain bowl has been converted into a flower display.
[18]![]() | ||
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Maiwand Lion |
Forbury Gardens 51°27′25″N 0°58′03″W / 51.456952°N 0.967481°W |
1884 | George Blackall Simonds |
Memorial Sculpture |
Cast iron | Grade II | Commemorates the
Battle of Maiwand in 1880.![]() | |
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Meteor Garden |
Harris Garden,
University of Reading 51°26′08″N 0°56′27″W / 51.435653°N 0.940898°W |
2015 | Sculpture | Sponsored by the Friends of the Harris Garden and designed by their volunteers.![]() | ||||
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Oscar Wilde Memorial | Chestnut Walk 51°27′21″N 0°57′49″W / 51.455805°N 0.963573°W |
2000 |
Bruce Williams and Paul Muldoon |
Memorial | Memorial to
Oscar Wilde, who was imprisoned in the adjacent
Reading Gaol and wrote the
Ballad of Reading Gaol. Comprises metal gates, fencing and seats all with cultural references to Wilde.
[19]![]() | |||
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Queen Victoria | Town Hall Square 51°27′24″N 0°58′13″W / 51.456551°N 0.970177°W |
George Blackall Simonds | Statue | Marble | Grade II | Celebrates the Jubilee of
Queen Victoria.
[20]![]() | ||
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Reading Cenotaph |
Forbury Gardens 51°27′24″N 0°58′05″W / 51.456547°N 0.968046°W |
1932 | Edward Leslie Gunston | Memorial column | Stone | Commemorates the dead of Reading and Berkshire in the
First World War.
[21]![]() | ||
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Robed Figure |
Reading Abbey 51°27′22″N 0°57′56″W / 51.456197°N 0.965418°W |
1988 | Elisabeth Frink | Statue | A near-duplicate of the central of the central figure from Elisabeth Frink's work Martyrs of Dorchester.
[22]![]() | |||
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Rufus Isaacs | Eldon Square 51°27′28″N 0°58′21″W / 51.45773°N 0.9724°W |
Charles Sargeant Jagger | Statue | Commemorates
Rufus Isaacs, who held the roles of
Attorney General,
Lord Chief Justice and
Viceroy of India, and was the first
Marquess of Reading. The statue was originally sited in
New Delhi but was offered as a gift to Reading after
India achieved its independence in 1947. It was relocated to its current location in 1971.
[5]
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Rustic Fountain |
Forbury Gardens 51°25′51″N 0°58′32″W / 51.430908°N 0.975615°W |
1856 | Fountain | A rustic fountain in a pond, by an unknown artist but believed to date from 1856 when the town's Forbury was first laid out as 'pleasure gardens'.
[22]![]() | ||||
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Simeon Monument | Market Place 51°27′20″N 0°58′10″W / 51.45561°N 0.9695°W |
1804 | John Soane | Portland stone | 25 feet (7.6 m) in height | Also known as the Soane Obelisk, the Soane Monument and the Simeon Obelisk. Commissioned in his lifetime by
Edward Simeon and with a triangular cross-section, it is technically neither a
monument nor an
obelisk, despite often being called both.![]() | ||
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Space Between | Forbury Road 51°27′27″N 0°57′58″W / 51.457584°N 0.966101°W |
Simon Hitchens | Sculpture | Granite | 5 metres (16 ft) in height | Twin helical blocks of granite, carved from Chinese granite, situated outside new office blocks on Forbury Road opposite
Forbury Gardens.
[24]![]() | ||
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Sumer Is Icumen In |
Reading Abbey 51°27′23″N 0°57′54″W / 51.456404°N 0.965089°W |
Relief | Limestone | Stone relief commemorating the composition of the early English song
Sumer Is Icumen In at Reading Abbey in the 13th century.
[25]
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University of Reading War Memorial |
London Road Campus of the University of Reading 51°27′01.6″N 00°57′40.3″W / 51.450444°N 0.961194°W |
1924 | Herbert Maryon | Clock tower | Brick | 60 feet (18 m) in height |
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131 greetings Welcome to Reading | Brunel Arcade,
Reading railway station 51°27′29.8″N 0°58′17.4″W / 51.458278°N 0.971500°W |
2023 | Haya Sheffer | Mural | The mural presents the greeting Welcome to Reading in 131 different languages.
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