I was late and missed my Photography Meetup Group so went straight to Hyde Park, one of the stops on their route, and did my own photography until they arrived. Then onto a nice pub for lunch.
Interesting facts about the Archibald Fountain in Hyde Park
- The central figure is Apollo, the Greek god of light and music, with water jets radiating around him like sunbeams.
- Commissioned by Jules François Archibald to celebrate the Australia–France alliance in World War I, and sculpted in Paris by renowned French artist François‑Léon Sicard.
- Each statue—Apollo, Artemis, Theseus, Pan—symbolizes themes like beauty, strength, heroism, and the natural world.
- The water jets were designed to mimic the rays of the rising sun, reinforcing Apollo’s symbolic role.
- A rare Australian example of Art Deco public sculpture, blending classical mythology with 20th-century aesthetics.
- The fountain was cast in bronze in Paris and shipped to Sydney in 16 separate crates.
- Opened in March 1932, just two weeks before the Sydney Harbour Bridge, marking a grand civic moment for the city.
- The turtles and dolphins at the base spout water add whimsical touches to its grandeur.
- Early lighting and water effects were cutting-edge for the time, later restored to preserve their brilliance.
- Positioned along the central axis of Hyde Park, linking St Mary’s Cathedral and the ANZAC Memorial in a symbolic line of beauty, memory, and light.
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