Public Art in Ipswich
Tam
- By Honoria Surie
- 1995
- Bronze
- Black Horse Lane/Elm Street
Honoria Surie, the artist who created Tam, was born in Hertfordshire in 1944. She trained at Watford School of Art and is now a painter and potter.
The bronze of Tam, the artist's daughter, is Surie's first work in the field of sculpture and is sited on a short plinth on the grass triangle between Black Horse Lane and St Mary Elms Church.
The statue is made of bronze and has a calm and serene feel to it, in keeping with its location.
Other Public Art nearby: The Town Centre and Christchurch Park.
Last Updated: Friday 9th April 2010
Further pages in Public Art in Ipswich
- Exploring Ipswich's Public Art
- Navigator
- Spiral Vortex
- Rhumba
- Orchard life
- Sor of Hing
- Untitled - 3 Enamel Panels
- Lightships
- Against the tide
- Ripple
- Cineworld Bollards
- Clasped Hands and bench
- Propellor
- Prince Alexander Obolensky
- Cranes Tableau
- St Mary Elms Triptych
- Tutu
- Sir Bobby Robson
- Sir Alf Ramsey
- Handstanding
- Making Our Mark
- African Garden
- Formation
- Green Wind
- Suffolk Trinity
- Ipswich Madonna
- Barley Sculpture
- Trident and Nets
- Man and Ball
- Rubber artwork - Untitled
- Panel celebrating Peter Bruff
- Spirit of Youth
- The Trawlerman
- Sprites Lane - Four wall relief works
- Triple Mycomorph (Fungus Form)
- Ship
- Major
- A Quick Step to Recovery
- Decorative Church Gate
- Foxgrove Band gates
- The Longship Screens
- Giles' Family
- Beyond the Horizon
- Flightpost
- Tam You are here
- Innocence
- The Life of the River Gipping
- Swans
- Mosaic
- Three Angels
- Crows Nest
- Cardinal Thomas Wolsey
Stay up to date: