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Ornamental Fountains
Archibald Fountain | Anzac Memorial Pool of Reflection | Passage

The Archibald Fountain

Sydney’s favourite fountain is the Archibald in Hyde Park North. The name Archibald is associated not only with this distinctive Art Deco showpiece but with the popular annual Archibald Prize for portrait painting conducted through the Art Gallery of NSW. Both are the legacy of a private citizen, J F Archibald, both are somewhat bizarre and both are quintessentially ‘Sydney’.

Images

Archibald the fountain
The Archibald fountain was erected in Hyde Park North in 1932, a gift to the City of Sydney bequeathed in the will of J F Archibald. It is intended to commemorate the association between Australia and France in world War one, and is the work of French sculptor Francois Sicard. It depicts a bronze Apollo surrounded by other mythical figures. Horses’ heads, dolphins and tortoises exuberantly spray jets of water. (Tony Smith / City of Sydney)

Picture: Archibald the fountain
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Size: 106kb

Archibald the man
As the fountain is flamboyant, so was the man. In the 1880s AF Archibald founded the Bulletin newspaper, famous for encouraging an Australian idiom in Australian writing. But in his own life Archibald was fascinated by all things Parisian. He changed his name from John Feltham to Jules Francois and wore a little French style beard when no one else was wearing them. In donating the Archibald Fountain to the City he imagined its civic design and ornamentation developing to rival the city of his dreaming. (Norman Lindsay, Bohemians of the Bulletin, Angus & Robertson, Sydney, 1965)


Picture: Archibald the man

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Size: 83kb

Site for a fountain
This 1929 photo shows the place where the Archibald fountain would go. The raw design and the slight foliage evident in this photo is a result of the recent digging up of Hyde Park to build the underground railway. The fountain stands above the St James station. Note the bandstand with raked seating in the centre foreground of the photo (City of Sydney Archives, CRS 80/1468)

Picture: Site for a fountain
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Size: 83kb

Watching the grass grow
1933. Men in hats, the fountain and a Sydney landmark, the T & G Building on the corner of Park Street and Elizabeth Street
(City of Sydney Archives, CRS 56/565)

Picture: Watching the grass grow
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Size: 72kb

Postcard from Sydney
The fountain was everyone’s favourite then and it still is. Today it’s a chosen spot for wedding photos, political rallies and just for meeting. (City of Sydney Archives, SRC Photographic Files)

Picture: Postcard from Sydney
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Size: 72kb

The fountain by night
Getting the right ‘look’ for the fountain after dark has been the subject of much discussion over the years. This night image was taken in 1934, is attached to an official file that discusses the difficulties of presenting the complex variety of figures and water in the best light (City of Sydney Archives, CRS 34/ 5438/34)

Picture: The fountain by night
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Size: 103kb

Visitors from France
In 1936 the sculptor’s son, Pierre Sicard, who had made the architectural drawings for the fountain, paid a visit to Sydney and pronounced it ‘one of the most beautiful groups of modern sculpture’. He was less enamoured of the methods used by the City Council to light it with a festoon of neon lights. (‘Designer of Memorial Visits Park – Sculptor’s Son Sees Statuary’, Daily Telegraph, 18 December 1936.)

Picture: Visitors from France.
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Size: 85kb

The Archibald and the artist
This iconic fountain provides endless opportunity for photographic creativity. This image was taken in the 1960s for the City Council by Max Dupain, one of Sydney’s leading photographers. (City of Sydney Archives, SRC Photographic Files)

Picture: The Archibald and the artist
Click to Enlarge image
Size: 130kb

 
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