Pump Room Door

Pump Room Door

  • Artist: Bettina Furnée (b.1963)
  • Date: 1993
  • Medium: Bronze
  • Lent by Birmingham City Council
  • Location: Green Heart. To find this sculpture, you can either use its what three words location or use the campus digital map.

This carved bronze door, sculpted by Bettina Furnée, was originally created to be displayed on the pump room for the sculptural fountain found in Victoria Square in Birmingham city centre. However, it was never installed. As part of the expansion of the new campus parkland, the Green Heart, the architects created a home for the door on the pump room to the newly installed water feature, the rill. The door is carved with an excerpt from T.S. Eliot's poem Little Gidding from the Four Quartets series, which examines the theme of past, present, and future, and humanity's place within them. 

Detail of carved bronze Pump Room Door by Betina Furnee featuring inscription of poetry by T.S Eliot
Carved bronze Pump Room Door by Betina Furnee featuring inscription of poetry by T.S Eliot in context of wild flower grass ridge with Muirhead Tower behind and water feature in foreground
Detail of carved bronze Pump Room Door by Betina Furnee featuring inscription of poetry by T.S Eliot
Carved bronze Pump Room Door by Betina Furnee featuring inscription of poetry by T.S Eliot

 

Visual Description

This is a large bronze door set back from a small path which follows the side of a tiered moving water feature called a rill. The path is along the right side of the rill and then turns a right-angled corner to the right and leads down a gentle slope to two doors. This slope is cut into the side of a tall grass verge with long grass and wild flowers all around it. There is a metal railing which rises up around the path to separate the paved area from the plants on the grass verge. There is a walkway above behind the railings. The sculpture is the door on the right-hand side as you stand facing it. The door is dark brown-bronze in colour. The surface is smooth apart from words cut into the surface. It is intricately carved with words from T.S. Eliot’s poem Little Gidding which reads:

We shall not cease from exploration

And the end of all our exploring

Will be to arrive where we started

And know the place for the first time.

Through the unknown, unremembered gate

When the last of earth left to discover

Is that which was the beginning;

At the source of the longest river

The voice of the hidden waterfall