Belgian motorway chosen as site for Europe’s tallest artwork | World news


A Belgian motorway has been confirmed as the site of Europe’s tallest public artwork, which at 60 metres will be twice as high as the statue of Jesus in Rio de Janeiro and taller than the Statue of Liberty.

Arc Majeur, an imposing 250-tonne steel arc, will stand over the busy E411 between Namur and Luxembourg, a spot chosen partly on the basis that a driver’s view will be unencumbered by any lampposts.

The sculpture is not expected to be formally inaugurated until October but the installation of its main sections will take place from the late evening of 10 August to 6am the following morning, it has been announced.

The €2.5m arc, designed by the French artist Bernar Venet, has had a troubled history including two failed attempts to install it in France.





The Corcovado in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil



The Arc Majeur will be twice as high as the statue of Jesus in Rio de Janeiro. Photograph: five

It was initially due to be erected in 1984 near the city of Auxerre along the A6 leading to Paris, only to fall foul of a campaign from a local politician despite the backing of the then French culture minister Jack Lang

Subsequent plans for the artwork to hover over a road in Burgundy came to nothing after Venet rejected a proposal from officials from the French highway company to paint it red.

The sculpture will be formed of two arcs, of 28 metres and 60 metres in height, emerging from the earth on either side of the highway near the village of Lavaux-Sainte-Anne on the outskirts of the Belgian city of Rochefort. About 1,000 tonnes of concrete will be used to keep it in place.

A spokesman for Venet said: “There are higher monuments in the world, but no bigger sculpture made by an artist. “The Statue of Liberty without its pedestal is smaller and the Corcovado [the statue of Jesus Christ in Rio de Janeiro] is half the size.”

The UK’s tallest free standing artwork is the Aspire tower at the University of Nottingham’s Jubilee campus, which at 52 metres on top of a eight-metre concrete foundation is three times the size of Antony Gormley’s 20-metre-tall Angel of the North in Gateshead.

On the continent of Europe, the Arc Majeur will still be dwarfed by the Motherland monument in Ukraine, at 102 metres high, or the Sanctuary of Christ the King in Almada, Portugal, which is 110 metres tall.





Soldiers march by the 102-metre-high Motherland monument in Ukraine.



Soldiers march by the 102-metre-high Motherland monument in Ukraine. The Arc Majeur will be 60 metres high. Photograph: Mykola Lazarenko/TASS

The construction of the arc is largely being funded by the John Cockerill Foundation, a philanthropic arm of the mechanical engineering company based in Seraing, Belgium.

In 2016, Venet built a 20-metre arc at a roundabout in the German city of Bonn in 2016, entitled Arc ’89, to commemorate the fall of the Berlin Wall and Germany’s reunification. A temporary 22-metre-high arc by Venet was also installed near the palace of Versailles in 2011.

The tallest monument in the world, at 182 metres high, is believed to be a statue of India’s first deputy prime minister, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel in Gujrat.


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