Memorial to Oscar Wilde Hambling's 1998 outdoor sculpture at
Charing Cross in
central London as a memorial to dramatist
Oscar Wilde, the first public monument to him outside his native
Ireland.
Derek Jarman first suggested a memorial in the 1980s and a committee chaired by Sir
Jeremy Isaacs including actors Dame
Judi Dench and Sir
Ian McKellen and the
poet Seamus Heaney, raised the money and commissioned Hambling. Her design features Wilde rising from a polished green granite coffin holding a cigarette. The coffin is intended to serve as a public bench rather than the more conventional stone plinth, hence Hambling's name for the memorial
A Conversation with Oscar Wilde, as visitors sit next to the writer's effigy. The work bears a quotation from ''
Lady Windermere's Fan: "We are all in the gutter but some of us are looking at the stars." but supporters said it was well-loved by the public. The chief art critic of The Independent'' wrote that ultimately the sculpture was not about Wilde or the viewing public, but a reflection of Hambling herself. The cigarette was repeatedly removed, "the most frequent act of vandalism/veneration to a public statue in London", and is now no longer replaced.
Memorial to Benjamin Britten beach.
Scallop (2003) celebrates the composer
Benjamin Britten and stands on the beach outside
Aldeburgh,
Suffolk, near Britten's homes and not far from Hambling's village. Opponents claimed the sculpture ruined a previously unspoilt stretch of beach. A local petition against it attracted several hundred signatures and it has been vandalised a number of times. For this work, Hambling received the 2006
Marsh Award for Excellence in Public Sculpture.
Memorial to Mary Wollstonecraft In May 2018, Hambling was chosen to create a statue commemorating
Mary Wollstonecraft, the “foremother of feminism”. The
Mary on the Green campaign was working to erect a permanent memorial to the philosopher and author of
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman since 2011. It chose Hambling for the sculpture unanimously. Hambling's design features a figure – described as an everywoman – emerging out of organic matter. It is inspired by Wollstonecraft's claim to be “the first of a new genus”. Wollstonecraft's famous quotation, “I do not wish women to have power over men but over themselves”, appears on the plinth. The work,
A Sculpture for Mary Wollstonecraft, was unveiled in
Newington Green, north London, on 10 November 2020, across from the
Newington Green Unitarian Church, where Wollstonecraft worshipped. Newington Green is known as the birthplace of feminism because of Wollstonecraft's roots there and is where Wollstonecraft moved her school for girls from
Islington in 1784. The sculpture sparked a
backlash. British feminist author
Caroline Criado Perez called it "catastrophically wrong" and said, "I honestly feel that actually this representation is insulting to [Wollstonecraft]. I can't see her feeling happy to be represented by this naked, perfectly formed wet dream of a woman." Hambling defended her decision, saying that "clothes would have restricted her. Statues in historic costume look like they belong to history because of their clothes. It's crucial that she is 'now'." The design of the statue was in deliberate opposition to "traditional male heroic statuary" of the Victorian era, the campaigners behind it describing the figure as someone who has "evolved organically from, is supported by, and does not forget, all her predecessors." ==Awards==