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Uri Geller spoon gorilla statue unveiled

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  • Uri Geller spoon gorilla statue unveiled

    Uri Geller spoon gorilla statue unveiled

    17 May 2014 Last updated at 15:14

    Sculptor Alfie Bradley said the pose had been inspired by the film King Kong


    A huge gorilla statue made entirely of spoons for entertainer Uri
    Geller has been unveiled by Prince Michael of Kent.

    The 12ft-high (3.6m) statue features about 40,000 spoons and has taken
    almost five months to build at the British Ironworks Centre in
    Oswestry.

    The spoons have been donated from across the world, as well as local
    schoolchildren.

    It is due to be transported to Mr Geller's home in Berkshire on 28 May.

    It was hoped the statue could be transported to Berkshire by
    helicopter, but after safety fears, the Ironworks Centre said the TV
    production company behind Shipping Wars had stepped forward to help.

    About 250 people toasted the unveiling of the gorilla statue in a
    sunny Oswestry.

    The British Ironworks Centre had long kept the project under wraps so
    there was a palpable sense of intrigue and anticipation about what a
    12ft high gorilla made entirely of spoons would actually look like.

    Uri Geller was clearly very pleased with the end result.

    He even signed bent spoons for a few of the children who came along to
    the unveiling.

    While Mr Geller laid down the challenge of creating a giant gorilla,
    Clive Knowles, managing director of the British Ironworks Centre, said
    it had been built for the nation and funded by the firm.

    He said he was hoping the statue would ultimately live somewhere more
    accessible to the public and that the firm was in contact with Great
    Ormond Street Hospital as a possible location.

    Many of the spoons have been sent from as far away as China, India,
    Kenya, Tahiti and Armenia.

    Mr Geller, a friend of Prince Michael, himself donated a spoon once
    owned by Winston Churchill.

    Speaking at the unveiling, in front of a large crowd, Mr Geller
    described the statue as "an amazing piece of art".

    He said: "This will not raise money for charity. It will do something
    better. It will amaze sick children."

    "I am not going to look at the gorilla too hard in case the spoons
    bend," he added

    "It has been an amazing day and Clive has made the impossible possible.

    Uri Geller said he had donated a spoon owned by Winston Churchill to
    be used in the statue
    The project has taken almost five months to complete

    Sculptor Alfie Bradley, who has hand-welded every spoon to the statue,
    said he had been amazed at how the appeal for cutlery had taken off on
    social media.

    "Initially we thought we only needed 5,000 spoons, but it's incredibly
    hard to calculate and it turned out we actually needed 40,000," he
    said.

    "It's been incredibly repetitive, but it's been a challenge. The
    spoons have been different sizes, different metals."

    'Immense appetite'

    He said the project had given him "sleepless nights" and now "just the
    word 'spoon' is enough to drive me crazy".

    Mr Bradley added that the gorilla's pose, with one fist breaking out
    of a cage, had been inspired by the film King Kong.

    Due to the number of spoons donated by schoolchildren across the
    world, he said he had come to think of the statue as "a protector" of
    children.

    Teams from the centre have given presentations at schools in
    Shropshire, Staffordshire and Cheshire in an appeal for spoons, but
    the firm soon looked overseas.

    Mr Knowles said he believed the past five months had cost the firm
    about £120,000 in staff time, but described it as an "exciting
    rollercoaster of a ride".

    He said the experience had given the firm "an immense appetite to do
    something even better" and appealed to the public to suggest a new
    project that would "celebrate Britain".

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-shropshire-27453471



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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