A new sculpture depicting the devastating human cost of war has gone on display at St Paul's Cathedral.
The artwork, 'Sorry, Sorry Sarajevo', is a life-sized bronze sculpture of a man holding another man languishing in his arms.
It was created by Nicola Hicks in 1993 at the height of the Bosnian
War and is being displayed in the cathedral as a reminder of the brutal
warfare still blighting parts of the world.
The sculpture has been deliberately placed directly opposite Henry
Moore's 1983 sculpture, Mother and Child: Hood, to stimulate reflection
on the contrast between birth and relationships, and the horrors and
devastation of war.
Sorry, Sorry Sarajevo will remain on display until the end of 2013
and its display comes as the nation and the wider world prepares to mark
the centenary of the First World War next year.
The Reverend Canon Mark Oakley, Chancellor of St Paul's said: "The
First World War claimed the lives of 16 million people and was described
as 'the war to end all war'. However, human conflict did not stop and
within Europe as recently as the 1990s, the Bosnian War saw around
100,000 people killed, up to 50,000 women raped, and over two million
people displaced.
"Nicola Hicks' sculpture is a powerful and affecting study of the
true grief of war. It is a military, but also piercingly human, pieta.
The universality of the work reminds us that such militarised violence
and death are still part of our world, and that history will always
record the peacemakers and reconcilers, working to end the carnage, as
the blessed ones."
Its display at the cathedral has been welcomed by former Liberal
Democrat leader Lord Ashdown, a vocal advocate of British action in the
Balkans at that time and later High Representative for Bosnia and
Herzegovina.
He said: "Sarajevo is one of the greatest cities in the world. What
it suffered over twenty years ago is a scar that painfully bears many
lessons for not only Bosnia's future but the world's. I am really very
pleased that Nicola Hicks' sculpture is in St Paul's Cathedral to help
those lessons be learned."