PUBLIC ART AND DESIGN.
Welcome to the new blog style website.
Established in 2002, Mooch is an award winning creative practice specialising in public realm art and design.
Explore the snapshot of Mooch projects here. Working with local authorities, commercial companies, galleries and private clients creates brilliantly diverse challenges. The Mooch practice is a broad one, responding to each creative project in it's own site specific context.
We have a snappy, short web address, new studio address and email. If you already know Mooch please update your records, if this is a first visit to the portfolio then welcome!
Enjoy the work and do contact the Mooch studio if you need any more information.
Studio address
2 Didsbury Close
London E6 2SX
UK
Telephone
+44 (0)870 248 6060
info@mooch.co
HAMMERS SCULPTURE
The Memorial Park was in the late 1800s the recreation ground for the Thames Ironworks Shipbuilding employees and the home of their works football club. In 1900 the team turned professional and became West Ham United, moving from this site to the Boleyn Ground in Green Street. Their emblem today still carries the image of the hammers used by the riveting gangs who built many great steel ships in one of Britain?s most important shipyards.
West Ham and Plaistow New Deal for Communities have been working on an extensive programme regenerating the Memorial Park, building the Grassroots community centre and upgrading the sports facilities. They wanted a landmark sculpture in the Park, not only as a point of reference but also as an opportunity to tell the history of this unique site. Mooch was commissioned in 2007 to research and create the installation. Fe26 were selected as fabricators for the steelwork being not only skilled tradespeople but trained as sculptors too. Two interns fron Middlesex University also worked on the project, bringing valuable professional experience to their portfolios. This memorial sculpture was finally completed in April 2008.
The eleven steel posts are laid out on the construction lines of the deck of HMS Albion, a cruiser built by the Thames Ironworks. At its launch in 1898 into Bow Creek, 38 people died as the tidal wave created by the launch caused chaos for the spectators close to the water. Many of the dead from this tragic event are buried in the cemetery next to the Park .
This work is a memorial to those victims but also marks a once great local industry and the craft of its workers, bringing back the clang of hammer on steel. The sound of the riveting gangs of the Thames Ironworks is gone forever but the heritage is still celebrated today in the fans chant: