Saturday, January 24, 2026
ADVT 
International

Artwork Marking Women's Vote Battle Lights Up UK Parliament

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jun, 2016 11:45 AM
    LONDON — It's more often likened to a circus than a gallery, but Britain's Parliament is full of art.
     
    For the most part that means portraits of sombre-looking men, but the latest addition is different — a huge, vividly colored light sculpture commemorating the decades-long battle that won British women the vote.
     
    The first abstract artwork created for permanent display in the 19th-century parliamentary complex, "New Dawn " was unveiled Tuesday on the 150th anniversary of the first mass petition to Parliament calling for women to have the right to vote.
     
    It would be more than 60 years before the goal was achieved, and artist Mary Branson wants her work to pay tribute to the thousands of people who fought for women's voting rights over the decades.
     
    A few are well-known, especially the militant suffragettes who fought with protests, hunger strikes and even bombings. But Branson, who spent six months exploring Parliament's archives, said she was moved by "all the women that I'd never heard about, ordinary people like ourselves."
     
    "There were so many women coming in relentlessly day after day," she said. "Petitioning, protesting."
     
    Branson calculated that almost 16,500 petitions featuring more than 3 million signatures calling for female suffrage were submitted to Parliament between 1866 and 1918, when women over 30 were granted the vote (full voting equality with men took another decade).
     
    "That said to me I needed to make something really big, and I needed to put it in a really powerful space," Branson said.
     
    Branson found visual inspiration in Parliament's Act Room, where thousands of laws stretching back centuries are stored on parchment scrolls.
     
    "New Dawn" consists of 168 circles of hand-blown glass inspired by the scrolls, mounted in a 4 metre-by-6 metre (13 foot-by-20 foot) ellipse.
     
    It hangs in one of the most prominent positions in Parliament, above the entrance to St. Stephen's Hall, the main approach to the House of Commons and the site of many protests over the years.
     
    The sculpture is lit from behind in a rainbow of colours to reflect the many strands of the votes-for-women movement. The lighting changes over a 12-hour period timed to the tides of the River Thames that winds through London — symbolizing the unstoppable tide of change.
     
    Parliament may have been slow to grant women the vote, but it has paid the 124,000-pound ($180,000) cost of the sculpture — and is selling a range of mugs, earrings, chocolate bars and other "New Dawn" merchandise in its gift shop.
     
    "It's a fitting tribute to the champions of liberty of the past, as well as an inspiration for future generations," Commons Speaker John Bercow said of the artwork.
     
    Branson said her glass scrolls are mounted atop a portcullis, an iron gate that is the traditional symbol of Parliament. In the artwork, the portcullis is open.
     
    "It's like women are here," Branson said. "We're in."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Justin Trudeau In US: State Dinner Features The Best Of Spring, With A Dash Of Canadian Whisky

    Justin Trudeau In US: State Dinner Features The Best Of Spring, With A Dash Of Canadian Whisky
    he best of America's spring produce, with a little help from some Canadian whisky, will feature heavily on the menu for the state dinner Thursday night to mark Justin Trudeau's first prime ministerial visit to the U.S.

    Justin Trudeau In US: State Dinner Features The Best Of Spring, With A Dash Of Canadian Whisky

    I Think Islam Hates Us: Donald Trump

    I Think Islam Hates Us: Donald Trump
    Trump, 69, maintained that the war was against radical Islam, but said, "it's very hard to define. It's very hard to separate. Because you don't know who's who."

    I Think Islam Hates Us: Donald Trump

    Donald Trump's Positions On Trade, Alliances Could Roil Asia Ties

    With characteristic brashness, Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump has staked out uncompromising positions on Asia policy that could potentially roil U.S. relations with the region if he won the White House.

    Donald Trump's Positions On Trade, Alliances Could Roil Asia Ties

    Anti-Trump Republicans Come To Terms With Cruz Nomination

    Trump, in turn, is renewing his vigorous criticism of the Texas senator, casting the rival he calls "Lying Ted" as too polarizing to break the Washington gridlock or win a general election.

    Anti-Trump Republicans Come To Terms With Cruz Nomination

    Belgian Police Find 25 Sikhs In A Secret Compartment Of A Romanian Truck

    Belgian Police Find 25 Sikhs In A Secret Compartment Of A Romanian Truck
    Police in Essen in Antwerp Province discovered 25 undocumented people in a secret compartment in a lorry at an industrial zone on Tuesday. The migrants were aged between 2 and 88.

    Belgian Police Find 25 Sikhs In A Secret Compartment Of A Romanian Truck

    Indian Student Attacked In Russia Dies

    Indian Student Attacked In Russia Dies
    An Indian medical student, who was in a state of coma after being attacked by unidentified miscreants in a Russian city, has died, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj said on Wednesday.

    Indian Student Attacked In Russia Dies