John Dunmore Lang

Related to City Art
Installed 1890
The upper half of a bronze statue of John Dunmore Lang, viewed from below. Lang is dressed in a suit with one hand open near his waist, and the statue is slightly weathered. There are skyscrapers in the background.
A bronze statue of John Dunmore Lang on a granite base, viewed from the side. Lang is wearing a suit with one hand open near his waist and a pile of books at his feet. There are trees in the background.
A bronze statue of John Dunmore Lang on a granite base, viewed from below. Lang is wearing a suit and holding a scroll in his left hand.
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A larger than life-size bronze statue of statesman John Dunmore Lang sits in Wynyard Park.

Artist: Giovanni Fontana 

Artwork description

The John Dunmore Lang statue was unveiled in Wynyard Park on 26 January 1891.

This larger than life-size sculpture was erected in memory of John Dunmore Lang, described first and foremost as a founder of the Presbyterian Church in Australia. Two years earlier in 1888 the John Dunmore Lang Memorial Committee of the Presbyterian Church organised a ceremony for the laying of the statue’s foundation stone.

The bronze statue sits on a polished grey granite base with a cornice of fine-grained red granite. It was sculpted by Giovanni Fontana of London at a cost of £4,500 pounds and finished in 2 years.

Some years earlier the memorial committee enlisted J Barnett, son of the colonial architect, to design the statue’s base. Some of the building materials used in the base, and the tools for putting them in place were donated by tradesmen and this gesture was lauded as unique proof of the esteem in which Lang was held by all sections of the community.

Early pictures of Wynyard Park show the statue’s dominance of this space at the time and into the 20th century. The contraction of the park’s open space and the growing spread of the boundary trees means that the statue no longer dominates Wynyard Park.

More information

John Dunmore Lang (1799–1878) was honoured for his varied contributions to the church and the state. While he is recognised as a founder of the Presbyterian Church, Lang was also celebrated as an advocate for the separation of Victoria and Queensland and the colonisation of New Zealand, an ardent republican and an influential individual on much of Sydney architecture through his introduction of Scottish mechanics to the colony in 1831.

An opponent of both the emancipists and the exclusives, Lang sought to repopulate Australia with free settlers. This ambition was partially achieved through the assisted migration of thousands of Scottish highlanders and others. Although a trained Presbyterian minister, Lang combined pastoralism with an active career in politics and publishing. His term in government stretched from 1842–1853 and 1859–1869.

Artist

Giovanni Fontana (1821–1893) was born in Carrara, Italy and died in London.

As a sculptor he specialised in classical and allegorical groups. Although Fontana sculpted a number of marble statues and groups for public buildings in Sydney, he was based in London.

Among his sculptures for public buildings in Sydney were figures of the Prince and Princess of Wales in the Colonial Secretary’s Buildings, and the group which includes Queen Victoria over the Martin Place entrance to the General Post Office. These works were sculpted in the 1880s, before his bronze portrait figure of Lang.

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