Sometimes quite ordinary houses sport just one lively and interesting detail that makes the whole thing come alive. At 54 Harley Street, a solemn neo-Georgian house built for one of the consultants that infest the street to this day, the keystone over the front door is carved with this lovely mermaid. She holds a trident in one hand and twirls her hair seductively with the other. Her tail curls round and round itself - it must be the longest mertail ever.
The house was designed by Niven and Wigglesworth in 1904, so the sculptor may be Albert Hodge or his assistant Charles Doman.
1 comment:
Looks to me like this fishy lovely has a split tail, although I still can't quite untangle the knot. I'm sure that when I was an innocent child mermaids all had one tail but it seems (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mermaid_problem) that the split tail version has been around for some time, else where do new mermaids come from?
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