Art world fights to preserve former gardener’s fantastical kingdom of historic figures

Arts

Gerry's Pompeii in west London © Jasper Fry

It's a striking sight: in a small garden at the edge of the Grand Union Canal in west London stand rows of strange concrete figures studded with pieces of sparkling glass and costume jewellery.

The names inscribed into their bases reveal them to be an eclectic array of historical luminaries. These range from "Elizabeth of York, the wife of Henry VII to "Leo Casey, Irish Poet", and "Claudius, Emperor of Rome".

Until his death this September, only a handful of his close friends and the immediate community knew of this fantastical world created by the 83-year-old pensioner Gerard Dalton both in and around his modest Westbourne Grove housing association flat. For more than three decades during the summer months, Gerry (as he was known) worked on this project secretly at night. He first filled his back yard and then a strip of land along the Grand Union Canal with a parade of more than 200 sculptures made from heavily customised garden statuary and a 50-foot mural embedded with tiles, plaques and glass ornaments.

Gerry with his outdoor sculptures and mural © Lily Bertrand Webb

During the winter hed make intricate architectural replicas of famous buildings including Buckingham Palace, Chatsworth House, Hampton Court, St Pauls Cathedral and the nearby Modernist Trellick Tower, as well as a multitude of painted statues and wall-mounted works of art that covered every surface of his flat.

Dalton migrated from rural southern Ireland in the 1950s and had a long working life as a parcel porter and factory worker. A shy and unassuming man, he considered himself a gardener rather than an artist, having worked on the estate of a retired British colonel when he was still in Ireland.

He jokingly described the fruits of his labours as “Gerrys Pompeii” and modestly said that his epic gesamtkunstwerk “kept [him] off the streets.” However, Gerrys Pompeii is currently under serious threat as the landlords Notting Hill Genesis want to reclaim the property for social housing.

© Jasper Fry

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