Vault (sculpture) explained

Vault
Artist:Ron Robertson-Swann
Type:abstract, minimalist
Material:prefabricated steel
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:in
City:Southbank, Victoria, Australia[1]
Museum:Australian Centre for Contemporary Art
Coordinates:-37.8261°N 144.9677°W

Vault (popularly known as The Yellow Peril) is a public sculpture located in Southbank, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. The work of sculptor Ron Robertson-Swann, Vault is an abstract, minimalist sculpture built of large thick flat polygonal sheets of prefabricated steel, assembled in a way that suggests dynamic movement. It is painted yellow.

Presently located outside the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, it is a key work in Melbourne's public art collection, and of considerable historical importance to the city.[2]

Vault has weathered much controversy throughout its existence. Commissioned by the Melbourne City Council after winning a competition in May 1978,[3] for the newly built Melbourne City Square, the sculpture was not even built before it began to attract criticism from certain media and council factions, on the grounds that its modern form was felt to be unsympathetic to the location. The cost of $70,000 was also felt to be excessive.

The sculpture had no official name for over two years, and acquired a number of nicknames during this time. Robertson-Swann himself called it The Thing. The steelworkers who constructed it called it Steelhenge. Newspapers gave it the derogatory nickname The Yellow Peril, a name which has stuck. Robertson-Swann eventually officially named the sculpture Vault in September 1980.

Installed in the City Square for its opening in May 1980, the Melbourne City Council voted to remove it only three months later. The controversy was one of many issues that led to the State Government's sacking of the City Council in December 1980. The Builders Labourers Federation announced they would ban any attempts to move it.

In July 1981, Vault was finally dismantled and re-erected at Batman Park, a much less prominent part of the city. It remained there until 2002 when it was moved to a position outside the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art in Southbank.[4]

Following a heritage study of the Southbank area in 2017, the sculpture was recommended for heritage protection through inclusion in the City of Melbourne Planning Scheme Heritage Overlay, which was applied in 2020.[5] In May 2024 it was proposed for listing at the State level on the Victorian Heritage Register.[6]

Vault has been inspirational for some built and propositional architectural projects designed in Melbourne. Several of Denton Corker Marshall's works have "adopted peril's yellow almost as a point of pride and solidarity", while its form has been referenced in some works by ARM Architecture (Ashton Raggatt McDougall).[7]

References

Notes

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Vault. Australian Centre for Contemporary Art. 2013-10-24.
  2. Statement of Recommendation from the Executive Director, Heritage Victoria; Vault, PROV H2450; 13 May 2024
  3. News: Attwood. Alan. Peril in the Square: The Sculpture that Challenged a City. 2013-10-24. 2004-06-19.
  4. News: Masanauskas. John. Yellow Peril set to return to Swanston St. 2013-10-24. Herald Sun. 2012-09-24.
  5. http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/controversial-vault-sculpture-to-get-heritage-protection-in-southbank-planning-review/news-story/d3c2d7d6b90f87544489ed52b33ee73b 'Controversial Vault sculpture to get heritage protection in Southbank planning review', IAN ROYALL AND JAYITRI SMILES, Herald Sun 6 November 2017
  6. Web site: Brook . Stephen . 2024-05-25 . Melbourne’s controversial sculpture vaults its way to heritage listing . 2024-05-26 . The Age . en.
  7. Web site: Edgar . Ray . 2018-03-25 . From yellow peril to pure gold: 40 years on, Vault has been vindicated . 2024-05-26 . The Age . en.