Somewhere in East London, a statue of England captain Harry Kane has sat dormant for years. Commissioned in 2019 by Waltham Forest Council at a cost of £7,200, some feared it may never see the light of day. But the Big Issue has exclusively obtained pictures of the artwork.
When news of the statue’s existence was revealed in February, speculation mounted over its exact form – and why exactly it had not been put on display despite being funded by public money. Pictures show Kane sitting on a bench, wearing an England kit and holding a ball on his knee.
Kane’s metal doppelganger had reportedly languished in storage because nobody could find a home for it around his boyhood home of Chingford.
The images were supplied to Waltham Forest Council by Warwickshire-based sculptors Sculpture Machine, and obtained by the Big Issue.
Emma Best, one of the councillors who commissioned the statue, told the BBC she had spent “hours and hours” trying to find somewhere to put it. Proposed locations, reported by The Guardian, included Chingford Rail Station and Ridgeway Park, where Kane used to play as a youngster. Kane’s representatives said in February “the location of the statue is really important to us”, and that “when we get it right, we will be happy to go.”
Most of the funding for the Harry Kane statue came from a pot allocated to councillors. “This Community Ward Funded community project was commissioned by residents and funding allocated by councillors,” Waltham Forest council told the Big Issue.