Skip to main content
Donate to the 95 years appeal
The Spirit of Trade Unionism by Bernard Meadows
TUC HQ designed by David Du Roi Aberdeen with Bernard Meadows' sculpture The Spirit of Trade Unionism

THE BUILDING of the TUC's new headquarters Congress House in Holborn, which opened in 1958, was also seen as an opportunity to promote interest in the arts and architecture.

A design competition for the new building was launched in 1946  — the first of its kind in the post war period — and over 180 projects were submitted, from which David Du Roi Aberdeen’s modernist proposal was selected.

The TUC’s aspiration to promote the arts was amply vindicated when, in 1988, the building was Grade-II listed by Historic England. It’s considered to be one of the most important buildings housing an institution in London and a 1950s’ architectural landmark.

The Congress House portico is unconventional as it’s placed to one side of the building on the street corner, rather than centrally in the main facade. This widens the visibility of its foyer from the outside and it also opens it, on the inside, onto the street.

But the focal point of the front of the building is the bronze sculpture The Spirit of Trade Unionism by Bernard Meadows. Placed on an 17ft-tall plinth made up of a platform supported by a single rectangular column, it is well nigh invisible at close proximity but, paradoxically, it is in perfect harmony with the building when viewed from a distance.

Meadows, a native of Norwich, had joined the Communist Party in the 1930s and was a conscientious objector until Nazi Germany attacked the Soviet Union in 1941, impelling him to join the RAF.

He came to international notice at the 1952 Venice Biennale with his work, angular and aggressive and reflecting post-WWII conflicts.

Although possibly the most naturally gifted of his generation of sculptors, Meadows’s profound friendship with Henry Moore and the resulting work commitment as his assistant meant that it took precedence over his own work.

He was also a dedicated academic and taught at the Royal College of Art, where he was an influential and inspirational professor of sculpture until 1980.

The Spirit of Trade Unionism marked a radical formal adjustment from the bulk of Meadows’s work, with its grammar of representational abstraction. It was, as he once confided, “all about the human condition. The crabs, birds, armed, pointing figures are all about fear ... perhaps not fear, it’s vulnerability.”

Meadows put that vulnerability at the centre of the “Spirit” and it is an eloquent allegory of the ideals of trade unionism — two barely clothed human figures have their arms firmly intertwined in a lock of assistance and rescue. One barely stands, the other is on the ground and their eyes are fixed on one another.

The scene has the air of a gladiatorial contest between labour and Capital, in which workers who fall are swiftly helped up by their union comrades. There is spirited energy in the arrangement of the figures that emanates single-minded determination and the power of class solidarity championed by trade unionism.

As sculpture it certainly conforms with Marxist artist and critic John Berger’s litmus test of “does this work help or encourage [wo]men to know and claim their social right?”

Yet an intriguing thought persists about the impact of the sculpture’s elevation. What if it were taken off that “hydraulic lift” of a plinth, doubled in size and placed at street level, right in our faces?

From July 9-11, the TUC is running the Organise 2020 event, showcasing union organising stories from around Britain and the world, along with debates on major trends in organising and free  online training sessions in key organising topics and new digital technologies. Details: tuc.org.uk/welcome-organise-2020

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Cartoons: (L to R) Citizen Chicane and Songi
Culture / 23 December 2024
23 December 2024
(L to R) the book cover; Labour Party election poster 1945;
Books / 3 December 2024
3 December 2024
MICHAL BONCZA recommends a compact volume that charts the art of propagating ideas across the 20th century
Cairokee play Telk Qadeya (That is a Cause)
Gig review / 5 May 2024
5 May 2024
MICHAL BONCZA reviews Cairokee gig at the London Barbican
PROUD HISTORY: (L to R) Living Wage Campaign by COSATU (The
Culture / 29 April 2024
29 April 2024
Similar stories
(L) Lando di Pietro, Head of Christ (fragment of crucifix), 1338; (R) Ambrogio Lorenzetti Madonna del Latte (Madonna of the Milk), about 1325 / Pics: © Foto Studio Lensini Siena
Exhibition review / 25 April 2025
25 April 2025

LOUISE BOURDUA introduces the emotional and narrative religious art of 14th-century Siena that broke with Byzantine formalism and laid the foundations for the Renaissance

The statue of Harry Kane unveiled at The Peter May Centre, L
Men’s football / 2 December 2024
2 December 2024
Sculptors offer their advice on what makes for a good depiction in the eyes of the art world and the public
Features / 5 August 2024
5 August 2024
From creative industry concerns to Welsh language promotion in unions, this year's festival showcases the intersection of culture and labour, offering insights into Wales’ past and future struggles, writes TUC Cymru president SIAN GALE
View of the China pavilion
Venice Biennale 2024 / 13 June 2024
13 June 2024
SIMON DUFF walks us through a fascinating display that is bold, optimistic and spiritual