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Model of Beattie Statue Unveiled
Friday, 6th Sep 2019 07:00

Pictures of the model on which the final statue of Blues legend Kevin Beattie will be based can be revealed for the first time today.

Last week, it was confirmed that The Beat Goes On fundraising campaign, led by the EADT and Ipswich Star in conjunction with BBC Radio Suffolk and TWTD, had hit its target

The statue, which is being sculpted by Sean Hedges-Quinn, known as Coach who was responsible for those of Sir Alf Ramsey and Sir Bobby Robson, is expected to be ready next the spring. It will stand on Portman Road just along from Beattie’s mentor Robson towards Planet Blue.

As part of the process of sculpting the statue Hedges-Quinn, a Town season ticket holder, has created a maquette — a small first model of the design - upon which he will base his final piece.

Sean outlines how he has gone about getting to this stage and what he has to do in the months to come.

How did you approach the design?

It was important to me to capture the very essence of The Beat. Right from the off, I had every intention in my mind to capture the grace, power and athletic agility of a wonderful player. Having a standard standing pose (ball at feet/ball in arm etc) like many other footballing statues around the UK was never going to be an option.

Speaking to many people who witnessed him play in his pomp, the one overriding observation that most people commented on was this extraordinary leap that he possessed when heading the ball. I decided that was the pose I wished to create.

What were the biggest challenges?


The challenges were numerous! I had to create a statue of great weight, balance and movement; a statue that looked like and felt like a great tribute to The Beat and to come up with a unique idea to the problem of suspending him in mid air without any apparent support. This on top of pleasing 20,000-plus ITFC supporters with very high expectations!

What were the first things you were trying to achieve with the design?

Being an ITFC season ticket holder and Ipswich boy through and through, I really wanted everyone in my home town to be proud of what ever I produced. The one thing I really was trying to achieve was something different from the norm, something unique.

How pleased are you with the results?

I am delighted with how the maquette has turned out and very happy and thrilled that the people close to Kevin Beattie seem to share that delight.

Emma Beattie [his daughter and a member of The Beat Goes On committee] was quite overwhelmed and has expressed to me how she felt it was a beautiful and perfect representation of her father. For me that was not only of course a relief but also the best I response I could ask for.

The statue committee also gave me a little standing ovation which was also rather nice.
I now push on to scaling him up and being able to show the rest of Ipswich what I have been doing for over a year.

You have previously stated that the head is the least important aspect at this stage.

As you can imagine, the head of my maquette is smaller than a Brussels sprout and his eyes are the size of a grain of rice. Getting a spot on likeness is very difficult at that scale.

I always aim to get a good resemblance but a good likeness at this early stage is not a priority. What is much more important is getting the balance, weight, flow and look right.

Does the pose work from all angles and not just one? Is it a pleasing aesthetically for the observer? Does the pose work as a stand alone subject? These are the questions I ask at this stage.

I can also at the maquette stage make minor changes if it is required by third parties. ie move an arm easily, turn his head slightly etc.

A facial likeness is very much the most important aspect when the full scale statue is completed but at this stage not so.

What is the process now?

The next stage is to now start sculpting the full scaled-up version of Kevin Beattie.

This I start by creating a steel armature which in turn supports the clay that I am using to sculpt The Beat. A separate removable head will be sculpted so that I can get a good portrait likeness.

The portrait of The Beat will need a lot of concentration as he will be pulling a funny, determined ‘heading the ball’ face but at the same time still be instantly recognisable.

After I have sculpted The Beat (around five months), he will then be moulded and then sent to a bronze foundry were he will be cast in bronze (around eight to 10 weeks), ready for an unveiling in the spring.

I am hoping to start the scaled up version on Monday and really can’t wait to get going. It really is an absolute privilege to be doing this. I consider myself very lucky to have been asked and I will thrive to produce a wonderful and fitting tribute to a great, great player.


Photos: Sarah Lucy Brown/Archant/TWTD



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RegencyBlue added 13:10 - Sep 6
If the end result is as good as his work on Sir Alf and Sir Bobby there is nothing to worry about. It will be magnificent!
4

alfromcol added 14:55 - Sep 6
Plastacine warriors out in force.

Bloody hell some people will be critical about anything - get a life
1

jabberjackson added 15:23 - Sep 6
Really good, and take on board the Brussels Sprout thing BUT, and this is really important
....
Hands up who agrees with this

He should not have a moustache
The Beattie tache coincided with the awful perm era, not the flowing locks era (of the statue), when he was at this best
1

jabberjackson added 15:26 - Sep 6
Brilliant

BUT and it's a massive BUT

Hands up who agrees that the Kevin Beattie depicted by the 'model' would not be wearing a moustache
That was the Beat of the awful perm era

1

jabberjackson added 15:28 - Sep 6
Why the moustache?
Wrong era
Who agrees?
1

jabberjackson added 15:29 - Sep 6
Sorry
Didn't mean to make the point 3 times
I'm marginally less boring in real life
0

JewellintheTown added 15:41 - Sep 6
The BBC are showing a few other images in an article on it, if anyone's interested.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-suffolk-49599060
Obviously not as good as TWTD, of course. ;-)
0

soclopath added 15:54 - Sep 6
Nice pose,thighs not chunky enough,hair wrong face looks more like Engelburt Humpledink.
1

Northstandveteran added 16:00 - Sep 6
I think the moustache, sideburns and hair are spot on.

His daughter is happy with the resemblance.

The posture of the statue is absolutely perfect.

Not only is this going to be the most unique statue of a footballer ever seen but a tribute, let's remember, from the fans that raised the money.

Well done Sean, superb!
2

BobbyBell added 16:20 - Sep 6
What the state can't show is the fact that his shorts would be level with everyone else's shoulders. The man's leap was immense..
1

PhilTWTD added 17:05 - Sep 6
jabberjackson

Maggie wants the moustache, so no way it's not going to be there! The final piece will be a bit of an amalgam between Beat in different eras, physically mid-seventies when he was at his peak, facially slightly later with the tache.
3

Sir_Monte_Carlo added 17:27 - Sep 6
It's Alan Hunter.
1

whosroundisitanyway added 17:51 - Sep 6
As usual so many on here think they can do a better job.
2

TimmyH added 17:55 - Sep 6
That leap sums Beattie up!...like a salmon, look forward to the finished article. Great work.
2

joolsg100 added 17:56 - Sep 6
Love the design... but racially looks more like Allan Hunter ?
0

TimmyH added 17:59 - Sep 6
and have to agree the second photo down more a likeness to Mr Hunter but working at such a small scale (as stated) is far more difficult to get his looks, when he scales up that will be the litmus test!
2

dirtydingusmagee added 20:00 - Sep 6
Have faith folks it will be great, and if it didnt have a head at all it would still be better than the statues at Carrot Road..............oh sorry they aint got none ! The Beat goes on .
1

badadski added 10:00 - Sep 7
In regards to the thighs, i cannot say i have witnessed the great man but he is jumping so any thigh definition in mid air would have been minimal any way and i am guessing this sculpture was based on an actual photo some where.
0

Cageyblue added 13:59 - Sep 7
Have to agree with a few others. When I first looked at it I thought it was Alan Hunter.
0

BluePatriot added 18:07 - Sep 7
It looks like Alan Hunter close up on the face and legs
0

planetblue_2011 added 10:28 - Sep 8
Brilliant statue! A great tribute to the best player👍
0


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