James doesn't look happy in this statue modelled on a work by Francis Chantrey.
Maybe it's because his stone body is looking a bit dirty these days. Or, maybe it's because there always seems to be the same raggedy pigeon perched on his head, whilst the adjacent statues always get off scot-free. Or, maybe it's because he's not as shiny as his own glitzy effigy down the road on Broad Street, where he's also flanked by his mates Murdock and Boulton. However, I always like to think James Watt looks a bit tired and glum here because he's facing the wrong way. Standing as he does, the Watt Statue gazes out over the city's civic buildings, such as the Museum and Art Gallery, the Town Hall and the Council House. This could be considered pretty apt for a man who can legitimately be considered one of the founding fathers of the modern city. However, James Watt was a forward thinker - an inventor and dreamer first and foremost. He would be happier, I think, turned around 180 degrees, watching over the current library building as an architectural symbol rightly or wrongly of a late 20th Century future age where modernity, logic and functionality were briefly prized over the more style conscious Victorian era. read more