Blink and you'll miss it.
There's more to Old Square than the larger and conspicuous tribute to Birmingham's reluctant son, Tony Hancock. Situated opposite Hancock's glassy pixel effigy is another Brummie 1960s icon. Rendered in fibreglass, brass and iron, the eponymous relief by Kenneth Budd pays tribute to this part of Birmingham, which was destroyed to make way for a ring-road in the late 1960s.
The brief is quite simple - Budd tells the chronological story of Old Square from its earliest days as a 13th Century Priory up until the 1890s when the last of the residencies were razed by pick-axes as the city centre became more and more commercialised. In between, Budd's story of this tiny corner of Birmingham reads like a biography of the whole city. Look closely and you'll find a world of stagecoaches, inns, gun makers, bankers, intellectuals and rioters. Next time you hurry past to catch a bus, please take a moment to notice. read more