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Keeping An Eye on Eliza

Eliza is a bronze sculpture located in Matilda Bay on the Swan River in Western Australia. The sculpture and plinth are mounted on a steel pylon 15 metres off the shoreline and depicts a woman about to dive off a wooden platform. It commemorates the old Crawley Baths which were a prominent Perth landmark during the early to mid 20th century. The sculp- ture is 2.2 metres high. The artwork has its own lighting from solar panels. The public artwork was done by Perth artist Tony Jones on a commission from the City of Perth. Jones’ other piec- es include the C.Y. O’Connor statue near Coogee and Sea Queen at Claisebrook Cove. Eliza was unveiled by Peter Nattrass, Perth Lord Mayor on 15 October 2007. The sculpture takes its name from Mount Eliza, which in turn was named after the wife of Governor Ralph Darling, an early Governor of New South Wales. The name was given by Captain James Stirling. Wikipedia

WeekendNotes (www.weekendnotes.com/perth) recently revived a discussion on “Who Dresses Up Eliza?” Here is Shannon Meyerkort, writer/blogger/mother of three (shannonmeyerkort. com), obligingwithavibrantresponse:

It is a Perth truth universally acknowledged that every time you drive or ride down Mounts Bay Road, you must see what outfit Eliza is wearing today.

Will she be in a fancy cocktail dress? Will she be wearing the scarf of a local footy team? Will she have been squeezed into a private school blazer? Or (gasp) will she be au naturel in her natural (bronze) bathing suit.

At 2.2 metres tall Eliza stands well above the height of the average woman. Her majestic bulk makes her eclectic ward- robe even more astonishing – given that there is a prankster or pranksters – who manage to find so many outfits to fit her, and stretch over her magnificent outstretched arms.

An article on the ABC in 2010 quotes the sculptor as saying he was appalled the first time he saw Eliza dressed up, but he has since come around. “As long as the dressing up doesn’t stay there for weeks and weeks. I think that’s important, and the other thing is that it’s not vandalised or damaged and that doesn’t seem to happen,” he said to journalist Clair Nichols.

Over the years I have seen Eliza in outfits ranging from full cocktail gowns, football colours, school uniforms, Santa out- fits, jockey outfits, scary Halloween costumes, flags, wedding dresses and modern day bathing costumes. Once she had a bike strapped to her, another time a surfboard.

Sometimes the outfits stay a few days, sometimes they are gone overnight. Apparently the City of Perth keep a close eye and quickly remove anything too inappropriate.

I have always wondered who dresses Eliza. Situated fifteen metres off shore, any would-be stylist would require a boat or at least be a confident swimmer with a keen sense of adventure.

There is no parking anywhere near by on Mounts Bay Road, so you wouldn’t be able to stop the car and jump out to do a quick makeover. There is also an almost constant flow of traffic, meaning you would have to be a very surreptitious stylist.

It is generally assumed that the pranksters tend to be local school and university students, and as far as I can tell, no one has come publicly forward to claim responsibility for an outfit or two. It could be many hundreds of people, using Eliza as a way of celebrating major events (Melbourne Cup, Christmas) and personal milestones (weddings and birthdays).

Often Eliza’s outfit is merely a sign wishing someone good luck or a happy birthday or protesting about a timely political issue. Shannon Meyerkort, via www.weekendnotes.com/who-dress- es-Eliza-the-statue/

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