Mystery artist replaces village's stolen statue

Jim Scott
BBC News, North East and Cumbria
BBC A bronze-coloured fibreglass statue of a pony stands fixed to a wooden board, which is on top of a concrete plinth.BBC
The pit pony was installed overnight with the first Ryhope residents seeing it on Friday morning

Villagers have awoken to a replica pony standing tall in place of a bronze metal statue which was cut down to its hooves last summer.

The original in Ryhope, Sunderland, was stolen in August 2024, while an identical statue at the other end of the village was sliced down by thieves in 2021, with nobody ever traced for either theft.

The new bronze-coloured, fibreglass effigy by a secretive sculptor appeared on one of the concrete plinths welcoming visitors to the village on Friday morning.

The families of miners previously said they were heartbroken by the theft of the statues, which they said were memorials to those who worked at Ryhope pits.

Councillors previously estimated it could cost £34,000 to replace each original, and that the council faced "financial pressures".

A concrete plinth which spells out the words Ryhope is below the bronze-coloured fibre-glass statue of a pony, which has been installed overnight. In the background are houses and a main road leading into the village.
The original sculptures represented the animals which hauled heavy carts of coal at Ryhope's pits, which closed in 1966

The person behind the replacement artwork, who is only willing to be identified on social media as Ryhope Horse, said they had been "vexed" every time they passed the remains of the original statue.

"It annoyed me to see the cut-off feet every time I drove passed it," they told the BBC.

"[It was] just a matter of local pride, I wasn't going to let the thieves spoil it for Ryhope."

The remains of a bronze statue which was cut down in the village of Ryhope last August, there are four hooves which remain on top of a concrete plinth which welcomes visitors to Ryhope.
When the BBC visited the pony last August, all that was left were its hooves

The same sculpture was first installed at the village's other plinth in 2023, but was repeatedly damaged and the same mystery artist replaced it with a more sturdy concrete statue.

"Once that [concrete statue] was made, I concentrated on repairing this one and making a suitable base to fit it to the taller plinth," the artist said.

"Now we have two again."

Villagers were left baffled in 2023 when the replacement statue first appeared, hailing the cryptic creator who had "gone to so much trouble" to make the pony.

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