Hambling commissioned local business J. T. Pegg & Sons LTD to create the sculpture.[2] It is made from stainless steel and is 3.7 metres in height and weighs 3.5 tons, appearing as two halves of a seashell. The sculpture features a quote from Benjamin Britten’s opera, Peter Grimes: “I hear those voices that will not be drowned.”[1]
Hambling was not paid for her time working on the sculpture and funded manufacturing costs with her own money and sales of her artwork.[3] Hambling intended the piece to be interacted with, climbed on, sat on, "made love" under, and used as a shelter.[3]
The sculpture was unveiled on Saturday 8 November 2003 by former culture secretary Chris Smith.[4]
Reception
Reaction to the sculpture was mixed. Scallop was named the best public sculpture in Britain and received the Marsh Award for Excellence in Public Sculpture in 2006.[5][6] However negative criticism has arisen surrounding the sculpture’s position in an area of outstanding natural beauty with critics claiming that it has ruined views of the seafront. Following the unveiling of the sculpture, some Aldeburgh residents formed a campaign group calling on Suffolk Coastal District Council to have the sculpture removed to another location.[7] Hambling defended her sculpture as made “for that particular place in juxtaposition with the sea, and that is where I want it to stay.”[7] The sculpture has also been the target of repeated vandalism.[7]