Yellow Metal Sculpture By Brian King - Presented By The The Urban Cartographer
Yellow Metal Sculpture By Brian King - Presented By The The Urban Cartographer
Discover the story behind 'Galway Yellow', the iconic Brian King sculpture at the University of Galway. Often nicknamed "The Big Yellow Thing," this protected structure is a defiant departure from Ireland's "red metal yokes" and a vital artefact of 1970s Irish modernism.
Author: The Urban Cartographer
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04. Apr 2026
Photographed By William Murphy - Select Image To View Photographs
Across the towns and villages of Ireland, a familiar sight often holds court at the centre of a roundabout: the ubiquitous abstract metal sculpture. For many, these installations eventually blend into the background, earning the affectionate—if slightly dismissive—local moniker of the "red metal yoke." In the Irish vernacular, a "yoke" refers to any generic, nondescript thing, and the sheer prevalence of a certain primary-red shade has turned these sculptures into a national archetype of public art.
The Yellow Yoke: A Study in Irish Public Art
A Defiant Splash of Colour
In Galway, however, the script is flipped. Our "yoke" is not red; it is defiantly, unmissably yellow.
Known colloquially by a spectrum of names—ranging from the pragmatic "BYT" (The Big Yellow Thing) to the more imaginative student nickname, "Archimedes’ Balls"—the sculpture on the University of Galway campus bears the official title ‘Galway Yellow’. A work by the notable Irish sculptor Brian King, it was presented to the University in 1976 by P.J. Carroll & Co. Ltd., in conjunction with the Arts Council.
More Than Just a Landmark
For a student rushing past on a damp Tuesday morning, it is easy to dismiss the structure as just another piece of abstract art—"that yellow yoke on campus." Yet, this casual perception belies its true cultural weight.
While it might surprise those who see it daily, Galway City Council has officially placed the sculpture on its list of protected structures. This designation underscores a value that transcends immediate aesthetics:
A Snapshot of Modernism: Galway Yellow is a significant artefact of the 1970s, a period of intense creative and cultural evolution in Ireland.
Artistic Pedigree: As a representative example of Brian King’s early career, it serves as a potent symbol of the "modern" Irish art movement.
Historical Context: Its value lies not just in its geometric form, but in what it represents about Ireland’s mid-century shift towards avant-garde public expression.
Not Your Average Yoke
This brings us back to that intentional choice of colour. In a landscape of public art often populated by generic red metal yokes, Galway Yellow makes a statement. It refuses to be the archetype. While it may be a "yoke" in the fond, familiar Irish sense, it is pointedly—and importantly—not the red one. It is our yellow one: a bright, humorous departure from the norm.
Ultimately, Brian King’s sculpture is woven into the cultural and architectural fabric of the university and the city. It is a protected piece of Irish art history that reminds us, with a characteristically Galwegian dash of humour, that not all yokes are created equal. Some, thankfully, are yellow.
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