Positive News magazine has featured London’s Statues of Women. As the piece says, ‘These sculptures do more than decorate the city, they reshape its story. Each woman depicted stands as a symbol of progress, resilience and creativity. And as their presence grows, so too does the promise of a more inclusive public space where every Londoner can see themselves reflected.’
The Camden New Journal features London's Statues of Women
The Camden New Journal, one of the best local papers in London, has given London’s Statues of Women a long and favourable review.
Matt Chorley interviews Juliet Rix about London's Statues of Women on BBC Radio 5 Live
On 31 July Juliet Rix was interviewed by Matt Chorley on his afternoon Radio 5 Live show about London’s Statues of Women.
Times Radio interviews Juliet Rix about London's Statues of Women
Tom Whipple interviewed Juliet Rix on Times Radio’s afternoon show about London’s Statues of Women.
The Londonist features London's Statues of Women
Juliet Rix has a feature on London’s Statues of Women on the hugely popular Londonist website.
The Times features London's Statues of Women
The Times’s London section published a double-page feature spread by Juliet Rix on London’s Statues of Women.
London's Statues of Women featured on London Cheapo
The London Cheapo website is featuring Juliet Rix’s London’s Statues of Women, and specifically recommending its Statue Safaris around central London.
Juliet Rix interviewed on BBC News website about London's statues of women
The unveiling in a London park of the capital’s latest statue of a woman, landscape gardener Fanny Wilkinson, saw Juliet Rix, author of London’s Statues of Women, interviewed by Radio London for the BBC News website.
Juliet Rix writes about London's statues of women in the Express
Juliet Rix, author of the just-published London’s Statues of Women, has written a superb double-page feature on the subject in the Daily Express.
Travis Elborough reviews Croydonopolis for the TLS
Travis Elborough recently gave Croydonopolis an extensive review in the Times Literary Supplement. While acknowledging it to be ‘an unashamedly boosterish survey’, he concedes that it ‘mostly succeeds in persuading the sceptical to give the place a second look’.
