Statue of Samuel Johnson
The statue of Samuel Johnson is a Grade II listed statue on the Strand in the Churchyard of St Clement Danes church in London.
Samuel Johnson was a writer and lexicographer most famous for his dictionary, who lived and worked nearby on Fleet Street, a location renowned for its historic connection to print houses. It was in his house in Gough Square that Johnson wrote his dictionary. St Clement Danes was a church frequented by Johnson.
The statue was designed by Percy FitzGerald and was inspired by a portrait of Johnson by Sir Joshua Reynolds. As in Reynolds's portrait, the statue similarly shows Johnson with a full-bottomed wig; he also holds a book in his left hand with an inkwell at his feet. The front of the plinth on which he stands has a portrait in relief of his biographer James Boswell. A marble statue of Johnson also stands inside St Paul's Cathedral, the first statue to be placed in the church. In 1995 the book in Johnson's hand was stolen and replaced by a replica made by Faith Winter, who was also the sculptor of two statues at the western front of St Clement Danes.