<p>British police on Wednesday cordoned off an area outside the BBC's Broadcasting House in central London after a man was spotted scaling the building and using a hammer to attack a statue by controversial sculptor Eric Gill.</p>.<p>Officers and ambulance workers rush to the scene after receiving reports that a man had used a ladder to reach the 10-foot tall sculpture above the building's front entrance.</p>.<p>The sculpture, depicting Ariel and Prospero from the Shakespeare play “<em>The Tempest</em>,” was installed in the 1930s.</p>.<p>It was created by Gill, a prominent British artist who died in 1940.</p>.<p>His diaries, which were published decades after his death, revealed that he sexually abused his daughters and the family dog.</p>.<p>The sculpture had previously drawn criticism and activist groups have demanded its removal.</p>.<p>The Metropolitan Police said officers attempted to “engage with the man," and that another man was arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit criminal damage.</p>.<p>The incident came a week after a jury cleared four protesters of criminal damage after they pulled down a statue of 17th-century slave trader Edward Colston during a Black Lives Matter demonstration in the city of Bristol in June 2020.</p>.<p>The four protesters, who threw the statue into the harbour after toppling it, were acquitted on Jan. 5 following an 11-day trial.</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos:</strong></p>
<p>British police on Wednesday cordoned off an area outside the BBC's Broadcasting House in central London after a man was spotted scaling the building and using a hammer to attack a statue by controversial sculptor Eric Gill.</p>.<p>Officers and ambulance workers rush to the scene after receiving reports that a man had used a ladder to reach the 10-foot tall sculpture above the building's front entrance.</p>.<p>The sculpture, depicting Ariel and Prospero from the Shakespeare play “<em>The Tempest</em>,” was installed in the 1930s.</p>.<p>It was created by Gill, a prominent British artist who died in 1940.</p>.<p>His diaries, which were published decades after his death, revealed that he sexually abused his daughters and the family dog.</p>.<p>The sculpture had previously drawn criticism and activist groups have demanded its removal.</p>.<p>The Metropolitan Police said officers attempted to “engage with the man," and that another man was arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to commit criminal damage.</p>.<p>The incident came a week after a jury cleared four protesters of criminal damage after they pulled down a statue of 17th-century slave trader Edward Colston during a Black Lives Matter demonstration in the city of Bristol in June 2020.</p>.<p>The four protesters, who threw the statue into the harbour after toppling it, were acquitted on Jan. 5 following an 11-day trial.</p>.<p><strong>Check out DH's latest videos:</strong></p>