Kent Messenger Maidstone

Visit out of this world art exhibition

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The spectacula­r art installati­on Gaia has opened at Rochester Cathedral.

The exhibition shows Earth from a new perspectiv­e and aims to get visitors thinking about their place and impact on it.

Gaia is an illuminate­d sculpture of the planet and was originally due to arrive in Medway in February but the opening was postponed.

The seven-metre wide globe was created by visual artist Luke Jerram, who lives in the UK but has been touring his large-scale art installati­ons all over the world since 1997.

This latest exhibition has already impressed audiences in places including Taiwan and Hong Kong, and a crowd in Rochester was no different.

“It is quite breathtaki­ng,” said Beverley Jacobs. “It reminds me of films when you see the world from a spaceship. I thought I am so old now I won’t ever see it from that angle but it is like that.

“I think it is very thought-provoking.”

Gaia uses detailed NASA imagery of the Earth’s surface to provide visitors to the cathedral with a unique perspectiv­e of our own planet floating in three dimensions.

The artwork aims to put vis

itors in the shoes of an astronaut and provoke wider thought about the planet’s place in the universe.

Simon Olley, who was visiting the exhibit, said: “It is very shocking the size and scale of it, it is really eye-catching.

“It is a little like viewing the Earth from outer space, how you would never see it.

“It does make you think and seeing it like this from underneath, there is a lot of sea and space between the continents. It does make you think about what

we are fighting about.”

Vicki Emrit said: “It is something you are so familiar with but you are so caught off guard seeing it like this. It raises a lot of questions about us on the planet.”

A specially-made surround sound compositio­n by BAFTA-award winning composer Dan Jones is also played alongside the exhibition.

The installati­on is all part of a new initiative from the Church of England, which has outlined its intention to be net carbon zero by 2030, focussing on climate change.

The Dean of Rochester Philip Hesketh said: “We have brought it here again to fill the cathedral, draw people to into the space and hopefully have a conversati­on and help people ask questions, reflect and just experience the wonder of what is an extraordin­ary planet that we all live on and actually is in jeopardy.

“The purpose is to invite people into this space, the nave is a public space and we have a number of exhibition­s here to draw people who would not normally come to the cathedral or indeed feel they can’t come in. That is really important.

“While they are here they may well be able to ask questions to help them reflect on their place in the world.

“And for us, hopefully encounter something of the spiritual dimension which we believe is the unseen around us.

“People have been interested by the perspectiv­e and just suddenly looking at it like this and realising how small we are and how vast the planet Earth is. And the amount of water.”

During their visit, people will be encouraged to think about how they can play a part in fighting climate change, easing the strain on the environmen­t and protecting the planet’s wildlife and ecosystems.

It follows the artist’s groundbrea­king lunar spectacle, the Museum of the Moon, which was shown in Rochester in 2020, and the success of sell-out light show, Space Voyage, by Luxmuralis inside the cathedral last year.

Gaia will be at Rochester Cathedral until Sunday, June 12.

Entry is free, but must be booked online in advance.

Visit www.rochesterc­athedral. org/gaia

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 ?? ?? Luke Jerram’s Earth art exhibition Gaia has opened at Rochester Cathedral where The Dean of Rochester Philip Hesketh (right) is encouragin­g people to visit and reflect
Luke Jerram’s Earth art exhibition Gaia has opened at Rochester Cathedral where The Dean of Rochester Philip Hesketh (right) is encouragin­g people to visit and reflect

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