Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Plans for a new Forest art trail

- CARMELO GARCIA Local Democracy Reporter

VISITORS to the Forest of Dean Sculpture Trail this summer will be treated to eight new pieces of artwork if new plans get the go-ahead.

The sculpture trail, which starts and ends at Beechenhur­st Lodge near Coleford, attracts more than 300,000 people every year.

And trustees hope that new temporary sculptures will bring more visitors as the UK starts to recover from the Covid-19 pandemic.

The plans, which have been submitted to the Forest of Dean District Council, say the trail will run alongside the existing route.

The idea is to create a shorter, more accessible, fun and familyorie­ntated trail called Forest to Forest - and it will be in place for up to six months.

The new sculptures have been designed by different artists and include arms hugging trees, a poem cut into a steel cylinder surroundin­g a tree and a wicker bench shelter made in the form of a badger. There will also be wildflower paintings hanging from the trees, dozens of bright red bugs made from garden hand trowels crawling up tree trunks and lightweigh­t modules suspended from the canopy.

The new trail will also have an undulating canopy made of 1,600 recycled plastic bottles filled with coloured water and several giant colourful totem poles.

None of the installati­ons will be fenced off and there will be no

descriptio­n or signage so visitors will be expected to make their own judgment of what the sculptures represent.

Consultant­s working on the scheme say there will be no clearance of trees, shrubs or ground fauna to install them and the plans have been designed to make efficient use of the existing resources

The Forest of Dean Sculpture Trail was establishe­d in 1986 thanks to the shared vision of Martin Orrom, the then forestry and environmen­t officer for the Forestry Commission, Jeremy Rees, the founding director of the Arnolfini gallery in Bristol, and Rupert Martin, curator at the Arnolfini.

The brief given to the artists who created the original sculpture trail was that the works should respond intellectu­ally, historical­ly, physically and conceptual­ly to the particular­ity of the Forest of Dean.

Planners are expected to consider the scheme for the new temporary trail by June 16, 2021.

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 ??  ?? > An image of the badger bench; left, a bug made from a hand trowel
> An image of the badger bench; left, a bug made from a hand trowel
 ??  ?? > Images of some of the new artworks planned for the Forest of Dean
> Images of some of the new artworks planned for the Forest of Dean

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