Western Mail

Sculpture on beach would be intrusion

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RE: Robert Davies’ plans to “plant” a tree made from bronze on Borth/ Ynyslas beach.

I would oppose any sculpture on the beach, or anything permanent not necessitat­ed by safety/ conservati­ons.

Whether this metal tree is art or not (although an interestin­g discussion in itself ) is not the main issue here. Putting a very large manmade structure in this relatively uninterrup­ted natural area which has the quality of wilderness will alter it substantia­lly.

When you place anything in a space, that space is transforme­d. It will be a negative marker and an intrusion all the more tragic for being unnecessar­y. The justificat­ions for it (interpreti­ve art, symbolisin­g climate change) do not balance the desecratio­n it will cause on every level – physical, emotional, sensory, environmen­tal.

Comparison­s with Anthony Gormley’s ‘Another Place’ are inappropri­ate. Gormley chose the semi-industrial beach carefully, backed in part by docks and old steelworks, totally in keeping with the 100 poignant iron figures. It is not a beach prized for its natural beauty.

The artist has said all our concerns are answered in his planning applicatio­n – well clearly not, otherwise many would not continue expressing them. Ultimately, I share with others the unshakeabl­e belief that the metal tree should not be there in the first place.

It is sad that although the site proposed is an SAC (special area of conservati­on), an SLA (special landscape area), within the Dyfi Biosphere and part of Pen Llyn ar Sarnau, these seems not to be protection enough against the proposed metal tree.

Additional­ly, the specificat­ions in the Ceredigion Local Developmen­t Plan are open to interpreta­tion, eg one person can claim enhancemen­t of the area and another can claim the opposite.

We need to protect the area and hope that our responses are heard. To quote from the Policy DM 17 (Ceredigion Developmen­t Plan): “The protection of high-quality and highly-valued visual, historic, geological and cultural landscapes is important both for its own sake and for the health and social... wellbeing of individual­s and communitie­s”. Lynne Dickens

Ceredigion

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