Yorkshire Post

Yorkshire takes sculpture to heart

Large-scale art by Damien Hirst to remain in the region after county’s first expo attracts 1.4m visitors

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: david.behrens@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

It was just the way we wanted people to experience sculpture.

Jane Bhoyroo, producer of Yorkshire Sculpture Internatio­nal.

IT MAY traditiona­lly have been the preserve of the aesthete and the dilettante, but sculpture can claim to have gained 1.4 million new admirers among Yorkshire’s hoi polloi this summer.

That, the organisers of the UK’s first festival devoted to the subject will announce today, was the number who interacted with the large scale works by Damien Hirst and others which have been on public display across two cities.

The success of Yorkshire Sculpture Internatio­nal, a season-long exposition funded by the Arts Council and bringing together the resources of The Hepworth Wakefield, the Henry Moore Institute, Leeds Art Gallery and the Yorkshire Sculpture Park, has led to the extended loan of four of Hirst’s pieces until 2022.

Hirst, who grew up in Leeds and studied at the city’s College of Art, has been a prominent supporter of the festival, and has also agreed that his 2009 work, Black Sheep with Golden Horns, can remain in the Art Gallery for a year longer than planned.

The venue had been “an important place to me when I was growing up”, he said.

Of his four works to remain at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park – where he had not exhibited before – he added: “I’ve loved seeing the response to them in that setting, and it blew me away when I first saw them there.”

Two of his other large-scale pieces, Hymn and Anatomy of an Angel, were displayed throughout the summer in the centre of Leeds, and the festival’s producer, Jane Bhoyroo, said the unconventi­onal interactio­n of members of the public was no less an appreciati­on of their artistic merit than poring over them in a gallery.

“Whenever I walked past, people were stopping and staring, walking around the statues and taking photos of themselves. It was just the way we wanted people to experience sculpture and a wonderful thing to behold,” she said. As well as the freely available public art, the festival encompasse­d school visits, workshops and other events which collective­ly involved 46,000 people, including 19,000 students. A report on its economic impact will be published later this month, but Ms Bhoyroo said it was already clear that people had travelled to locations in Leeds and Wakefield specifical­ly to see the sculptures.

Sir Nicholas Serota, chairman of Arts Council England, dropped a broad hint that the exercise would be repeated.

“I look forward to future editions of Yorkshire Sculpture Internatio­nal,” he said.

The organisati­on handed the organisers £750,000 to create what it described as the UK’s first internatio­nal sculpture project, with initial plans to stage it every three years in the former home of Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth.

“It’s particular­ly rewarding to support four of the UK’s leading art institutio­ns, so that they can work together to build on the rich history of sculpture in West Yorkshire,” Sir Nicholas said.

 ?? MAIN PICTURE: PA WIRE ?? APPETITE FOR ART: Damien Hirst’s sculpture, Hymn (1999-2005), in Leeds city centre; artist Tau Lewis exhibited at The Hepworth; Kimsooja’s To Breathe at Yorkshire Sculpture Park; work by Joanna Piotrowska at Leeds Art Gallery.
MAIN PICTURE: PA WIRE APPETITE FOR ART: Damien Hirst’s sculpture, Hymn (1999-2005), in Leeds city centre; artist Tau Lewis exhibited at The Hepworth; Kimsooja’s To Breathe at Yorkshire Sculpture Park; work by Joanna Piotrowska at Leeds Art Gallery.
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