A two-mile trail around Hereford’s new public artworks is now available online and in printed form for residents and visitors to follow.
The “easy” loop of the city centre “takes about one hour to complete at a moderate pace”, its backer Herefordshire Council said.
The latest addition is a series of eight sculptures by artists from Hereford College of Arts (HCA), celebrating its 170th anniversary this year, or with other links to Hereford, working with local charity Meadow Arts.
RELATED NEWS:
- Hereford's new murals take shape
- Herefordshire's worst road for traffic named and tested
- Plans for new shop in middle of Hereford revealed
These repurpose disused sign brackets around the city’s historic core, and are inspired old laws requiring shops to display visual representations of their trades.
The eight are:
- Cloud Palette #1 by Matthew Cornford, in Palace Yard opposite the cathedral, echoes a paint palette design formerly used on materials promoting the city’s art school.
- Drawing on costumes and flags of bygone times, the abstract Diamond by German-born Lothar Götz harks back to Broad Street’s rich history of festivities.
- The Sturgeon and the Artist by Nicholas Stevenson, at the corner of High Town and Widemarsh Street, takes its inspiration from a giant sturgeon caught in the city in 1846, in order to “capture the elusive essence of creativity”.
- Unleashed in Widemarsh Street “explores what wrought iron may do if it were free to go its own way”, according to its creator Laura White.
- Across Widemarsh Street, Bangin’ the Drum by Mark Houghton pays tribute to the iconic black-and-white kit of The Pretenders’ Hereford-born drummer Martin Chambers.
- Wonders in Trinity Square, by Celia Johnson with Wigmore High School, is inspired by the Hereford-born actor David Garrick's famous saying, “Wonders will never cease”.
- Symbolising Herefordshire’s farming “backbone”, the skeletal metal form of Plough by Daniel Moss in Church Street suggests the body of a community.
- Also in Church Street, the “machine aesthetic” of HR101 by Rich Makin takes inspiration from Hereford’s manufacturing heritage.
Part of the council's Art + People + Place programme, the sculptures join eight recently unveiled murals by national and international street artists now also dotted around the city.
Cabinet member for transport and infrastructure Coun Philip Price said: “Together, these works complete our Hereford public art trail which will enhance the city experience for visitors of all ages.”
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules hereLast Updated:
Report this comment Cancel