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Corrected an erroneous place-name. Golden is being placed on the former site of an ironworks called Goldendale Ironworks, not Goldenhill Ironworks. Goldenhill is a locality in the city of Stoke-on-Trent, about a mile from this site.
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'''Golden''' is a [[modern art]] [[Sculpture#Minimalism|sculpture]] due to be installed in the Chatterley Valley, on the outskirts of [[Tunstall, Staffordshire|Tunstall]], [[Stoke-on-Trent]] in 2013.<ref>[http://www.stokesentinel.co.uk/Tunstall-prepares-Britain-s-tallest-artworks/story-19283086-detail/story.html Tunstall prepares for one of Britain's tallest artworks]</ref> The £180,000 artwork is being placed on the site of the former Goldenhill Ironworks and was designed by the award-winning public art [[sculptor]] [[Wolfgang Buttress]], who designed the [[Rise (sculpture)|Rise sculpture]] in [[Belfast]].<ref>[http://wolfgangbuttress.com/news_gold.html Wolfgang Buttress]</ref> It will be one of the tallest [[public art]] sculptures in Britain. The proposed site is currently occupied by the Potteries Pyramid, which has been erroneously placed there since 2007.<ref>[http://www.stokesentinel.co.uk/Golden-work-art-seen-A500/story-17277330-detail/story.html This Golden work of art will be seen from A500]</ref>
'''Golden''' is a [[modern art]] [[Sculpture#Minimalism|sculpture]] due to be installed in the Chatterley Valley, on the outskirts of [[Tunstall, Staffordshire|Tunstall]], [[Stoke-on-Trent]] in 2013.<ref>[http://www.stokesentinel.co.uk/Tunstall-prepares-Britain-s-tallest-artworks/story-19283086-detail/story.html Tunstall prepares for one of Britain's tallest artworks]</ref> The £180,000 artwork is being placed on the site of the former Goldendale Ironworks and was designed by the award-winning public art [[sculptor]] [[Wolfgang Buttress]], who designed the [[Rise (sculpture)|Rise sculpture]] in [[Belfast]].<ref>[http://wolfgangbuttress.com/news_gold.html Wolfgang Buttress]</ref> It will be one of the tallest [[public art]] sculptures in Britain. The proposed site is currently occupied by the Potteries Pyramid, which has been erroneously placed there since 2007.<ref>[http://www.stokesentinel.co.uk/Golden-work-art-seen-A500/story-17277330-detail/story.html This Golden work of art will be seen from A500]</ref>


==Funding==
==Funding==

Revision as of 20:29, 18 November 2013

Golden
ArtistWolfgang Buttress
Year2013
TypeStylised flame
MediumCOR-TEN Steel
Dimensions21 m × 2.5 m (69 ft × 8.2 ft)
LocationTunstall

Golden is a modern art sculpture due to be installed in the Chatterley Valley, on the outskirts of Tunstall, Stoke-on-Trent in 2013.[1] The £180,000 artwork is being placed on the site of the former Goldendale Ironworks and was designed by the award-winning public art sculptor Wolfgang Buttress, who designed the Rise sculpture in Belfast.[2] It will be one of the tallest public art sculptures in Britain. The proposed site is currently occupied by the Potteries Pyramid, which has been erroneously placed there since 2007.[3]

Funding

The sculpture was privately funded using £180,000 of Section 106 monies set aside to provide new public art or maintain current public art in the area. The money was secured following the construction of the Blue Planet eco-warehouse built by construction firm Glazeley further along the Chatterley Valley, in the neighbouring borough of Newcastle-under-Lyme.[4][5] Stoke-on-Trent city council put the project out to tender in February 2011 and a number of designs were put forward.[6]

Design

The 69 ft (21m) sculpture is made from COR-TEN Steel, the same material as the Angel of the North and was fabricated in Nottingham. The tapered lozenge design, shaped to evoke a solitary flame such as lit the Chatterley Valley during the heyday of the Iron Works, features powerful colour changing LED lights that will illuminate 1,500 hand blown glass prisms containing wishes or memories of local residents written on handmade paper.[7] Each prism will be held out from the main body of the sculpture by a short stalk, giving the artwork a bristly appearance. Local arts group Letting In The Light were commissioned by artist Wolfgang Buttress to collect the wishes and memories, although people won't be able to see the actual messages once the sculpture is installed, the not-for-profit organisation plans to publish them in an accompanying book.[8]

See also

References