Artist Rachel Maclean s firs permanent outdoor commission created in Jupiter Artland in West Lothian combines architecture and animation ONCE upon a time, in the middle of the woods, there was an upside-down shop. And in the upside-down shop there was an upside-down girl … “You follow the hearts,” the artist Rachel Maclean tells me as we walk through the trees. On the ground in front of us a trail of candy-coloured cordiform tiles are embedded in the soil. We are in a bosky glade in Jupiter Artland, near Ratho and Maclean is taking me to see her new work. Entitled upside mimi ᴉɯᴉɯ uʍop (yes, it s supposed to be like that), it is her first permanent outdoor commission. It takes her familiar concerns (gender, femininity, body image, identity, late-era capitalism) and her traditional aesthetics (pinkness, cuteness, flamboyance) into new territory. For once the video artist’s fantasies have been made concrete. Or plasterboard and wood at any rate.