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Published:
11:30 AM May 20, 2021
Pakefield Man by artist Tobias Ford is installed at Potton Hall near Saxmundham for the Waveney and Blyth Arts Sculpture in the Valley trail
- Credit: Sonya Duncan
A huge metal sculpture of a prehistoric man has been erected at the entrance to a new exhibition taking place near the Suffolk coast.
Tickets are already selling fast for Waveney & Blyth Arts Sculpture in the Valley 2021 show at Potton Hall, Saxmundham, which is due to open on Friday, May 28.
Tobias Ford s giant sculpture - which was a big hit at the First Light Festival in Lowestoft - was moved from a farmer s field in Homersfield in north Suffolk.
“We’re blessed with a new and extraordinary site close to the East Suffolk coast with its woodland, heath, marsh and, of course, sky,” says David Baldry who is head of fine art at the University of Suffolk and, as an artist himself, works in drawing, sculpture, video and architecture.
“Art is at its best when pointing to something we don’t always acknowledge or which we take for granted,” he says. “This year, artists have every opportunity to think about, engage with and make sculpture in a very special location.”
Sculpture in the Valley curator David Baldry, head of fine art at the University of Suffolk, says art is at its best when pointing to something we don’t always acknowledge or which we take for granted”.
Pakefield Man by artist Tobias Ford is heading to Saxmundham
- Credit: Sculpture in the Valley
A giant iron sculpture of a prehistoric man is heading to a wildflower meadow near Saxmundham, where it will form part of a two-month display.
Tobias Ford created Pakefield Man – a large iron human form inspired by some of Britain’s earliest human settlers – which was a big hit at Lowestoft’s First Light Festival.
Since the festival, it has been kept in a meadow at Homersfield in north Suffolk.
However, it is heading down to Potton Hall on the Suffolk Coast and Heaths Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) on Wednesday, May 19, to be displayed then sold.
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