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Sculpture

Hidcote garden in the Cotswolds to host major sculpture exhibition this autumn


Hidcote garden is hosting a major sculpture exhibition for the first time, this September 2025.

More than 200 works of art, by nearly 50 artists, will be on display throughout the garden and inside the manor house from Friday 1 September to Sunday 2
November 2025. 

The eclectic exhibition, near Broadway, encompasses a variety of styles and materials from marble, granite and
ceramics to aluminium, gold and glass.  

Themes span the environment,
sustainability and human nature with sculptures inspired by the natural world and spectrum of human emotions. 

Featured artists include local and internationally acclaimed sculptors such as Ruth
Moilliet, who draws inspiration from the plant kingdom.

She said: ‘In my work, I reflect a childhood dream to be
able to shrink in size, like Alice in Wonderland, to enable me to enter a
plant’s elaborate structure and explore its floral architecture.

‘The enlarged
scale that I use indicates this desire to be at one with the object of my
study, to be engulfed in a flower.’

Blacksmith Jenny Pickford’s nature-inspired sculptures of ironwork and blown glass will be dotted around to encourage people to look into the light.  

And Marie Boyle, a sculptor
working in bronze and bronze resin, is showing pieces inspired by a love of dance, acrobatics and athletics. 

Contemporary, fluid forms inspired by nature, wildlife and the human form will be brought to life by figurative sculptor Clare
Bigger.

While Shaun Gagg, will showcase his welding skills with sculptures made from recycled everyday objects such as
spent coins, nails, washers, nuts and bolts, as well as keys. 

Neil Wilkin, who has his work displayed in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, draws
inspiration from the natural world to create gleaming glass
sculptures. 

The exhibition is curated by David
Waghorne and Kate McGovern from Sculpture Events.  

David said:
‘We are excited to work with Hidcote and to accept the challenge of
complementing both the Arts & Crafts style garden rooms and the long
avenues and vistas, with works that will suit all gardens and budgets.’ 

Hidcote has been in the care
of the National Trust since 1948.  

Visitor operations and experience manager, Rose Futers, said: ‘We’re thrilled to bring something
completely new to Hidcote and can’t wait for visitors to experience the garden
from a different perspective.

‘These stunning works of art complement the iconic
borders and vistas Hidcote is so well known for, while at the same time
standing out against them, each one inspiring the viewer in its own unique
way.’ 

All the works are available for sale
after the exhibition.  





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