inspired

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The Chiltern Sculpture Trail is a site which attracts many of thousands of visitors from all walks of life every year. It's particularly popular with families who make good use of the picnic area on sunny weekends. Another very important group are children visiting on organised school and college trips. They produce a wealth of art inspired by art in the shape of coursework and sculptural or ceramic project pieces. More about the educational aspects of the Trail can be read on the background:education page. The Chiltern Sculpture Trust encourage the use of the Trail as a resource for other art created by visitors inspired by the works or the natural environment there.

Local school children enjoy adding to the Trail on an organised workshop, lead by sculptor Roger Perkins. The Trail often plays host to organised workshops. This one, for local school children, was lead by sculptor and former Chiltern Sculpture Trust trustee Roger Perkins. Local school children enjoy adding to the Trail on an organised workshop, lead by sculptor Roger Perkins.
School and college trips represent a key area of the Trails work. The photographs above were taken during a Trail tour and workshop which was lead by sculptor and former Chiltern Sculpture Trust trustee Roger Perkins. They show children from a local school creating pieces in the wood, using indigenous and 'found' materials. Anyone visiting the Trail will probably chance upon 'Blair Witchesque' constructions amongst the trees, which may inspire them to make their own additions to the collection. However, it should be noted that anything made from natural materials found in the wood should be disassembled and spread afterwards.

Photographic negative of a section of 'that thin red streak' taken by Paul Smith. A photographic negative of Coming Ready Or Not taken by Paul Smith. Paul Smith, the designer of this web site, spent many hours photographing the sculptures on the Trail. One of his techniques, as seen on the pages featuring Fish Tree and Information Station 100 Yards, is to use negative images to show fine detail more clearly. He enjoys the unusual colours this also produces; the greens of the wood made into beautiful purples and blues, and in the picture of Coming Ready Or Not, right, the way that the blue of the sky has become a post-apocalyptic brown or orange. Dark trees become bleached and skeletal and the 'military' look of this sculpture is made even more stark and foreboding by the reversal of light and shade.

To the left is a photograph of the 'cloth' element of 'that thin red streak' which, as a negative, seems to glow as if lit by neon from within. Patches of spring grass become colourful smudges of cartoon toxic waste while the railing becomes reddened with non-existant rust.

More artwork inspired by the Trail to follow soon...

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