For those looking to soak up some culture, we’ve rounded up nine of the best sculpture parks and trails in the UK, from a metalwork safari in Shropshire to a contemporary art haven in Norfolk.
LessThe UK’s oldest sculpture park celebrated its 40th anniversary in 2017 and usually has around 100 sculptures to discover across its massive site, near Wakefield in West Yorkshire. The permanent exhibition includes works by local modernist sculptors Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth alongside visiting installations by renowned figures including Damien Hirst and Ai Weiwei. At a whopping 500 acres, it’d take you days to uncover everything YSP has to offer.
Looking to start a little sculpture garden of your own? Head to this ten-acre woodland garden, near Farnham in Surrey, where you’ll find as many as 800 sculptures by some 300 international artists on display at any one time. Ranging from the classical to the contemporary, the figurative to the surreal, virtually every style and taste is catered for, and with nearly everything in the garden on sale, the collection is constantly changing.
Gloucestershire’s ancient royal forest is home to one of the UK’s oldest sculpture trails. Opened in 1986, it features 17 sculptures along a four-and-a-half-mile circular route, many of which interact with the forest setting or are constructed from its raw materials. ‘Iron Road’, for example, is made using railway sleepers placed on a disused line, and ‘Cathedral’ is a a fifteen-foot-tall stained-glass window depicting a woodland scene, hanging among the trees as if part of the landscape.
The list of installations at this 120-acre woodland sculpture park in the grounds of Bonnington House reads like a who’s who of contemporary sculpture, with the likes of Antony Gormley, Phyllida Barlow and Anish Kapoor commissioned to create permanent works for the site. Highlights include Marc Quinn’s 12-metre-high ‘Love Bomb’ orchid, a psychedelic paddling pool called ‘Gateway’ by Joana Vasconcelos, and ‘The Cells of Life’, a series of neatly landscaped grassy plains and lakes.
Home to the largest sculpture collection in the Midlands, the British Ironworks Centre’s 30-acre garden features more than 100 metalwork sculptures. The main attraction is the educational Extinction Trail, a ‘metal safari park’ featuring forty sculptures of extinct and endangered creatures from a woolly mammal to a family of giraffes. Other highlights include Uri Geller’s ‘Spoon Gorilla’, a sculpture made using 40,000 spoons.
Following wishes expressed in her will, Barbara Hepworth’s family turned her St Ives home and studio into a public gallery in 1976, shortly after the artist’s death. Now owned and operated by the Tate, it features the largest permanent collection of works by the modernist sculptor, with many of the sculptor’s personal favourites on display in a small but picturesque garden overlooking the sea.
Keen walkers can discover 22 massive sculptures and interactive installations on the 27-mile forest trail around Northumberland’s Kielder Reservoir, which offers plenty of entertainment for younger visitors. Make your way through the Minotaur Maze, take rubbings of the brass plates on the two-mile Kielder Keepsake trail or enjoy the view from the ‘Janus Chairs’, three giant rotating seats on a peninsula jutting into the reservoir.
The indoor galleries at the Sainsbury Centre of Visual Arts brim with big names like Francis Bacon, Picasso and Degas. But more than 20 sculptures also surround the Norman Foster-designed building set on the University of East Anglia’s 350-acre campus. These include pieces by sculptors Henry Moore, Antony Gormley, Lynn Chadwick and Elisabeth Frink. But the absolute best thing? If you’re lucky, you might be able to spot some of the resident wild rabbits frolicking among the artworks.