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Press
release and photos
On
15 August 2007 the Friends of the Park were joined by Councillor Shan
Alexander (Executive Member for Leisure) to celebrate completion of the
main sculpture. The following press release was issued by the council
accompanied by the photos shown below:
NEW
SCULPTURE AT MARPLE MEMORIAL PARK
Have you ever seen an owl up close? Well now's your chance to come to Marple Memorial Park and view a hand-carved wooden sculpture of an
owl. As well as being able to see the wooden owl called Midnight, visitors will be able to see other hand carved animals including a fox, badger, mole, squirrel and a hedgehog.
All the sculptures have been carved from the remains of a Copper Beech tree by local sculptor Andrew Frost. Andrew has also created a similar piece in Etherow Country Park and Nature Reserve.
Andrew was commissioned to do the sculpture in July by the Friends of Marple Memorial Park, who were keen to seek a positive outcome from the tree's unfortunate demise after it was found to be unsafe. Stockport Council's Marple Area Committee, the Marple District Regeneration Partnership and a Voluntary Arts Grant from the Council helped the Friends of group fund the
project.
Bad weather in July caused the work on the sculpture to be delayed but Andrew has recently finished carving the main trunk of the tree. However, the project is still not quite finished and he will return in September to complete a series of ground sculptures that will be created from the boughs of the tree.
Local children were involved in the project when they were consulted through local schools and Marple Library. They were asked to vote for the owl's name and for their favourite creatures to be included in the design. The children also submitted nearly 500 drawings and designs for the ground sculptures that will be scattered in front of the wooden owl. The drawings and designs can all be viewed in the children's area at Marple Library.
Councillor Shan Alexander, Executive Member for Leisure, said: "This is a very impressive sculpture and the artist, Andrew Frost, must be congratulated on his work. I would encourage local people to come along to see the sculpture and enjoy Marple Memorial Park, one of eight green flag parks within Stockport."
The Friends of Marple Memorial Park hold Task Days on the last Saturday of each month and meet once each month on a Monday night, from 6.30pm, at Marple
Library. For more information about the Friends of group visit their notice board in the park, which will have details of their next meeting, or visit their web site at
www.marplememorialpark.org.uk.
Andrew Frost's work can be viewed at
www.treeart.co.uk
ENDS
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L-R, Terry Wood, Cllr. Shan Alexander,
Micaela Wood, Adrian Ellis, Bill Ardern, Gill Whittaker, Jay
Havoleana & Mark Whittaker
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Main
Sculpture Finished
Andrew
has now finished the tree sculpture itself and we have a series of
photographs taken as the work progressed below. Thank you to John
Connors who provided many of these. The sculpture has currently been
stained and oiled. It still has a few more coats to be applied but we
hope you agree it's looking fantastic already.
Andrew
has been delayed by the weather so much that he has run into problems
with a backlog of work building up and has to undertake another project
with a tight deadline before returning to create our ground sculptures
from the remaining boughs of the tree. We look forward to his return to
our park to put the final touches to the excellent work he has already
done.
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Locks
Festival
The
Locks Festival was blessed with just about the only sunshine we
seem to have had for the last month, in between the downpours of
course! Thankfully this meant that Andrew was able to make a
belated start to the project and it was certainly worth waiting
for. Everyone we spoke to on the day was amazed at how incredible
the sculpture looked and they were very excited about seeing the
work progress. Unfortunately the appalling weather has continued
to cause delays and Andrew has been unable to return this week.
Hopefully he will be back to continue soon and is currently
expected on Monday 9th July, weather permitting of course. The
following photographs show the fantastic progress made during the
Locks Festival and we hope to be bringing you more soon. Isn't it
incredible how much like the original sketch it looks!
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The first cut
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Midnight emerges
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A bit of major surgery
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How do you carve eyes on a mouse with a chain saw?
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Easy, just like that!
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An audience enthralled
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Youngsters enjoy the results
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| As those
of you who have seen the sculpture this week will
know, sadly it was vandalised within 24 hours of
work starting by someone who decided to spray it
with black paint.
Thankfully it has not
been burnt as reported in the Stockport Express and
it looks like the paint will clean off reasonably
well. We can only hope it will not be subjected to
further attacks and the pleasure brought to so many
people in Marple, especially the young children who
have already taken Midnight the Owl to their hearts,
will not be ruined by an ignorant minority. |
|
Work
to start at Locks Festival!
Well
it's still technically week commencing 25th June but only just!
Unfortunately Andrew has been delayed on his previous job due to
the awful weather last week and this week but has now confirmed
that he will start on Sunday 1st July during the Locks Festival.
Lets hope that the weather is kinder to us over the weekend than
it has been for the last two weeks.
The
drawings and designs produced by local school children will
available to view in the Marple Website tent during the Locks
Festival itself and will then go back to Marple Library early next
week, when we hope they will be put on display while Andrew
continues his work. We've had a few more and are now up to 475!
The
Friends of the Park will also be holding a tombola in the Marple
Website tent to raise funds so we hope you will come along and say
hello.
To
learn more about the Locks Festival visit www.marplelocks.org.uk
Work
to start week commencing 25th June!
The
Friends of the Park are pleased to announce that we've had a
fantastic response to our consultation about the Tree Sculpture
design. It has obviously caught the imagination of local school
children as we've had nearly 140 different names suggested for the
owl. Some some of them were quite unusual like "The Owl What Makes Your Dreams Come True!"
but the most popular by far was "Midnight" with 51 out of almost
340 votes.
Nearly
920 votes were cast for the most popular creatures to join
Midnight in the Tree Sculpture. Heading the huge variety of native and exotic species was the
squirrel with exactly 200 votes. Runner up was the hedgehog, followed by the
fox, the badger, a variety of birds led by the Robin, then
butterflies, mice, rabbits and bats. We hope that these will all be able to feature in the final design
produced by chainsaw artist Andrew Frost when he carries out the
work. We had some great suggestions too, like including a family
of bookworms, a bird's nest with baby birds and eggs and even to
include holes for real birds to nest in the remains of the tree.
All of these ideas will be passed on to Andrew to consider.
We have also had more than
430 drawings and designs from local school children to inspire
Andrew when he is creating the ground sculptures from the boughs of the tree.
There are more detail of the drawing and consultation results
below and we would like to thank all the children, and their
teachers, for showing such enthusiasm for our project. It is
planned to put as many of the drawings and designs as possible on
display in Marple Library while the work is going on.
Andrew
is due to start the sculpture during week commencing Monday 25th June and you will be able to come and watch
him at
work in the park. We also hope that he will be there during the Locks Festival on Sunday 1st July, when we expect
his work in progress to a attract a large audience and a great
deal of attention.
Check
back on the web site nearer the time to confirm the exact date
that Andrew will start and we look forward to seeing you there! |
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Tree
Sculpture Consultation (ended May 2007)
As
outlined above, we've had a superb response from local children to
our consultation on the design of the Tree Sculpture in Marple
Memorial Park. 137 different names were suggested for the wise owl,
who is central to the sculpture's "Nature and Knowledge" theme.
The top 24 names that received more than one vote each were:
| Name |
Votes |
Name |
Votes |
Name |
Votes |
Name |
Votes |
| Midnight |
51 |
Oswald |
5 |
Brabus |
2 |
Mrs Barton |
2 |
| Harry |
32 |
Ollie / Olly |
5 |
Browny / Tawny |
2 |
Old Brown |
2 |
| Wizzy |
32 |
Hedwig |
4 |
Fifi |
2 |
Old Know-it-all |
2 |
| Poppy |
30 |
Albert Owl |
3 |
Hooty |
2 |
Twit woo |
2 |
| Miles |
19 |
Oldknow |
3 |
Merlin |
2 |
Wisey |
2 |
| Hector |
13 |
Wilbert |
3 |
Mr Wise Owl |
2 |
Woody |
2 |
Forty three
different types of creature suggested to accompany
"Midnight" the Owl in the tree sculpture received 919
votes between them. The top 20 most popular were:
| Creature |
Votes |
Creature |
Votes |
| Squirrel |
200 |
Mole |
21 |
| Hedghog |
172 |
Boar |
19 |
| Fox |
86 |
Dog |
17 |
| Badger |
82 |
Horse |
16 |
| Birds |
73 |
Cat |
11 |
| Butterfly |
36 |
Duck |
6 |
| Mouse |
35 |
Worm / millipede |
6 |
| Rabbit |
34 |
Frog |
5 |
| Bat |
27 |
Snake |
5 |
| Wolf |
22 |
Deer |
4 |
In
addition to suggesting a name for the owl and voting for their
favourite creatures the children were asked to submit drawings and
designs for the smaller ground sculptures that Andrew will create
from the boughs of the tree. We were almost overwhelmed by the
response to this with a fantastic 432 submissions with some
wonderful ideas for Andrew to draw inspiration from. Twenty of the
most colourful and suitable for including on the Internet are
shown below but we hope that a much larger display of these will
be hosted in Marple Library while the work is underway. We also
hope that Marple Library will be prepared to retain the folders containing
all the drawings indefinitely, so that people can continue to view
the designs for years to come after the sculpture is finished.
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Update
15 April 2007
More
fantastic news as the Marple District Centre Partnership
come to the project's aid with a £1,000 donation towards
the Tree Sculpture. Brian Nash, Stockport Council's District
& Local Centres Regeneration Manager, has provided
us with the following statement:
| Marple
Regeneration Partnership was established by
Stockport Council in 2002 as part of the Strategy
for the District Centres. One of the key
achievements of the Strategy has been its approach
to the development and encouragement of increased
'ownership' of issues by local stakeholders
including businesses, residents and local interest
groups. This has led in to a significant increase in
local private sector involvement, engagement and
participation in District Centre activities with the
key aim to ensure that Marple retains a viable and
vital role within the economic, social and
environmental fabric of the Borough. Successful
projects include the Refurbishment of Market
Street/Derby Way, environmental improvements at The
Hollins, dramatic festive decorations and events,
promotional banners and Derby Street Car Park
refurbishment.
The Partnership is
pleased to support the activities of the Friends of
Memorial Park as we recognise the important
contribution the Park makes to making Marple an
attractive place to shop, work, live and visit.
This importance was
reinforced with the allocation of major resources to
create a much improved entrance from Stockport Road.
The project provided high quality materials
including paving and street lighting to that gave
the Park an entrance worthy of the status within
Marple.
The Partnership
participates and supports a number of local
initiatives that all involve the use and development
of the Park, ranging from Task Days to the hugely
successful Marple Carnival and Marple Locks
Festival. The Park is undoubtedly a central focus of
Marple life and the local businesses in the shopping
centre can all benefit from this valuable asset. |
So
a big thank you to the District Centre Partnership for their
generous support. This donation takes us to a total of
£3,000, which is within striking distance of our target and
will ensure that the project can go ahead. Keep
watching this space for more progress and to get involved in
the consultation process, which we will be starting soon.
Of
course if you can help us with a final push to reach our funding
target of £3,358 do please get in touch with Mark Whittaker on 427
4955.
Update
30 March 2007
The
great news is that as well as receiving a cheque for £1,000
from Marple Area Committee today, we also learnt that the
Friends' application for a Stockport Voluntary Arts Grant
has been successful and another £1,000 will soon be on its
way. This means that we have raised approximately 60% of the
£3,358 estimated to be required to complete the whole
project and now need to find just over £1,300.
Update
25 March 2007
Our
story made the local papers last week, with the article
below appearing in the Stockport Express on Wednesday 21st
March. We have also submitted an application for a Stockport
Voluntary Arts Grant towards the cost of creating the
sculptures. We should learn the outcome of this application
in a few weeks time. In addition, the large boughs have been
removed and laid on the ground near the trunk in preparation
for the work to start once we have managed to raise the rest
of the funds required.

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Tree
Sculpture in Memorial Park
In
December 2006 there were strong protests as work began to
fell the large Copper Beech tree in the park between the
Bowling Green and the Council's offices.
Due
to poor communication protesters believed that the tree was
being felled simply to allow scaffolding to be erected for
repairs to the offices. Unbeknown to them a survey of the
tree earlier in the year (following a request for it to be
trimmed back for the scaffold) had revealed it to be in a
dangerous condition.
The
Friends of the Park were disappointed not to learn about the
plans to fell the tree before the work was started but after
being briefed about the tree's condition by council
representatives it was agreed to support the decision to
remove it on safety grounds.
As
a result of the protests work was stopped until the
situation could be reviewed by Marple's Area Committee, who,
after being briefed at their meeting in January 2007,
reluctantly gave approval for the felling to be completed.
Since
learning about this the Friends of the Park have been keen
to try and develop a positive outcome from the tree's
unfortunate demise and through the Parks and Recreation Team
it was arranged to leave the main trunk in place so that its
suitability for a sculpture similar to the Etherow Owl at
Compstall could be assessed.
In
February the remains of the tree were examined by Andrew
Frost, sculptor of the Etherow Owl, and he confirmed that it
would be possible to do this. Andrew gave a quotation to
carry out the work and provided the Friends with a sketch of a
preliminary design using a nature and knowledge
theme that features animals and books.
The
cost of the sculpture will be £2,000 to carve the main
trunk and a further £1,000 to create a minimum of six
ground sculptures using the boughs of the tree. There will
also be additional costs for preservative materials and for
fixing the ground sculptures if they can be afforded in the
final scheme. The Friends also propose to include a plaque
explaining how the sculpture was funded, which will add a
little to the total cost.
On
7th March 2007 the Friends presented the design to Marple
Area Committee and applied for a Kick-Start Grant to help
pay for the work. The Committee were very positive about the
idea to use the remains of the tree in this way and
generously agreed to contribute £1,000 toward the project.
The
Friends now need help to raise at least another £1,000
towards the cost of this project, enabling the trunk to be
carved, and hopefully enough to pay for the ground
sculptures too. So if you feel you may be able to help,
either as an individual or as a representative of a local
organisation or business, then please get in touch with Mark
Whittaker on 427 4955.
Please
let us know what you think of these plans in the Forum
& Noticeboard.
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Andrew Frost's
preliminary design for
the tree in Marple Memorial Park:
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