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  • People walking through one of the light structures on the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-6156.jpg
  • A pinetum of pine trees is lit up in different coloured lights in time to music on  the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-6055.jpg
  • A pinetum of pine trees is lit up in different coloured lights in time to music on  the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-6050.jpg
  • A pinetum of pine trees is lit up in different coloured lights in time to music on  the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-6045.jpg
  • A pine tree lit up with cascading lights on the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-6033.jpg
  • A pine tree lit up with cascading lights on  the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-6036.jpg
  • The lit up word Edge reflected in water on  the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-6007.jpg
  • A pinetum of pine trees is lit up in different coloured lights in time to music on  the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-6061.jpg
  • A pinetum of pine trees is lit up in different coloured lights in time to music on  the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-6059.jpg
  • A pinetum of pine trees is lit up in different coloured lights in time to music on  the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-6052.jpg
  • Walkers follow the night trail on the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-6029.jpg
  • Trees are lit up with Christmas tree lights at the top on the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-6008.jpg
  • The lit up word Bed reflected in water on the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-6004.jpg
  • Lights change colour and area to move across the ground on  the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-5975.jpg
  • Lights change colour and area to move across the ground on  the 2nd of January 2022 at Bedgebury, Kent, United Kingdom. Christmas at Bedgebury brings artist together who use light and sound to produce a variety of artistic display pieces throughout the forest at Bedgbury National Pinetum, a10.5 square kilometre woodland run by Forestry England, part of the High Weald area of outstanding natural beauty. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Lights-Bedgebury-5966.jpg
  • Grace of the Sun. An art installation by artist Robert Montgomery at COP26, lit by Little Sun solar powered lights on the 31st of October 2021 in Glasgow, United Kingdom.  Little Sun, announced a solar powered light poem urging commitment to renewable energy at the UN climate conference COP26. Created by Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, the artwork has been constructed using 1,000 solar powered Little Sun lights and stands 11 metres wide and 5 metres tall. The giant solar light poem will illuminate every day at sunset as a poetic beacon of hope for Glasgow. (photo by Andy Aitchison)
    COP26-Art-GraceOfTheSun-4172.jpg
  • Grace of the Sun. An art installation by artist Robert Montgomery at COP26, lit by Little Sun solar powered lights on the 31st of October 2021 in Glasgow, United Kingdom.  Little Sun, announced a solar powered light poem urging commitment to renewable energy at the UN climate conference COP26. Created by Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, the artwork has been constructed using 1,000 solar powered Little Sun lights and stands 11 metres wide and 5 metres tall. The giant solar light poem will illuminate every day at sunset as a poetic beacon of hope for Glasgow. (photo by Andy Aitchison)
    COP26-Art-GraceOfTheSun-4127.jpg
  • Looking Ahead by artist Jacqueline Poncelet for the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot on 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Looking Ahead pierces holes through the brick of the retaining wall of the old Ship Street gasworks. A variety of lenses have been fitted into the holes, including some that mimic bee-eyes, as well as mechanically operated kaleidoscopes. Viewers will be afforded an extraordinary and ever-changing view over the gasworks site, the railway viaduct and the hills, as well as the future. Folkestone's 5th open air art exhibition The Plot sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-190...jpg
  • People enjoying Looking Ahead by artist Jacqueline Poncelet for the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot on 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Looking Ahead pierces holes through the brick of the retaining wall of the old Ship Street gasworks. A variety of lenses have been fitted into the holes, including some that mimic bee-eyes, as well as mechanically operated kaleidoscopes. Viewers will be afforded an extraordinary and ever-changing view over the gasworks site, the railway viaduct and the hills, as well as the future. Folkestone's 5th open air art exhibition The Plot sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-189...jpg
  • Artist Jyll Bradley with her installation Green/Light part of the Folkestone Triennial launch on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. For Folkestone Triennial 2014, Bradley presented Green/Light (for M.R.), a major sculptural light installation created for the former gasworks site on the junction of Ship Street and Foord Road North, Folkestone. Now derelict, the site was once a hub of energy and the place where light was first generated for the town. The creation of the installation was an intense personal journey for Bradley, who was born in Folkestone in the same year that the gasworks were decommissioned, but has lived her adult life as a successful artist in London. Since its creation, Green/Light (For M.R.) has become a highly acclaimed work and much-loved local beacon. Its reflective, exciting presence acts as a powerful catalyst for conversations on the future of the gasworks. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-145...jpg
  • The artist Morag Myerscough at the site of Flock of Seagulls Bag of Stolen Chips for the Folkestone Triennial launch on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Flock of Seagulls Bag of Stolen Chips is a gateway or ‘welcome pavilion’ for the former gasworks site at Ship Street, from where visitors will be able to view the entire site and imagine how it might be developed in the future. Its cylindrical form and its open lattice-work metal construction echo the gasometers that once stood on the site, while its brightly painted panels suggest an altogether more post-industrial atmosphere. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-124...jpg
  • Grace of the Sun. An art installation by artist Robert Montgomery at COP26, lit by Little Sun solar powered lights on the 31st of October 2021 in Glasgow, United Kingdom.  Little Sun, announced a solar powered light poem urging commitment to renewable energy at the UN climate conference COP26. Created by Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, the artwork has been constructed using 1,000 solar powered Little Sun lights and stands 11 metres wide and 5 metres tall. The giant solar light poem will illuminate every day at sunset as a poetic beacon of hope for Glasgow. (photo by Andy Aitchison)
    COP26-Art-GraceOfTheSun-3889.jpg
  • Grace of the Sun. An art installation by artist Robert Montgomery at COP26, lit by Little Sun solar powered lights on the 31st of October 2021 in Glasgow, United Kingdom.  Little Sun, announced a solar powered light poem urging commitment to renewable energy at the UN climate conference COP26. Created by Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, the artwork has been constructed using 1,000 solar powered Little Sun lights and stands 11 metres wide and 5 metres tall. The giant solar light poem will illuminate every day at sunset as a poetic beacon of hope for Glasgow. (photo by Andy Aitchison)
    COP26-Art-GraceOfTheSun-4300.jpg
  • Grace of the Sun. An art installation by artist Robert Montgomery at COP26, lit by Little Sun solar powered lights on the 31st of October 2021 in Glasgow, United Kingdom.  Little Sun, announced a solar powered light poem urging commitment to renewable energy at the UN climate conference COP26. Created by Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, the artwork has been constructed using 1,000 solar powered Little Sun lights and stands 11 metres wide and 5 metres tall. The giant solar light poem will illuminate every day at sunset as a poetic beacon of hope for Glasgow. (photo by Andy Aitchison)
    COP26-Art-GraceOfTheSun-4322.jpg
  • Grace of the Sun. An art installation by artist Robert Montgomery at COP26, lit by Little Sun solar powered lights on the 31st of October 2021 in Glasgow, United Kingdom.  Little Sun, announced a solar powered light poem urging commitment to renewable energy at the UN climate conference COP26. Created by Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, the artwork has been constructed using 1,000 solar powered Little Sun lights and stands 11 metres wide and 5 metres tall. The giant solar light poem will illuminate every day at sunset as a poetic beacon of hope for Glasgow. (photo by Andy Aitchison)
    COP26-Art-GraceOfTheSun-4249.jpg
  • Grace of the Sun. An art installation by artist Robert Montgomery at COP26, lit by Little Sun solar powered lights on the 31st of October 2021 in Glasgow, United Kingdom.  Little Sun, announced a solar powered light poem urging commitment to renewable energy at the UN climate conference COP26. Created by Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, the artwork has been constructed using 1,000 solar powered Little Sun lights and stands 11 metres wide and 5 metres tall. The giant solar light poem will illuminate every day at sunset as a poetic beacon of hope for Glasgow. (photo by Andy Aitchison)
    COP26-Art-GraceOfTheSun-4213.jpg
  • Grace of the Sun. An art installation by artist Robert Montgomery at COP26, lit by Little Sun solar powered lights on the 31st of October 2021 in Glasgow, United Kingdom.  Little Sun, announced a solar powered light poem urging commitment to renewable energy at the UN climate conference COP26. Created by Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, the artwork has been constructed using 1,000 solar powered Little Sun lights and stands 11 metres wide and 5 metres tall. The giant solar light poem will illuminate every day at sunset as a poetic beacon of hope for Glasgow. (photo by Andy Aitchison)
    COP26-Art-GraceOfTheSun-4222.jpg
  • Grace of the Sun. An art installation by artist Robert Montgomery at COP26, lit by Little Sun solar powered lights on the 31st of October 2021 in Glasgow, United Kingdom.  Little Sun, announced a solar powered light poem urging commitment to renewable energy at the UN climate conference COP26. Created by Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, the artwork has been constructed using 1,000 solar powered Little Sun lights and stands 11 metres wide and 5 metres tall. The giant solar light poem will illuminate every day at sunset as a poetic beacon of hope for Glasgow. (photo by Andy Aitchison)
    COP26-Art-GraceOfTheSun-4193.jpg
  • Grace of the Sun. An art installation by artist Robert Montgomery at COP26, lit by Little Sun solar powered lights on the 31st of October 2021 in Glasgow, United Kingdom.  Little Sun, announced a solar powered light poem urging commitment to renewable energy at the UN climate conference COP26. Created by Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, the artwork has been constructed using 1,000 solar powered Little Sun lights and stands 11 metres wide and 5 metres tall. The giant solar light poem will illuminate every day at sunset as a poetic beacon of hope for Glasgow. (photo by Andy Aitchison)
    COP26-Art-GraceOfTheSun-4109.jpg
  • Grace of the Sun. An art installation by artist Robert Montgomery at COP26, lit by Little Sun solar powered lights on the 31st of October 2021 in Glasgow, United Kingdom.  Little Sun, announced a solar powered light poem urging commitment to renewable energy at the UN climate conference COP26. Created by Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, the artwork has been constructed using 1,000 solar powered Little Sun lights and stands 11 metres wide and 5 metres tall. The giant solar light poem will illuminate every day at sunset as a poetic beacon of hope for Glasgow. (photo by Andy Aitchison)
    COP26-Art-GraceOfTheSun-4087.jpg
  • Grace of the Sun. An art installation by artist Robert Montgomery at COP26, lit by Little Sun solar powered lights on the 31st of October 2021 in Glasgow, United Kingdom.  Little Sun, announced a solar powered light poem urging commitment to renewable energy at the UN climate conference COP26. Created by Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, the artwork has been constructed using 1,000 solar powered Little Sun lights and stands 11 metres wide and 5 metres tall. The giant solar light poem will illuminate every day at sunset as a poetic beacon of hope for Glasgow. (photo by Andy Aitchison)
    COP26-Art-GraceOfTheSun-4057.jpg
  • Looking Ahead by artist Jacqueline Poncelet for the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot on 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Looking Ahead pierces holes through the brick of the retaining wall of the old Ship Street gasworks. A variety of lenses have been fitted into the holes, including some that mimic bee-eyes, as well as mechanically operated kaleidoscopes. Viewers will be afforded an extraordinary and ever-changing view over the gasworks site, the railway viaduct and the hills, as well as the future. Folkestone's 5th open air art exhibition The Plot sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-190...jpg
  • Looking Ahead by artist Jacqueline Poncelet for the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot on 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Looking Ahead pierces holes through the brick of the retaining wall of the old Ship Street gasworks. A variety of lenses have been fitted into the holes, including some that mimic bee-eyes, as well as mechanically operated kaleidoscopes. Viewers will be afforded an extraordinary and ever-changing view over the gasworks site, the railway viaduct and the hills, as well as the future. Folkestone's 5th open air art exhibition The Plot sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-190...jpg
  • Looking Ahead by artist Jacqueline Poncelet for the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot on 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Looking Ahead pierces holes through the brick of the retaining wall of the old Ship Street gasworks. A variety of lenses have been fitted into the holes, including some that mimic bee-eyes, as well as mechanically operated kaleidoscopes. Viewers will be afforded an extraordinary and ever-changing view over the gasworks site, the railway viaduct and the hills, as well as the future. Folkestone's 5th open air art exhibition The Plot sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-190...jpg
  • Artist Jyll Bradley with her installation Green/Light part of the Folkestone Triennial launch on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. For Folkestone Triennial 2014, Bradley presented Green/Light (for M.R.), a major sculptural light installation created for the former gasworks site on the junction of Ship Street and Foord Road North, Folkestone. Now derelict, the site was once a hub of energy and the place where light was first generated for the town. The creation of the installation was an intense personal journey for Bradley, who was born in Folkestone in the same year that the gasworks were decommissioned, but has lived her adult life as a successful artist in London. Since its creation, Green/Light (For M.R.) has become a highly acclaimed work and much-loved local beacon. Its reflective, exciting presence acts as a powerful catalyst for conversations on the future of the gasworks. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-144...jpg
  • Artist Jyll Bradley with her installation Green/Light part of the Folkestone Triennial launch on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. For Folkestone Triennial 2014, Bradley presented Green/Light (for M.R.), a major sculptural light installation created for the former gasworks site on the junction of Ship Street and Foord Road North, Folkestone. Now derelict, the site was once a hub of energy and the place where light was first generated for the town. The creation of the installation was an intense personal journey for Bradley, who was born in Folkestone in the same year that the gasworks were decommissioned, but has lived her adult life as a successful artist in London. Since its creation, Green/Light (For M.R.) has become a highly acclaimed work and much-loved local beacon. Its reflective, exciting presence acts as a powerful catalyst for conversations on the future of the gasworks. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-142...jpg
  • An orange bungalow on the edge of Folkestone harbour built by the artist Richard Woods as part of the 2017 Folkestone Triennial. Folkestone, Kent. The artist wanted to create a piece about the housing crisis in the UK.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-2017-Folkestone-Triennial-328...jpg
  • A floating pink bungalow in Folkestone harbour built by the artist Richard Woods as part of the 2017 Folkestone Triennial. Folkestone, Kent. The artist wanted to create a piece about the housing crisis in the UK.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-2017-Folkestone-Triennial-436...jpg
  • The installation Green/Light part of the Folkestone Triennial launch on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. For Folkestone Triennial 2014, Bradley presented Green/Light (for M.R.), a major sculptural light installation created for the former gasworks site on the junction of Ship Street and Foord Road North, Folkestone. Now derelict, the site was once a hub of energy and the place where light was first generated for the town. The creation of the installation was an intense personal journey for Bradley, who was born in Folkestone in the same year that the gasworks were decommissioned, but has lived her adult life as a successful artist in London. Since its creation, Green/Light (For M.R.) has become a highly acclaimed work and much-loved local beacon. Its reflective, exciting presence acts as a powerful catalyst for conversations on the future of the gasworks. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-194...jpg
  • The installation Green/Light part of the Folkestone Triennial launch on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. For Folkestone Triennial 2014, Bradley presented Green/Light (for M.R.), a major sculptural light installation created for the former gasworks site on the junction of Ship Street and Foord Road North, Folkestone. Now derelict, the site was once a hub of energy and the place where light was first generated for the town. The creation of the installation was an intense personal journey for Bradley, who was born in Folkestone in the same year that the gasworks were decommissioned, but has lived her adult life as a successful artist in London. Since its creation, Green/Light (For M.R.) has become a highly acclaimed work and much-loved local beacon. Its reflective, exciting presence acts as a powerful catalyst for conversations on the future of the gasworks. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-195...jpg
  • Chain Brain 2019 by artists Gilbert & George and Climate Emergency Services By Artist Mike Stubbs, two artworks made for the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Folkestone's 5th open air art exhibition The Plot sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-188...jpg
  • Jacqueline Donachie with friends at the launch evening on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-181...jpg
  • People gathered to dance on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-176...jpg
  • People gathered to dance on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-173...jpg
  • Jacqueline Donachie speaking at the launch evening on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-170...jpg
  • Jacqueline Donachie speaking at the launch evening on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-171...jpg
  • A couple pause under a parasol on a summers evening on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-169...jpg
  • A couple pause under a parasol on a summers evening on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-168...jpg
  • People gathered to dance on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-168...jpg
  • A couple pause under a parasol on a summers evening on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-168...jpg
  • People gathered to dance on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-166...jpg
  • People gathered to dance on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-165...jpg
  • People gathered to dance on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-165...jpg
  • People gathered to dance on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-164...jpg
  • People gathered to dance on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-163...jpg
  • Fortune Here, by artist genuinefake on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Taking its inspiration from the Rotunda amusement arcades that drew crowds to the beach until the 1990s, FORTUNE HERE (for Urban Room Folkestone) is a pavilion and visitor experience located near the site of the now demolished domed buildings from which the Rotunda got its name. The pavilion contains themed games - and a course for crazy golf - addressing significant contemporary topics that affect both local residents and Europe’s wider population. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-164...jpg
  • Fortune Here, by artist genuinefake on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Taking its inspiration from the Rotunda amusement arcades that drew crowds to the beach until the 1990s, FORTUNE HERE (for Urban Room Folkestone) is a pavilion and visitor experience located near the site of the now demolished domed buildings from which the Rotunda got its name. The pavilion contains themed games - and a course for crazy golf - addressing significant contemporary topics that affect both local residents and Europe’s wider population. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-164...jpg
  • Fortune Here, by artist genuinefake on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Taking its inspiration from the Rotunda amusement arcades that drew crowds to the beach until the 1990s, FORTUNE HERE (for Urban Room Folkestone) is a pavilion and visitor experience located near the site of the now demolished domed buildings from which the Rotunda got its name. The pavilion contains themed games - and a course for crazy golf - addressing significant contemporary topics that affect both local residents and Europe’s wider population. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-162...jpg
  • Fortune Here, by artist genuinefake on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Taking its inspiration from the Rotunda amusement arcades that drew crowds to the beach until the 1990s, FORTUNE HERE (for Urban Room Folkestone) is a pavilion and visitor experience located near the site of the now demolished domed buildings from which the Rotunda got its name. The pavilion contains themed games - and a course for crazy golf - addressing significant contemporary topics that affect both local residents and Europe’s wider population. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-162...jpg
  • Fortune Here, by artist genuinefake on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Taking its inspiration from the Rotunda amusement arcades that drew crowds to the beach until the 1990s, FORTUNE HERE (for Urban Room Folkestone) is a pavilion and visitor experience located near the site of the now demolished domed buildings from which the Rotunda got its name. The pavilion contains themed games - and a course for crazy golf - addressing significant contemporary topics that affect both local residents and Europe’s wider population. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-161...jpg
  • Fortune Here, by artist genuinefake on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Taking its inspiration from the Rotunda amusement arcades that drew crowds to the beach until the 1990s, FORTUNE HERE (for Urban Room Folkestone) is a pavilion and visitor experience located near the site of the now demolished domed buildings from which the Rotunda got its name. The pavilion contains themed games - and a course for crazy golf - addressing significant contemporary topics that affect both local residents and Europe’s wider population. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-161...jpg
  • Climate Emergency Services by artist Mike Stubbs  is a ‘conflicted’ vehicle and artwork, aiming to evoke and challenge our love / hate relationship with motor vehicles in a period becoming characterised by our increasing fear of climate change on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom.  The conflicted quality of the artwork’s message is condensed into the contract between the exterior and interior of the vehicle.Outside, the bodywork references the high temperature culture of car modification for ‘high performance’ and the linkage between the conspicuous consumption of oil and ‘the apocalyptic’. Inside, the cabin is designed to evoke a science laboratory that might be plotting the environmental indicators triggered by climate change, and a place of cool optimism in which the thinking needed to survive that climate change can be pursued. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-158...jpg
  • Climate Emergency Services by artist Mike Stubbs  is a ‘conflicted’ vehicle and artwork, aiming to evoke and challenge our love / hate relationship with motor vehicles in a period becoming characterised by our increasing fear of climate change on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom.  The conflicted quality of the artwork’s message is condensed into the contract between the exterior and interior of the vehicle.Outside, the bodywork references the high temperature culture of car modification for ‘high performance’ and the linkage between the conspicuous consumption of oil and ‘the apocalyptic’. Inside, the cabin is designed to evoke a science laboratory that might be plotting the environmental indicators triggered by climate change, and a place of cool optimism in which the thinking needed to survive that climate change can be pursued. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-156...jpg
  • Climate Emergency Services by artist Mike Stubbs  is a ‘conflicted’ vehicle and artwork, aiming to evoke and challenge our love / hate relationship with motor vehicles in a period becoming characterised by our increasing fear of climate change on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom.  The conflicted quality of the artwork’s message is condensed into the contract between the exterior and interior of the vehicle.Outside, the bodywork references the high temperature culture of car modification for ‘high performance’ and the linkage between the conspicuous consumption of oil and ‘the apocalyptic’. Inside, the cabin is designed to evoke a science laboratory that might be plotting the environmental indicators triggered by climate change, and a place of cool optimism in which the thinking needed to survive that climate change can be pursued. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-155...jpg
  • Climate Emergency Services by artist Mike Stubbs  is a ‘conflicted’ vehicle and artwork, aiming to evoke and challenge our love / hate relationship with motor vehicles in a period becoming characterised by our increasing fear of climate change on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom.  The conflicted quality of the artwork’s message is condensed into the contract between the exterior and interior of the vehicle.Outside, the bodywork references the high temperature culture of car modification for ‘high performance’ and the linkage between the conspicuous consumption of oil and ‘the apocalyptic’. Inside, the cabin is designed to evoke a science laboratory that might be plotting the environmental indicators triggered by climate change, and a place of cool optimism in which the thinking needed to survive that climate change can be pursued. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-155...jpg
  • Climate Emergency Services by artist Mike Stubbs  is a ‘conflicted’ vehicle and artwork, aiming to evoke and challenge our love / hate relationship with motor vehicles in a period becoming characterised by our increasing fear of climate change on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom.  The conflicted quality of the artwork’s message is condensed into the contract between the exterior and interior of the vehicle.Outside, the bodywork references the high temperature culture of car modification for ‘high performance’ and the linkage between the conspicuous consumption of oil and ‘the apocalyptic’. Inside, the cabin is designed to evoke a science laboratory that might be plotting the environmental indicators triggered by climate change, and a place of cool optimism in which the thinking needed to survive that climate change can be pursued. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-155...jpg
  • Climate Emergency Services by artist Mike Stubbs  is a ‘conflicted’ vehicle and artwork, aiming to evoke and challenge our love / hate relationship with motor vehicles in a period becoming characterised by our increasing fear of climate change on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom.  The conflicted quality of the artwork’s message is condensed into the contract between the exterior and interior of the vehicle.Outside, the bodywork references the high temperature culture of car modification for ‘high performance’ and the linkage between the conspicuous consumption of oil and ‘the apocalyptic’. Inside, the cabin is designed to evoke a science laboratory that might be plotting the environmental indicators triggered by climate change, and a place of cool optimism in which the thinking needed to survive that climate change can be pursued. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-155...jpg
  • Beautiful Sunday is a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-141...jpg
  • Beautiful Sunday is a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-132...jpg
  • Beautiful Sunday is a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-131...jpg
  • Beautiful Sunday is a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-131...jpg
  • The artist Morag Myerscough at the site of Flock of Seagulls Bag of Stolen Chips for the Folkestone Triennial launch on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Flock of Seagulls Bag of Stolen Chips is a gateway or ‘welcome pavilion’ for the former gasworks site at Ship Street, from where visitors will be able to view the entire site and imagine how it might be developed in the future. Its cylindrical form and its open lattice-work metal construction echo the gasometers that once stood on the site, while its brightly painted panels suggest an altogether more post-industrial atmosphere. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-124...jpg
  • The artist Morag Myerscough at the site of Flock of Seagulls Bag of Stolen Chips for the Folkestone Triennial launch on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Flock of Seagulls Bag of Stolen Chips is a gateway or ‘welcome pavilion’ for the former gasworks site at Ship Street, from where visitors will be able to view the entire site and imagine how it might be developed in the future. Its cylindrical form and its open lattice-work metal construction echo the gasometers that once stood on the site, while its brightly painted panels suggest an altogether more post-industrial atmosphere. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-124...jpg
  • The artist Morag Myerscough at the site of Flock of Seagulls Bag of Stolen Chips for the Folkestone Triennial launch on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Flock of Seagulls Bag of Stolen Chips is a gateway or ‘welcome pavilion’ for the former gasworks site at Ship Street, from where visitors will be able to view the entire site and imagine how it might be developed in the future. Its cylindrical form and its open lattice-work metal construction echo the gasometers that once stood on the site, while its brightly painted panels suggest an altogether more post-industrial atmosphere. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-123...jpg
  • The artist Morag Myerscough at the site of Flock of Seagulls Bag of Stolen Chips for the Folkestone Triennial launch on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Flock of Seagulls Bag of Stolen Chips is a gateway or ‘welcome pavilion’ for the former gasworks site at Ship Street, from where visitors will be able to view the entire site and imagine how it might be developed in the future. Its cylindrical form and its open lattice-work metal construction echo the gasometers that once stood on the site, while its brightly painted panels suggest an altogether more post-industrial atmosphere. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-122...jpg
  • The artist Morag Myerscough at the site of Flock of Seagulls Bag of Stolen Chips for the Folkestone Triennial launch on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Flock of Seagulls Bag of Stolen Chips is a gateway or ‘welcome pavilion’ for the former gasworks site at Ship Street, from where visitors will be able to view the entire site and imagine how it might be developed in the future. Its cylindrical form and its open lattice-work metal construction echo the gasometers that once stood on the site, while its brightly painted panels suggest an altogether more post-industrial atmosphere. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-122...jpg
  • Artist Maggie Hambling at her London Studio. Posing with her 'Special Brew' series.
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  • Chain Brain 2019 by artists Gilbert & George and Climate Emergency Services By Artist Mike Stubbs, two artworks made for the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Folkestone's 5th open air art exhibition The Plot sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-188...jpg
  • Chain Brain 2019 by artists Gilbert & George and Climate Emergency Services By Artist Mike Stubbs, two artworks made for the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Folkestone's 5th open air art exhibition The Plot sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-187...jpg
  • Jacqueline Donachie speaking at the launch evening on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-180...jpg
  • People gathered to dance on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-179...jpg
  • People gathered to dance on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-177...jpg
  • People gathered to dance on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-173...jpg
  • People gathered to dance on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-172...jpg
  • Jacqueline Donachie speaking at the launch evening on Beautiful Sunday, a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 21st of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-170...jpg
  • Fortune Here, by artist genuinefake on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Taking its inspiration from the Rotunda amusement arcades that drew crowds to the beach until the 1990s, FORTUNE HERE (for Urban Room Folkestone) is a pavilion and visitor experience located near the site of the now demolished domed buildings from which the Rotunda got its name. The pavilion contains themed games - and a course for crazy golf - addressing significant contemporary topics that affect both local residents and Europe’s wider population. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-162...jpg
  • Beautiful Sunday is a sculptural installation by the artist Jacqueline Donachie that celebrates ‘all the dance floors of Folkestone’ by marking out their size one-to-one on a huge stage set in the middle of the derelict gasworks site. Visitors are invited to stand on the stage and remember (if they are local residents) the dance floors - many of which are no longer active on the 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-139...jpg
  • Climate Emergency Services By Artist Mike Stubb parked in the middle fo the road for the launch of The Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot Tontine street was closed off and more artwork appeared. This is Folkestone's 5th open air art exhibition and the third one curated by Lewis Biggs. The Plot sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-182...jpg
  • Climate Emergency Services By Artist Mike Stubb parked in the middle fo the road for the launch of The Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot Tontine street was closed off and more artwork appeared. This is Folkestone's 5th open air art exhibition and the third one curated by Lewis Biggs. The Plot sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK.  (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-182...jpg
  • The Marcus Rashford mural displayed on the side of a cafe in Withington, south Manchester on the 6th of August 2021, Manchester, United Kingdom.  The mural has attracted huge numbers of people since the Euro 2020 final between England and Italy on 11 July and the subsequent racist abuse levied at Rashford and other Black players on the England team. Based on a photograph by Daniel Cheetham, the painting of Marcus Rashford was completed in 2020 by street artist Akse, in collaboration with the street art project Withington Walls, to commemorate the footballer's work to reduce child hunger. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Marcus-Rashford-Mural-2572.jpg
  • Letters of support attached to the wall of the Marcus Rashford mural displayed on the side of a cafe in Withington, south Manchester on the 6th of August 2021, Manchester, United Kingdom.  The mural has attracted huge numbers of people since the Euro 2020 final between England and Italy on 11 July and the subsequent racist abuse levied at Rashford and other Black players on the England team. Based on a photograph by Daniel Cheetham, the painting of Marcus Rashford was completed in 2020 by street artist Akse, in collaboration with the street art project Withington Walls, to commemorate the footballer's work to reduce child hunger. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Marcus-Rashford-Mural-2568.jpg
  • Letters of support attached to the wall of the Marcus Rashford mural displayed on the side of a cafe in Withington, south Manchester on the 6th of August 2021, Manchester, United Kingdom.  The mural has attracted huge numbers of people since the Euro 2020 final between England and Italy on 11 July and the subsequent racist abuse levied at Rashford and other Black players on the England team. Based on a photograph by Daniel Cheetham, the painting of Marcus Rashford was completed in 2020 by street artist Akse, in collaboration with the street art project Withington Walls, to commemorate the footballer's work to reduce child hunger. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Marcus-Rashford-Mural-2565.jpg
  • Letters of support attached to the wall of the Marcus Rashford mural displayed on the side of a cafe in Withington, south Manchester on the 6th of August 2021, Manchester, United Kingdom.  The mural has attracted huge numbers of people since the Euro 2020 final between England and Italy on 11 July and the subsequent racist abuse levied at Rashford and other Black players on the England team. Based on a photograph by Daniel Cheetham, the painting of Marcus Rashford was completed in 2020 by street artist Akse, in collaboration with the street art project Withington Walls, to commemorate the footballer's work to reduce child hunger. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Marcus-Rashford-Mural-2563.jpg
  • Letters of support attached to the wall of the Marcus Rashford mural displayed on the side of a cafe in Withington, south Manchester on the 6th of August 2021, Manchester, United Kingdom.  The mural has attracted huge numbers of people since the Euro 2020 final between England and Italy on 11 July and the subsequent racist abuse levied at Rashford and other Black players on the England team. Based on a photograph by Daniel Cheetham, the painting of Marcus Rashford was completed in 2020 by street artist Akse, in collaboration with the street art project Withington Walls, to commemorate the footballer's work to reduce child hunger. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Marcus-Rashford-Mural-2562.jpg
  • Letters of support attached to the wall of the Marcus Rashford mural displayed on the side of a cafe in Withington, south Manchester on the 6th of August 2021, Manchester, United Kingdom.  The mural has attracted huge numbers of people since the Euro 2020 final between England and Italy on 11 July and the subsequent racist abuse levied at Rashford and other Black players on the England team. Based on a photograph by Daniel Cheetham, the painting of Marcus Rashford was completed in 2020 by street artist Akse, in collaboration with the street art project Withington Walls, to commemorate the footballer's work to reduce child hunger. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Marcus-Rashford-Mural-2561.jpg
  • Janus’ Fortress: Folkestone by Pilar Quinteros is a monumental sculptural head with two faces, representing Janus, the Roman god of beginnings and transitions, who was often associated with thresholds – and so also with a present poised between the past and the future on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The sculpture is located high up on the East Cliff, overlooking Folkestone’s harbour, and with its two faces is able to look both towards the European mainland and towards England, connecting them, as Folkestone has always done whether as a fortress or a port. It is made of chalk and plaster, and will gradually erode and disintegrate. The artist’s intention was to make a kind of anti-monument, imposing in scale but ephemeral and vulnerable. Its disintegration also mirrors (and reflects on) the gradual erosion of the chalk cliffs and coastline. The white cliffs of Dover are sometimes referred to as the fortress walls of England. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-169...jpg
  • Janus’ Fortress: Folkestone by Pilar Quinteros is a monumental sculptural head with two faces, representing Janus, the Roman god of beginnings and transitions, who was often associated with thresholds – and so also with a present poised between the past and the future on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The sculpture is located high up on the East Cliff, overlooking Folkestone’s harbour, and with its two faces is able to look both towards the European mainland and towards England, connecting them, as Folkestone has always done whether as a fortress or a port. It is made of chalk and plaster, and will gradually erode and disintegrate. The artist’s intention was to make a kind of anti-monument, imposing in scale but ephemeral and vulnerable. Its disintegration also mirrors (and reflects on) the gradual erosion of the chalk cliffs and coastline. The white cliffs of Dover are sometimes referred to as the fortress walls of England. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-168...jpg
  • Janus’ Fortress: Folkestone by Pilar Quinteros is a monumental sculptural head with two faces, representing Janus, the Roman god of beginnings and transitions, who was often associated with thresholds – and so also with a present poised between the past and the future on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The sculpture is located high up on the East Cliff, overlooking Folkestone’s harbour, and with its two faces is able to look both towards the European mainland and towards England, connecting them, as Folkestone has always done whether as a fortress or a port. It is made of chalk and plaster, and will gradually erode and disintegrate. The artist’s intention was to make a kind of anti-monument, imposing in scale but ephemeral and vulnerable. Its disintegration also mirrors (and reflects on) the gradual erosion of the chalk cliffs and coastline. The white cliffs of Dover are sometimes referred to as the fortress walls of England. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-168...jpg
  • Gateways of the sea by artist Atta Kwami on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The free standing three-dimensional artworks are an imposing but joyful asymmetric double archway stands at the junction of four pathways in the centre of the Harbour Arm. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-159...jpg
  • Janus’ Fortress: Folkestone by Pilar Quinteros is a monumental sculptural head with two faces, representing Janus, the Roman god of beginnings and transitions, who was often associated with thresholds – and so also with a present poised between the past and the future on 20th of July 2021, in Folkestone, United Kingdom. The sculpture is located high up on the East Cliff, overlooking Folkestone’s harbour, and with its two faces is able to look both towards the European mainland and towards England, connecting them, as Folkestone has always done whether as a fortress or a port. It is made of chalk and plaster, and will gradually erode and disintegrate. The artist’s intention was to make a kind of anti-monument, imposing in scale but ephemeral and vulnerable. Its disintegration also mirrors (and reflects on) the gradual erosion of the chalk cliffs and coastline. The white cliffs of Dover are sometimes referred to as the fortress walls of England. The artwork is part of the Creative Folkestone Triennial 2020, The Plot, which sees 27 newly commissioned artworks appearing around the south coast seaside town. The new work builds on the work from previous triennials making Folkestone the biggest urban outdoor contemporary art exhibition in the UK. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
    UK-Art-Folkestone-Triennial-2020-153...jpg
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