4 July 2011 BBC NEWS website
A giant star has been selected as the winning design for a landmark sculpture on the Scotland-England border.
A giant star has been selected as the winning design for a landmark sculpture on the Scotland-England border.
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Cecil Balmond's Star of Caledonia was chosen by the judges for the Border Crossing project at Gretna.Panelist and Creative Scotland chief executive Andrew Dixon said the design was "rooted in Scotland's scientific contribution to the world.
Mr Dixon said: "The project will provide millions of future visitors with an iconic welcome and an ever-changing contemporary symbol of a confident, creative Scotland."
The project - entitled the Great Unknown - is being developed and produced by Wide Open (South Scotland) Ltd for The Gretna Landmark Trust.
Sri Lanka-born Mr Balmond's previous works include the Arcelor Mittal Orbit tower, the UK's largest public art sculpture, which was designed in collaboration with Anish Kapoor for London 2012.
His latest design is the result of a "fully integrated collaborative effort" with renowned landscape artist Charles Jencks.
"Crossing the border to Scotland, across the River Sark, is now a passage obscured under a bridge by cars travelling at speed," said Mr Jencks.
"Instead of marking this with motorway signs we are using a landform and sculpture that pulls together the adjacent site, the distant hills and the Solway.
"Nestled into the curving mound and springing from it is Cecil Balmond's whirling creation."
He described it as a "scintillating piece of calligraphy seen against the sky" which could have a variety of meanings like a starburst, energy, a thistle or St Andrew's Cross.
"It all depends from where you see it in the landscape," he said.
"These meanings emerge dramatically as you walk the site, but they are also taken up by the landform and embedded in its curves."
'Power of invention'
Three international contenders had made it to the final stage of the selection process.
Designer Cecil Balmond, American artist Ned Kahn and Chris Wilkinson, of Wilkinson Eyre Architects, were in the running for the project.
Designer Cecil Balmond, American artist Ned Kahn and Chris Wilkinson, of Wilkinson Eyre Architects, were in the running for the project.
The winner was selected by a panel of judges for the Gretna Landmark Trust.
The project - entitled the Great Unknown - is being developed and produced by Wide Open (South Scotland) Ltd for The Gretna Landmark Trust.
Sri Lanka-born Mr Balmond's previous works include the Arcelor Mittal Orbit tower, the UK's largest public art sculpture, which was designed in collaboration with Anish Kapoor for London 2012.
His latest design is the result of a "fully integrated collaborative effort" with renowned landscape artist Charles Jencks.
"Crossing the border to Scotland, across the River Sark, is now a passage obscured under a bridge by cars travelling at speed," said Mr Jencks.
"Instead of marking this with motorway signs we are using a landform and sculpture that pulls together the adjacent site, the distant hills and the Solway.
"Nestled into the curving mound and springing from it is Cecil Balmond's whirling creation."
He described it as a "scintillating piece of calligraphy seen against the sky" which could have a variety of meanings like a starburst, energy, a thistle or St Andrew's Cross.
"It all depends from where you see it in the landscape," he said.
"These meanings emerge dramatically as you walk the site, but they are also taken up by the landform and embedded in its curves."
'Power of invention'
Mr Balmond said he wanted to capture the "powerful energy, scientific heritage and magnetic pull of Scotland" - particularly the work of James Clerk Maxwell.
"The Star of Caledonia is a welcome; its kinetic form and light paths a constant trace of Scotland's power of invention," said Mr Balmond. "And I am delighted to be collaborating with Charles Jencks to create an integrated idea of this concept in both landscape and form."
The flagship landmark will have a potential audience of 10 million people crossing the Scotland-England border at Gretna every year.
It is hoped the design can be put in place in time for the Commonwealth Games in 2014.
"The Star of Caledonia is a welcome; its kinetic form and light paths a constant trace of Scotland's power of invention," said Mr Balmond. "And I am delighted to be collaborating with Charles Jencks to create an integrated idea of this concept in both landscape and form."
The flagship landmark will have a potential audience of 10 million people crossing the Scotland-England border at Gretna every year.
It is hoped the design can be put in place in time for the Commonwealth Games in 2014.
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