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Rushenden Public Art 2010
Situated on the North Kent Coast in the Thames Gateway, The
Isle of Sheppey has been identified as a 'locus' for
contemporary Art in the Public Realm. Queenborough &
Rushenden Regeneration scheme is national best practice for
community engagement, and has partnered with innovative arts
organisation Art at the Centre Swale to commission two
exciting Art in the Public Realm projects. The partners
decided to commission artist Richard Perry to develop and
deliver two very different works with the focus being that
both would be community driven in artworks.

Shoalstone by Richard Perry
Shoalstone is a sculpture that
celebrates the sense of community that the artist
encountered when running stone carving workshops in
Rushenden. The themes that arose from the workshops focused
on Rushenden being on the Swale and Medway estuary, local
fish and fictional sea creatures featured strongly in the
drawings and carvings made by children and adults during the
week. The fish represented in the sculpture (eels, rays,
flat fish etc) are all local to the Swale and Medway
estuary. The relief carvings interweave and overlay
producing a symbolic and dynamic sense of community and
place. The finished workshop carvings have been integrated
into the new scheme that forms the pathway for the main
sculpture.

Rushenden Colour Palette by
Richard Perry
As part of the
Rushenden Art in the Public Realm project, artist Richard
Perry has been commissioned to design an artwork for the
fence which lines the road as one enters Rushenden, owned by
Medichem International. The concept for the project was to
create a colour palette for Rushenden, taken from images
taken by local photographers, as part of the Roaming
Perspectives 3 workshop. The fence slats have been painted a
range of blues to reflect the range found naturally in the
nearby nature reserve.
This project was
made possible with thanks to Vi-involved volunteers, and
Medichem for allowing us to paint their fence.

Richard Perry at Launch Event 9th April
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Photograph by
Charlotte Huggins

Carved from a solid
6 tonne block of stone Shoalstone is an impressive marker
on the landscape.(photo by Charlotte Huggins)

Launch of the Project
The final Project Launch

Simon and Pagan at
the Launch.

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