Top 5 super-sized art in England
Thursday, 6 September 2012 10:55 AM
Northumberlandia, The Goddess of the North, is officially revealed to the public this week
The trend for creating big works of art across the English landscape looks set to continue as Northumberlandia’s ‘Goddess of the North’, opens to the public this week.
In celebration of all things great and not so small, with the help of VisitEngland, we round up some of the nation’s best super-sized art:
Northumberlandia, Northumberland
Charles Jenck’s Northumberlandia, or the Goddess of the North, is officially revealed to the public this week. Thought to be the largest human form ever sculpted into land, the reclining female figure of Northumberlandia stretches 400 metres in length and is made up of some 1.5 million tonnes of rock, clay and soil. Far from being a rigid manicured art form, Northumberlandia is a living part of the countryside that will mature over time and change with the seasons: what visitors will experience today is only the start of something that will evolve through generations.First public openings: Wednesday September 5th & Saturday September 8th. Formal opening: October 2012. Visit: www.northumberlandia.thelandtrust.org.uk

ArcelorMittal Orbit, Olympic Park
ArcelorMittal Orbit, Olympic Park, London
The ArcelorMittal Orbit rises over the Olympic site giving a brand new perspective of London from its freshly redeveloped home in the East End. The UK's tallest sculpture to date, Kapoor’s swirling red construction was 18 months in the making and required 560m of tubular red steel to form the sculpture’s lattice superstructure. The result is a bold statement of public art that is both permanent and sustainable. Sitting between the Stadium and the Aquatics Centre, the ArcelorMittal Orbit has been a beacon for the Olympic Park during London 2012. The structure has quite been quite literally lighting up East London with a 15 minute moving light show every evening. After the Games, the monumental structure will be used as a visitor attraction and is aimed to bring an influx of tourism to the future Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. Visit: www.arcelormittalorbit.com
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The Angel of the North
The Angel of the North, NewcastleGateshead
After a controversial start, Anthony Gormley’s ‘The Angel of the North’ is now almost universally loved, and it seems the feeling is mutual; the 20m sculpture’s wings are angled forward 3.5 degrees to create, in Gormley’s words, “a sense of embrace”. Dominating Gateshead’s skyline and dwarfing all those who come to see the Angel's silhouette, this Newcastle icon now rivals the famous Tyne Bridge. A panoramic hilltop site was chosen where the sculpture would be clearly seen by more than 90,000 drivers a day on the A1 - more than one person every second - and by passengers coming in on the East Coast main line from London to North East England. Visit: www.gateshead.gov.uk/angel

Wiltshire White Horses
Wiltshire White Horses, Wiltshire
There are over twenty of white horse hill figures in England, thirteen of which are in Wiltshire. Most of these white horses have been carved into chalk hillsides, making central Wiltshire’s chalk downs the ideal canvas for such artworks. Of the thirteen white horses known to have existed in Wiltshire, eight are still visible. Contrary to popular belief, most white horses are not of great antiquity: only the Uffington white horse is of certain prehistoric origin, being some three thousand years old. Most of the others date from the last three hundred years or so. Visit: www.wiltshirewhitehorses.org.uk

Cerne Giant, Dorset
Cerne Giant, Dorset
Horses aren’t the only figures carved into England’s expanses of chalk. The country’s largest chalk figure is also its most controversial: Dorset’s Cerne Giant depicts a well-endowed warrior believed to encourage fertility. To this day, couples trying to conceive travel to visit the, ahem, ‘particular feature’ of the naked club-wielding giant in the hope of boosting their fertility. Above the Cerne Giant stands a rectangular earthwork enclosure, known as the Trendle. Like the giant, the Trendle is of unknown origin, but it is believed to date back to the Iron Age. It is still used today by local Morris Dancers as a site for May Day celebrations. Visit: www.nationaltrust.org.uk/cerne-giant
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