A Clitheroe sculpture tells its story
A new town centre sculpture of a large dog in steel draws visitors to Clitheroe and brings its story to life. This project will see the piece installed and launched, ensuring that it is here to stay.
About the Project Creator
I am a sculptor, based in Lancashire with work spread from New Zealand and Hong Kong to Europe and America. Originally from the Netherlands, I trained at art colleges in London and Manchester. Most of my work starts with a story; I believe that, through stories, we make sense of the world, and we connect with one another.
In the year 2000 I moved to Lancashire and began to create sculptures in response to its history, landscape, and folklore. I placed these sculptures in the spaces they most resonate, in the landscape, parks and towns. I turned to working in steel, for which we have - in this county – the most up to date technology allowing sculptures to be created at almost any scale.
In 2008 I was commissioned by United Utilities to create a heron, which stands at the water's edge of Entwistle Reservoir, at 2.7metres tall. Made from galvanised steel it blends into the elements and is a treasured landmark for the local community.
Situated in Darwen’s Bold Venture Park, I recreated a Victorian parlour in response to the life of wallpaper designer James Huntington. It is a gigantic, playful feature irresistible to children, and a resting place appreciated by families and hikers on the climb up to Darwen Tower.
I examined the subject of familiars in “Dandy”, imagining the familiar spirit of James Device – one of the Pendle Witches - as a large wolf-like black dog. Sculpted in steel and 2 metres tall, it was installed in Clitheroe in May 2024, a new landmark for the town centre following a successful crowdfund campaign.
Sir Hare, at more than 3.5 m. in corten steel, is my largest piece thus far. It stood in Liverpool’s Baltic Triangle for more than a year, in Gisburn Forest and until June '23 in Whitaker Park, Rossendale. It is currently a stunning sight for visitors to Wyresdale Park in The Forest of Bowland.
The hare, a once plentiful creature in the fields where I grew up, is now a priority species of local concern. I am fascinated by how present it is in our storylore. “Sir Hare” is one of the 77 names given to the creature in a late 13th Century middle English poem. Several Lancashire sources give us accounts of supernatural hares which shape-shift, speak to us and fill us with a sense of dread. We find them in the history of the Pendle Witches and in ‘The White Dobbie’, a ghost story from Morecambe Bay. It tells us of encounters with a Boggart, a ghostly figure who haunts the coastal roads, always accompanied by his hare-familiar.