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Coal site transformed into top art attraction

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By Fiona Reid
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A STUNNING new work of land art will be unveiled this summer in Upper Nithsdale, created by locally-based world-renowned landscape artist Charles Jencks.

The Crawick Multiverse sits on the site of a former open cast coal mine which is being transformed into a spectacular 55-acre artland, visitor attraction and public amenity.
Materials found on the expansive site, from tonnes of earth to some 2000 large boulders, were used to create the artwork.
It is expected to provide an economic boost to the local communities of Sanquhar, Kelloholm and Kirkconnel as well as attracting international visitors.
This landmark links the themes of space, astronomy and cosmology, with a network of paths navigating features and landforms which represent the Sun, universes, galaxies, comets, black holes and more.
Local people have already had a sneak preview at recent community events in Kirkconnel Miners Memorial Hall and Sanquhar Community Centre.
They viewed maps, plans and pictures of the site; were updated on the benefits the project will bring, including job creation, tourism and education.
Work on the Crawick Multiverse is nearing completion, with a public launch event scheduled for the summer solstice on June 21.
Mr Jencks said: “This former open cast coal site, nestled in a bowl of large rolling hills, never did produce enough black gold to keep digging. But it did, accidentally, create the bones of a marvellous ecology.
“The landscape had to be healed, it had to welcome the nearby communities of Sanquhar, Kelloholm and Kirkconnel, and help restore the locality both economically and ecologically – and so the Crawick Multiverse, a new version of an old scientific idea, was born.
“This work of land art, created primarily from earth and boulders on the site, celebrates the surrounding Scottish countryside and its landmarks, looking outwards and back in time.”

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