* A mock-up of how the artwork will look.
Llangollen International
Musical Eisteddfod (LIME)is calling for people to help transform the landmark
Llangollen Bridge into a giant work of art to launch this year’s festival.
The Eisteddfod has commissioned internationally
renowned artist Luke Jerram to create the new artwork.
He plans to wrap the 60
metre-long bridge in a giant patchwork reflecting the crafts and cultures of
Wales alongside the festival’s participating nations.
While the festival will
mainly be held online this year, organisers hope the eye-catching Festival Bridge
will also attract people to visit the town this summer.
Luke Jerram’s new bridge artwork aims to connect
and extend the Eisteddfod’s creativity out from the field where it is normally
held each year into the town, transforming and animating Llangollen for the
whole world to see.
The festival is offering anyone, from
local residents in the area and fans of the Eisteddfod to the friends and
families of people participating, the chance to get involved.
They are asking
for 1m x 1m fabric squares which will be stitched together into a giant
patchwork and hung over the bridge. Ideally the patches should be bold in
design, so the image stands out when seen from a distance.
People are asked to submit their
patchwork by 30 June 2021 and to visit https://international-eisteddfod.co.uk/for details, information and terms and
conditions.
Luke Jerram, who is known for
public art works around the world, said: "When I
first saw LlangollenBridge I fell in love with it. It’s so iconic and at the
heart of the town.
"Across the world, bridges have always been used as both a
physical and symbolic way to connect people – which fits perfectly with the
aims and ambitions of the Eisteddfod. I can’t wait to see the patchworks the
creative people from the local community send in, in order to turn the bridge
into a work of art.”
BetsanMoses,
CEO Llangollen International Musical
Eisteddfod (LIME), said: “The
Eisteddfod has a long and rich history of working with different communities
and nations across the world to bring people together to share their creativity
and a message of peace.
"The community of Llangollen are so important to the
festival, with hundreds of local people volunteering every year. So we hope
that creating and sharing patchwork pieces for the bridge artwork will be a way
of helping them to connect to the online festival this summer, as well as
attracting visitors to the town.”
Usually attracting over 4,000
performers from around the world and 35,000 visitors to Llangollen, this year’s
unique celebration of global peace and harmony will be largely held online in
July 2021, with the main programme being presented over the weekend of the 9 –
11 July.
In keeping with the Eisteddfod’s
tradition of celebrating of the broadest possible range of musical genres from
classical, opera and choral, to jazz, soul and rock, this year’s online
programme will continue to share the message of peace and connect with existing
and new audiences in preparation for its physical return in 2022.