Dream, the dramatic new sculpture for St.Helens and the Northwest by Catalan artist Jaume Plensa, launched with a spectacular event on Sunday 31 May that involved hundreds of people from the local community and visitors from across the country.

Chosen by a group of ex-miners and commissioned by St.Helens Council as part of of The Big Art Project, the work stands 20 metres high, sited on top of the former Sutton Manor Colliery overlooking the M62, a gateway sculpture for both Merseyside and Greater Manchester at the heart of the Northwest. The work takes the form of the head of a little girl with eyes closed, seemingly in a dream-like state. It is the artist’s response to the brief and subsequent conversations with the ex-miners and members of the wider local community who wanted a work that looked to a brighter future and created a beautiful and contemplative space for future generations, not least their own grandchildren, at the top of the former spoil heap. The work has been fabricated in pre-cast concrete, with a very white, almost luminescent finish using a white marble/concrete aggregate mix in marked contrast to the black of the coal that still lies below.

The Big Art Project is an ambitious public art commissioning initiative from Channel 4 supported by Arts Council England. The Big Art Project in St.Helens is being delivered by St.Helens Council, in partnership with the national funders. The project was curated by Liverpool Biennial, with the active involvement of a group of former miners from Sutton Manor Colliery, and supported by the Forestry Commission. Born in Barcelona, Jaume has exhibited all over the world and completed major commissions in Canada, Israel, Japan, France, Germany, and the United States. His most famous work is the dramatic “Crown Fountain” in the centre of Chicago. Jaume’s public artworks in the UK include a laser beam light sculpture at the Baltic Arts Centre in Gateshead and, most recently, a spectacular new sculpted and illuminated glass dome for the BBC’s Broadcasting House HQ in London.

For further information contact Laurie Peake: laurie@biennial.com

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  • "Is this still in St. Helens? Would love to see it!x"

    Janaya, 22/09/2009
  • "I have just travelled with four friends from the wark-oxfordshire border
    to see your Dream.....I hope this email may reach the miners involved in
    choosing the sculptor and guiding through the choice of work.....we were
    absolutely stunned with the beauty and power of expression of this piece
    and how it is born from your endeavour and skill and years of effort in
    the mines underneath.....as if the Dream is a tree with her roots the
    very mine itself ...and there is something so forgiving and brave and
    imaginative and real in this that you have caused to be made...we were
    all transformed by going there THANKYOU FOR YOUR MESSAGE OF PEACE and
    VISION OF THE FUTURE that you send out to all the world ...It is very
    marvelous TRULY five dreamers travelling."

    Sue, Warwickshire/Oxfordshire, 03/02/2010
  • "Dream, the dramatic new sculpture for St.Helens and Merseyside it should read! I'm sick of the NWDA trying to hijack this sculpture for Manchester by making out it's the gateway to the two counties,don't they know Cheshire lies between us and them?"

    Paul, 19/03/2010
  • "we should see alot more public art in areas outside city centre liverpool. what about Sefton etc.."

    al, 10/05/2010