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The Goodwood Art Foundation – a new venture placing the best in contemporary art in the most stunning of natural settings – has enjoyed the best possible start in its first weeks since opening.
Transcript
00:00Good afternoon. My name is Phil Hewitt, Group Arts Editor at Sussex Newspapers. Really lovely
00:06to speak to Anne Gallagher this afternoon. Now, Anne, you are the consultant curator
00:10at the New Goodwood Art Foundation. It's such an exciting project, isn't it? But the great
00:15thing is, it's made a good start. Been open a few weeks now. What have you learned in
00:20these open weeks, would you say?
00:23Well, I think what we hoped was that audiences would appreciate both the wonderful landscape
00:29and the wide variety of contemporary art that they can experience within it. And the first
00:36impressions we're getting is that that's really working and people are having a very good
00:40time and, yeah, learning about the artists that we're showing.
00:45And that must be very gratifying because this has been a long time in preparation. You've
00:50been involved for three years, haven't you? That's quite something.
00:53Yeah, it obviously took a long time to plan the format, to do research on what the foundation
01:01could be, what we felt audiences would most appreciate. And really, because the artists
01:09were experiencing on their first visit a landscape that hadn't yet changed, it took some time before
01:15we could work together with the landscape designers and we, as the curatorial team, to plan both
01:22the landscape and the art together. And it's very gratifying to have been able to, yeah, be
01:28adventurous, to have climate controlled galleries now to show work inside that couldn't be shown
01:36in the landscape, but also in the landscape to be adventurous about showing not just sculpture
01:41and installation, which obviously work extremely well in that sort of format, but also a sound
01:47work by Susan Phillips and Formants would be an ongoing part of the programme.
01:53As you say, changing landscape, that's part of the challenge and part of the excitement,
01:57isn't it?
01:58Yes, the landscape is actually designed to change every two weeks. I think Dan Pearson's...
02:04That's quite frequent for landscapers.
02:06But his idea was that you had 24 seasons that, yeah, different plantings would emerge at different
02:16times of the year. You know, I've learned quite a lot about horticulture in the process,
02:22that there are trees that blossom in the spring and then again in the autumn and different
02:27colours appear. And that's been really interesting to know about all this while you're planning
02:32the artworks that might appear next to them.
02:35And that is exciting, isn't it? You can come for two entirely different reasons. It's
02:39absolutely legitimate to come purely to enjoy the landscape or purely to enjoy the art, but
02:44ideally both in combination.
02:49Brilliant. Well, really lovely to speak to you. Let's chat more as it grows and congratulations
02:55on all the success so far. Thank you.
02:58Thank you so much.

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