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Arts and science meet at summer solstice week

Graham HarveyAuthor: 

Graham Harvey is an Emeritus Professor of Religious Studies at The Open University.

Summer solstice is the longest day and shortest night of the year. It also involves the moment of maximum tilt of the Earth towards the Sun. In the Northern Hemisphere, summer solstice usually falls on or around 21 June.

This year, The Open University in Scotland and the spectacular art-land Crawick Multiverse (near Sanquhar in Dumfries and Galloway) are collaborating in hosting a week’s events to celebrate the artistic, scientific, and cultural significances of the solstice.

Artworks at Crawick Multiverse © Mike Bolam

In our era of increasing climate and extinction dangers, the Crawick Multiverse solstice events - which are all open to the public - will weave together participative celebration and interactive education honouring the life-giving relationship of Earth and Sun. Everyone is invited to join in the celebrations and gain inspiration for living well as the Earth-Sun relationship continues.

The Crawick Multiverse is the perfect location for celebrating the solstice whilst reflecting on the lively beauty of our world. Indeed, the site not only roots us in our blue-green planet but also places us among our larger cosmic connections.

In 2005, the landscape artist Charles Jencks was invited by the Duke of Buccleuch to transform 55 acres of abandoned open-cast coal mine into a place of beauty and inspiration.

Crawick Multiverse is one of the greatest pleasures of my life, a cosmic landscape…It’s wonderful to see this park used in different ways, and for a designer such as me that’s the pay-off."
Charles Jencks

Jencks - who also designed landscapes at Jupiter Artland and the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art (Modern One) - saw the potential of the site to become a massive artwork, a restored ecology, a revelation of the cosmos and therefore a place of celebration and learning.

Speaking at the site when it opened in 2015, Jencks said: “Crawick Multiverse is one of the greatest pleasures of my life, a cosmic landscape…It’s wonderful to see this park used in different ways, and for a designer such as me that’s the pay-off.”

Years of earth-moving, involving thousands of boulders and tonnes of earth, resulted in the creation of a vista of beauty out of a once-ravaged landscape. The Multiverse’s giant conical grass mounds represent colliding galaxies, and its long avenue of boulders from the coal mine and other features are inspired by the sun, stars, and other wonders of the cosmos.

The aims and ambitions of the charitable trust, The Crawick Multiverse Trust, are completely in alignment with those of The Open University; those of making life-shaping education in the arts, sciences and humanities available, accessible and relevant to today’s society.

A week of activities for the 2023 summer solstice (18-24 June) is the result of the two groups working together to encourage the growth of fascination with celestial events and the festive feel they create in us.

At the Multiverse site – and at other local venues – activities will stimulate similar awe about the cosmos as that of our ancestors who built stone circles and monuments at Stonehenge. Knowledge derived from scientific and cultural research will be brought together with ceremonies to inspire desire for further celebrations and study.

The 2023 solstice week of activities builds on previous solstice events at the Crawick Multiverse. This time, there will be talks by Open University professors and lecturers of art history (Robert Wallis and Lindsay Crisp), planetary and space sciences (Monica Grady and Mahesh Anand), climate change (Stephen Peake), and of religious studies (Liudmila Nikanorova and myself).

Sun Amphitheatre at Crawick Multiverse © Mike Bolam

Tours of the Multiverse will include opportunities to record your own sensory impressions and reflections. Drumming led by musician Mat Clements, together with storytelling and craft-making workshops led by the environmental educator Gordon MacLellan, will build up to participation in the afternoon ‘tilt’ ceremony.

I will join with colleagues offering short interactive public talks about matters that inspire and excite us from our research. My colleague in religious studies, Liudmila Nikanorova, will talk about her participation in the largest annual summer solstice event in the world: the Yhyakh festival in Siberia’s Sakha Republic. I will talk about ceremonies offering gratitude to the Sun, especially at solstices. In particular, I’m interested in how these involve respecting Earth and Sun as living beings with interesting relationships.

Excitingly, these events will range across the Crawick Multiverse, including the massive Sun Amphitheatre which the late Charles Jencks designed with just this kind of celebration in mind.

Find out more at www.crawickmultiverse.co.uk.

This blog is an extract of a longer article published in The Scotsman.

Photos © Mike Bolam

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