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Sculpture for new Dyson Cancer Centre beginning to take shape

Thursday 27th October 2022 Bath Echo News Team Health

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A commission by British wildlife sculptor Hamish Mackie will form part of the new Dyson Cancer Centre at the Royal United Hospital in Bath, it has been revealed.

Hamish Mackie working on the new sculpture | Photo courtesy of the RUH

Hamish Mackie has shared a glimpse into his workshop, where he is busy on the work which is entitled ‘Swifts’.

Representing a pair of swifts in flight, the sculpture will form part of the inpatient courtyard in the new centre.

A video, filmed in Hamish’s studio in Oxfordshire, shows the internationally renowned sculptor making the armature, a framework around which a sculpture is built.

The armature has been designed to come apart, allowing Hamish to work on the swifts individually from all angles.

The next stage will be to sculpt the original in plasticine and capture the aerodynamic and fast-moving nature of the birds.

The final larger than life sculpture will be cast into bronze and mounted on a limestone plinth where it will form a focal point for the open air first floor courtyard in the centre.

Hamish Mackie said: “Swifts have a well-deserved reputation for being aeronautical masters of speed and precision flying. A migratory bird, they cover huge distances every year of around 200,000km.

“They even sleep and mate on the wing, remaining in the air for many months at a time. Swifts are monogamous and visit the UK in summer to breed and then winter in Africa. They have long scythe-shaped wings and a forked tail.

“With this sculpture I wanted to convey a sense of freedom, of thermals and high-speed flight paths. The understanding of their long journey to Britain every year and the happiness seeing them evokes, makes them the ultimate symbol of hope.

“They are the perfect bird to sculpt for the new Dyson Cancer Centre at the RUH.”

The artwork has been made possible through a donation from a local individual who is a long term supporter of the Trust’s charity RUHX and wishes to remain anonymous.

The use of natural light, external spaces, greenery and artwork are all known to have a positive effect on healing and overall patient experience and have been incorporated into the design of the centre, based around a land, water and sky theme.

The new Dyson Cancer Centre will provide a cancer services hub for half a million people in the South West and remains on track to open for patients in autumn 2023.

The purpose-built centre will bring together the majority of the RUH’s cancer services, including research, under one roof, providing oncology, chemotherapy and radiotherapy services and a 22-bed inpatient ward.

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