Yorkshire Sculpture Park unveils 3 New Sculptures
Yorkshire Sculpture Park (YSP) has added three new outdoor sculptures by Vanessa da Silva, Auke de Vries and Damien Hirst.
These 3 new additions join of over 90 outdoor works by some of the world’s leading artists, in Europe’s largest sculpture park.
Yorkshire Sculpture Park has a longstanding relationship with de Vries, and in 2000–2001 presented Living in Trees, an exhibition developed after the artist spent time immersed in the grounds. He became particularly captivated by the trees, observing their movement and shifting patterns of light and recording their forms in sketches that would later inform his sculpture.
The Watchtower emerged directly from these observations and was conceived in dialogue with YSP’s landscape. The motif has long been part of de Vries’s imagination, rooted in his childhood in The Hague during World War II, when structures of surveillance punctuated daily life. With The Watchtower, however, he transforms a symbol of conflict into one of benevolence. Rather than being associated with control, this sculpture becomes an invitation to look outwards, to listen, and to experience the landscape with curiosity and empathy.
Damien Hirst'sThe Martyr – Saint Bartholomew occupies the powerful intersection of scientific inquiry and religious devotion – a space of ambiguity and possibility that has shaped the artist’s practice for decades. “I like the confusion you get between science and religion,”said Hirst. “That’s where belief lies, and art as well.”
The work draws on a long lineage of Christian art depicting Saint Bartholomew, one of the Twelve Apostles, whose martyrdom became a testing ground for artists’ anatomical mastery. Hirst follows this tradition whilst reinventing its psychological and symbolic dimensions for a contemporary audience. YSP’s own Chapel, coincidentally, is also dedicated to St Bartholomew.
Inspired by Italian sculptor Marco d’Agrate’s 16th-century sculpture in the Duomo di Milano, where the saint stands draped in his own flayed skin, Hirst shifts the narrative by placing scissors and a scalpel in the figure’s hands. The suggestion of self-inflicted suffering complicates conventional portrayals of martyrdom, introducing a blend of agency, endurance, and complexity. The reference also extends into popular mythology when Hirst likens the figure to Edward Scissorhands, a character similarly caught between innocence and harm, tenderness and violence.
Vanessa da Silva’s Muamba Posy was first exhibited on the moors of Penistone Hill near Haworth, West Yorkshire, before continuing on its journey to YSP. Its large organic forms and vivid colours were inspired by the areas’s ever changing cycles of nature, where life has continuously adapted over time.
Around 300 million years ago, in the Carboniferous period, Penistone Hill was part of a lush tropical forest with a climate similar to today’s Amazon. The sculptures draw on the flora and fauna of that ancient ecosystem while also reflecting the contemporary landscape, echoing indigenous plants such as heather and bilberry.
Muamba Posy evolves ideas seen in Da Silva’s earlier work Muamba Grove (2019), displayed in YSP’s Lower Park. They explore movement and transformation, bodies in flux shaped by the landscape and each other, inviting interaction between sculpture, the human body, and the environment.
“I see the sculptures as a space for people to gather, to pause and connect with the nature around them… I’d like visitors to leave with a sense of calm, connection, but also joy,”Da Silva explains.
Main Image: The Martyr Saint Bartholomew by Damien Hirst. Photograph by India Hobson, courtesy of Yorkshire Sculpture Park