Kat Austen, CultureLab editor
The charred Black Trunk stands as proud as Kew's pagoda (Image: RBG, Kew)
At London's Kew Gardens, sculptor David Nash breathes new life into dying trees by carving them into works of art
THE oak has sheltered visitors to Kew Gardens in London since the 18th century. But now, beset by Agrilus beetles that have been steadily eating away at its trunk, the 300-year-old tree is at the end of its life.
Unlike other victims of acute oak decline, this magnificent tree will live again. Still rooted in place, its canopy has been carefully removed, and its outer bark and sapwood stripped off. Skinned to its heartwood, the oak is slowly being reborn as art: a segmented, bulbous sculpture that resembles a blank totem pole.
The resurrectionist is David Nash, a British sculptor famous for his large-scale charred wooden artworks. The sculpture is part of a year-long residency at Kew, where Nash will be making site-specific works in a "wood quarry" - a kind of outdoor sculpture studio. As well as the oak, the arboretum team has earmarked four other declining hardwoods for Nash to transform into artworks.
Removing ailing trees may be good for the health of the arboretum, but dispatching them is seldom easy. "An arboretum is like a family," says Tony Kirkham, head of Kew's arboretum. "It's always sad when a tree has to go, when it's come to the end of its life." Nash's grand sculptures should go some way towards alleviating that gloom.
The theme running through his works made Nash a perfect fit for Kew's first artist in residence, says Stephen Hopper, director of the gardens: "There's an underlying conservation message. David makes these pieces out of something that people would see as firewood."
Nash, too, has gained a new perspective. In the garden's collections and research labs, he has been studying the biology of the material he has sculpted for decades. "I have been able to look down a microscope at wood for the first time," he says.
In addition to the new sculptures that he is creating during the residency, many of his previous works are on display in an on-site gallery and throughout the gardens. The towering redwood block, Black Trunk (pictured), stands as a shadow of Kew's iconic pagoda. Within the Temperate House, a vast Victorian glasshouse, his Two Falling Spoons carving sweeps the same curve as the palm trunk above them.
"You can have the sculptures in a gallery," says Kirkham, "but it's the arboretum, the living trees, that really sets them off."
David Nash at Kew Gardens at Kew's Royal Botanic Gardens, UK, from 9 June
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