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Locomotive Breath - Collaborative and Commemorative Public Art



2022 the bicentenary of the Hetton to Sunderland railway. To mark the celebration I was commissioned to design and fabricate a stylised scale replica of the original locomotive, providing a steel skeleton to be filled with 350 fused glass tiles featuring images created in the community. The tiles were created in workshop sessions in schools of 2 to 2½ hours. Each session comprised a brief history of the Hetton Colliery Railway and its international importance. Work was carried out with participants to create their own glass panel inspired by the history, learning and key themes. Ceramic techniques were used to fuse the glass, giving each panel texture. When all of the tiles were completed they were fired in a glass kiln to form larger panel sections, which were fitted to the steel frame of the locomotive to form the body panels of the sculpture, with lighting fitted. The completed work, approximately 4.5 feet long by 3.5 feet high by 2 feet wide, will be displayed at the Hetton Centre.

The delivery objectives of the project were:

  • A legacy sculpture using fabricated steel, coloured glass and light

  • Students and parents will learn of the international importance of the Hetton Colliery Railway.

It will celebrate and commemorate the heritage of the Hetton Colliery Railway which, when it opened on the 18th of November 1822, was to be a landmark event of international importance in the development of railways. The railway ran from Hetton to the Staithes at Sunderland, the development of railways would follow at pace with the acclaimed Stockton to Darlington railway opening in 1825 and the Liverpool to Manchester in 1830. George Stephenson designed the Hetton Colliery Railway and it was built by his brother Robert. George would become known as the Father of Railways, this was the start of momentous changes leading to the Victorian rail building revolution, which changed the world.

The steps taken to get it done:

  • Securing a license to display the Sculpture from Sunderland City Council.

  • Awarding the contract for the creation of the Sculpture.

  • Agreement with schools to include workshops in their curriculum.

  • Construction of the steel skeleton.

  • Workshop sessions with schools.

  • Fusion of the glass panels.

  • Unveiling event.

Hetton Coal Company was not only important for its railway, it used ground-breaking technology to successfully sink a pit through permeable limestone for the first time and it was a forerunner of the Joint Stock Companies that dominated the railway age. The increased volumes of coal arriving at the River Wear led to the massive harbour and dock developments that transformed Sunderland’s riverside. Many famous names would become associated with Hetton, not least Thomas Hepburn a Hetton miner who became leader of the first miners’ union. The colliery became known as Lyons Colliery although the Lyons family who lived in Hetton Hall was not involved in the enterprise but did at onetime own the land. This family would marry into the Bowes family and become the ancestors of Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, who married H M King George VI. Kate Middleton, now Duchess of Cambridge, is the great-great granddaughter of John Harrison a Hetton coal miner. Her son George is a future Monarch of the UK.
















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