About this programme:
Working closely with the local community, we are offering you the opportunity to get to know Charnwood Forest better through creative projects and experiences.
Feel Good in The Forest is a part of our work with Charnwood Forest Geopark. We work closely with the local community, to give people an opportunity to get to know Charnwood Forest better and connect with nature through creative experiences.
We work within the forest to provide possibilities for people who may have previously found the forest difficult to interact with, from all walks of life, in order to connect with and learn from artists, scientists and educators.
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The Rectors Garden - Richard Hill CE Primary School
The Rector’s Garden art installation has been created by students at Richard Hill CE Primary School, together with artist Mandeep Dhadialla, and in partnership with Charnwood Forest Geopark and Charnwood Arts. The 1st Thurcaston Brownies also very kindly helped in making some of the leaves for the trees.
Over several workshops, the children interpreted and recreated the Rector’s Garden through different art forms, exploring making three-dimensional paper sculptures of fruits and vegetables that featured within the Rector’s Garden account of 1694. Each year group – including Early Years – have contributed to this project, making leaves, kidney beans, hazelnuts, figs, apples, gooseberries and cabbages. The installation layout was imaginatively configured by Mandeep Dhardialla from the information found within the seventeenth-century document
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100 Habitats
As part of our ongoing partnership work with Charnwood Forest Geopark, we have worked with Age UK’s Men & Women in Sheds and a range of artists and community partners to craft 100 new habitats for wildlife in Charnwood Forest. Shed members have made bird, owl, insect, bat and hedgehog boxes which community groups, artists and schools have decorated to create small works of art. These habitats have been gifted to locations across Charnwood Forest to support local wildlife and draw interest to the sites. A map has been created to show where they can all be found. Why not take a trip to see some of the habitats and visit a new location within Charnwood Forest? The project was completed in February 2024.
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Skills Sharing with Men and Women in Sheds
Age UK’s Men & Women in Sheds project offers a safe space for people over 50 to explore or reconnect with making and mending in a large, well-equipped workshop in Loughborough. We’re working alongside members of the Sheds to create opportunities to grow their creative skills, connecting them with artists, writers, and scientists to share ideas and learn from each other. Together we designed and created a hand-crafted bench for The Outwoods in Charnwood Forest, providing a legacy for people to enjoy, for many years to come.
To find out more about Men and Women in Sheds visit AgeUK.
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Learn about and Look After
During 2023, we offered free creative learning sessions at The Outwoods for home educated children aged 5-11 and their parents or caregivers. Alongside artist Kate May Griffiths, we explored Charnwood Forest through arts activities and learnt about the local landscape and wildlife. Throughout this project worked educational resources were created, that are available for free to download below, to help the group continue to learn and explore the forest. The project ended in Nov 2023.
To support the ongoing learning of the group and their continued relationship with Charnwood Forest, we have developed some educational resources which have been shared (for free) here.
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The Urban Forest - Archive
As part of our work in partnership with Charnwood Forest Geopark, from October 2022 to April 2023, we took over a large empty shop unit in Loughborough town centre to create The Urban Forest, an accessible community arts hub to bring the essence of the forest into the town. The space held art exhibitions, an indoor sculpture trail, sensory walk, talks, workshops, performances and wellbeing activities, all free of charge. It provided a safe and welcoming place for people to experience and learn about Charnwood Forest, through arts and creativity.
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Beacon Hill Accessible Trail
Since 2021 we have been collaborating with Safe, Well, Happy, working together to help make Charnwood Forest more accessible to people with different needs. We host regular sessions with the group, exploring nature through creativity, learning new skills and exploring the forest. In 2022, members of the group decided that they’d like to create an accessible trail for one of their favourite places to visit, Beacon Hill. Artist Lucy Stevens worked with the group to create The Yellow Trail at Lower Beacon Hill, which opened to the public in May 2022. The Yellow Trail is a short 1km route, on level ground, through the forest. It begins at the Car Park and is signposted by hand-carved, brightly painted wooden posts created by group members.
The Yellow Trail was co-created with the group and is now open to the public at Lower Beacon Hill.
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Charnwood Forest School
We have worked with Charnwood Forest School to provide accessible outdoor learning sessions for children under 5 and their parents or caregivers. Our relationship with Charnwood Forest School began as part of our Urban Forest (link) project. We supported Charnwood Forest School to launch at new locations within Charnwood, at the Rectory Wildlife Garden in Loughborough and Oaks in Charnwood.
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Interested?
Pop along to the calendar page to see what Arts Activities are coming up!
Found Sounds Project:
Charnwood Forest Geopark is being developed as part of the Charnwood Forest Landscape Partnership Scheme after the national Forest Company were awarded a National Lottery Heritage Fund grant back in 2020. This five-year scheme is promoting awareness and understanding of Charnwood Forest through 18 projects, developed and implemented by 17 partner organisations, one of which is Charnwood Arts.
As part of the scheme, Charnwood Arts now invites you to immerse yourself in the sounds of the Charnwood Forest, England’s unexpected uplands. From bubbling streams and birdsong to the natural sounds of the forest, the outpost of upland England in lowland Leicestershire. Research suggests that bringing the sounds of nature into your life can be very beneficial; it’s widely proven to significantly reduce anxiety and stress levels and the ultimate aim of this project, Found Sounds of Charnwood Forest.
In August 2024 Charnwood Arts commissioned three sound artists who led participants on a tour of Charnwood Forest to capture natural environmental sounds using various forms of audio equipment ranging from specialist microphones to simple smartphone applications.
The captured audio of the forest was then collated and edited and manipulated to be include in unique compositions sound scaping nature’s symphony of Charnwood Forest.
Found Sounds in the Forest is intended to be fluid, grow in content over the coming years and provide Charnwood Arts a platform to showcase new compositions by emerging sound artists.
Artists involved:
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The Making of Charnia Masoni
Tom Hill explains his thinking process, behind the composition of the piece.
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Charnia Masoni
Tom Hill
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Charnia Masoni (Audio Only)
Tom Hill
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The lonely oak
Karl Saddler
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The Lonely Oak (Audio Only)
Karl Saddler
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Safe Well Happy
Led by artist Lucy Stevens