Yorkshire Sculpture park marks 40th anniversary

Jonty Wilde Jaume Plensa, Spiegel, 2010Jonty Wilde
Yorkshire Sculpture Park was founded in 1977 with a £1,000 grant

The Yorkshire Sculpture Park is staging a weekend of special events to celebrate its 40th anniversary.

The park, near Wakefield, was founded in 1977 by Peter Murray and has been expanded from 10 to 500 acres in size.

It started with a £1,000 grant from Yorkshire Arts, but now attracts more than 500,000 visitors each year.

The park includes work by Barbara Hepworth, Henry Moore, Joan Miro, Ai Weiwei, Tony Cragg, Andy Goldsworthy and Antony Gormley.

Yorkshire Sculpture Park Opening Exhibition catalogueYorkshire Sculpture Park
Yorkshire Sculpture Park Michael Lyons and Peter MurrayYorkshire Sculpture Park
Michael Lyons (left) and founder Peter Murray

Mr Murray, who was a lecturer in art education at Bretton Hall College, on the same site, when he set up the park, said: "One of the great pleasures is seeing it used by the public.

"Anybody who tells you people are not interested in contemporary art is talking nonsense.

"All you have to do is come to the sculpture park and look at the way people engage with the work - it's quite amazing."

Yorkshire Sculpture Park Alf Dunn Quiet Conversation, 1976Yorkshire Sculpture Park
Alf Dunn, Quiet Conversation
Yorkshire Sculpture Park Andy Goldsworthy with Dandelion Circle, 1987Yorkshire Sculpture Park
Andy Goldsworthy with Dandelion Circle
Jonty Wilde Magdalena Abakanowicz, Twenty Standing Figures, 1994Jonty Wilde
Magdalena Abakanowicz, Twenty Standing Figures

The park was named the Art Fund museum of the year in 2014, beating venues such as Tate Britain and the Mary Rose Museum to the £100,000 prize.

A study carried out in 2011 said the park brought in about £5m to the local economy.

Yorkshire Sculpture Park Elisbeth Frink, Dying King, 1963Yorkshire Sculpture Park
Elisbeth Frink, Dying King
Jonty Wilde Peter Randall-Page, The Fruit of Mythological Trees, 1992Jonty Wilde
Peter Randall-Page, The Fruit of Mythological Trees
Jonty Wilde Sophie Ryder, Pink Lady Hare Dancing with Big Brown Dog, 2000Jonty Wilde
Sophie Ryder, Pink Lady Hare Dancing with Big Brown Dog

In September 2015, the park said 100,000 people visited to see the Wave poppy sculpture, which had previously been on display at the Tower of London

The celebrations include the opening of a new exhibition, Occasional Geometries, curated by Bangladeshi-born artist Rana Begum.

Yorkshire Sculpture Park David Nash, Standing Frame, 1982Yorkshire Sculpture Park
David Nash, Standing Frame
Jonty Wilde Tony Cragg, Caldera, 2008Jonty Wilde
Tony Cragg, Caldera
PA Wave poppy sculpture, 2015PA
Wave - part of Blood-Swept Lands and Seas of Red by ceramic artist Paul Cummins