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a black wood structure holding up collapising braches on the tree. the art is best described as a vertical pole that splits half way creating a treacle shapes with an open top for the branch to lay in its centre.
Support

Support by Alec Finlay (2019)

Support by artist Alec Finlay was installed into the small Hawthorn copse near the pond at the bottom of the belvedere in Campbell Park at the end of 2019. Commissioned by MK Gallery, it is in memorial to their former colleague Mike Stanley who sadly passed away 10 years ago but had had an impact on the public art collection in Campbell Park.  The artwork is made of 5 oak pieces created into supports and painted black for individual branches symbolising support needed in life. 

Alec Finlay is an internationally recognised Scottish artist and poet whose work crosses a range of mediums and art forms and considers culture, landscape and ecology.  Working with MK Gallery in the early 2000s Alec worked in Campbell Park in temporary installations such as creating wheat and poppy fields and an artistic bird box trail. 

The location for this piece is one of the oldest parts of the park, an old Hawthorn copse believed to be part of the boundary for the farm which was here before Milton Keynes was designated as a city in 1967.

Support can be found in the Hawthorn copse by the pond at the bottom of the Belvedere at What3Words location backed.blockage.freed.

Campbell Park Public Art

The original vision for Campbell Park was for it to be the cultural heart of the city, with sculptures sited in the park alongside art installations, performances and temporary shows. Today you can see thirteen pieces of public art within the park.

Public Art
Downhill path in Campbell Park in summer
Campbell Park

Residing in the heart of Milton Keynes, this Grade II listed landscape connects the city centre to the linear park network. As well as public art, visitors can discover water features, the Grand Union Canal, a cricket pitch and an amphitheatre.