The Needle’s Eye, Listed Grade II, Wentworth, South Yorkshire
"Around 1746, the Needle’s Eye, a
slender pyramid about 45ft high was built with a tall ogee arch and a
flamboyant urn on top. The most memorable factor behind this folly, one of the
finest in Britain, is the legend of how it came to be built. The story runs
that, one night, the inebriated Earl Fitzwilliam accepted a wager that he could
not “drive a carriage through the eye of a needle”. The following morning,
sober, he realised the difficulty of completing the challenge so, in an
expensive solution, he constructed a narrow arch just wide enough to allow a
coach through and called it “The Needle’s Eye”. It is not known if the legend
is true. There is evidence of that suggests the building was used for execution
by firing squad or target practice, as one side bears several distinct
musket-ball marks."
The
original inspiration of the exhibition Needle’s Eye was taken from the folly in
Wentworth, South Yorkshire.
The forth-coming
posts will be a combination of recently finished paintings and found images
from the internet which I am sourcing for ideas for future artwork and projects.
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