Six venues will host the touring poppy installations, Wave and Weeping Window, in 2017, the UK’s First World War Centenary arts programme, 14-18 NOW, announced.
For the first time, the ceramic poppies will be travelling to Northern Ireland, for a display at the Ulster Museum, Belfast, in October.
More than 1.5 million people have already visited them since the nationwide tours of Britain started in 2015.
2017 Dates
Wave will be installed at the Barge Pier, Southend-on-Sea in April and the CWGC Plymouth Naval Memorial in July.
Weeping Window will be going to the Maritime Museum in Hull in March; The Silk Mill, Derby in June; Y Senedd, National Assembly for Wales, Cardiff in August; and Ulster Museum, Belfast in October.
14-18 NOW has also announced that the poppies will travel to Stoke-on-Trent in 2018 as part of the final year of the tour. Many of them were made in the historic home of Britain’s pottery industry.
Jenny Waldman, Director of 14-18 NOW, said: “The poppies have captivated millions of people across the UK, and we are delighted to present them in more locations in 2017, including taking them to Northern Ireland for the first time.
“Paul Cummins and Tom Piper have created two enormously powerful artworks of national significance that continue to inspire all who see them.”
Wave and Weeping Window were part of the Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red installation ‘planted’ at the Tower of London for the 2014 Centenary.
The display of 888,246 ceramic poppies, each representing a British and Colonial death during the First World War, attracted an estimated five million visitors from July-November 2014.
Source: 14-18 NOW
Images: Centenary News
Posted by: CN Editorial Team