Peter Randall-Page
Seed, 2007
In 2003 artist Peter Randall-Page was commissioned to collaborate with Jolyon Brewis of Grimshaw Architects on the design of a new education building for the Eden. The result is a building whose roof structure is based on the geometric principles underlying plant growth.
At the centre of the building is a specially designed chamber housing ‘Seed’, Randall-Page’s enormous granite sculpture based on the same spiral phyllotaxis pattern as the structure itself.
This pattern relates to the Fibonacci sequence and the golden proportion and can be seen in pinecones and sunflower heads amongst many other botanical examples.
This monumental granite sculpture is constructed from a single piece of Cornish Granite, originally weighing over 167 tonnes, and took almost four years to complete.
Its surface is carved with nearly 2,000 ‘nodes’. The spiral pattern on which the sculpture is based bears no relation to a horizontal and vertical grid, which made the task particularly complex, involving as it did a balance between geometric accuracy and organic freedom.
In the manner of Rothko, who stipulated the dimensions and light conditions of the rooms in which his work should be seen, the chamber and artwork were conceived as one. Peter wanted to separate this inner sanctum from the bustle outside to give the chamber a meditative and contemplative quality.
‘Seed’ is lit by the natural daylight filtering down through the central aperture. The changing weather and seasons play across the sculpture’s undulating, tactile surface.