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New Exhibition Space Opens At Worthing's Highdown Gardens

Local creatives can now exhibit their work amongst Worthing’s 'unique collection of picturesque plants' with the launch of a new exhibition space at Highdown Gardens.

The gardens, at the top of Highdown Rise, off Littlehampton Road, have long been an inspiration for artists and photographers, with their collection of rare flowers, trees and shrubs from all over the world.

Following the creation of a new space, named Highdown Gallery, creatives, as well as art and craft groups, can now present their work surrounded by the display of Worthing’s free-to-access chalk gardens.

The gallery and event space has been made possible thanks to a donation of almost £1,500 from Worthing Community Chest, a local charity supporting projects and activities in Worthing with the aim of 'enriching its communities and citizens'.

The donation will allow the visitor centre to be transformed into a temporary affordable exhibition venue.

Funding from the grant has been used to repaint the gardens’ visitor centre and purchase a professional and versatile wall-hanging system that will enable the space to be adapted to artists’ needs for many years to come.

Highdown Gardens is home to a living library of rare and exotic plants thanks to the work of its creator, Sir Frederick Stern, who, along with his wife Lady Sybil, hired plant hunters to go on dangerous collecting expeditions around the world.

The pair purchased and swapped thousands of seeds and cuttings, all with the aim of creating a collection of their own at their chalk gardens on Highdown Hill.

Following Sir Frederick’s death in 1967, the gardens were passed onto Worthing Borough Council, which has carefully managed the collection and grounds since.

The council also owns Colonnade House, an art gallery and creative studio space in Warwick Street, Worthing, which has been assisting with the creation of the new gallery space at Highdown Gardens.

Highdown Gallery will be a rural alternative to other exhibition spaces in the area, but will use a similar model to Colonnade House, which has hosted hundreds of artists since opening in 2016. The council’s team at Colonnade House will continue to support the gardens’ new gallery space as it develops.

The gardens’ inaugural exhibition will feature floral portraits by local fine art photographer Steve Gallagher, who will be presenting at the space from May 14 to 26.

Entry to the gardens and the Highdown Gallery is free and accessible thanks to a recent project, paid for by the National Lottery Heritage Fund, to improve accessibility, run engagement and heritage programmes and preserve the Sterns’ legacy.

The transformational project, completed in 2021, saw a new path and visitor centre built, which features a lift, as well as a new sensory garden. The gardens’ glasshouses were also restored - an essential part of the plant heritage programme to preserve and share Highdown’s rare plant collection.

Anyone interested in using the Highdown Gallery space can find out more by visiting: https://highdowngardens.co.uk/highdown-gallery/ 

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