Noctalgia: Dark Skies Matter December 9th - March 2024
Northumberland National Park is proud to announce the celebration of the 10th anniversary of Northumberland’s International Dark Skies Park with a captivating new exhibition and supporting programme titled “Dark Skies Matter”. This exciting celebration will take place at The Sill: National Landscape Discovery Centre from December 9th 2023 until March 2024.
The heart of the festivities revolves around ‘Noctalgia: Dark Skies Matter,’ a groundbreaking exhibition and programme that will captivate audiences. Commissioned by Northumberland National Park Authority and generously supported by the Sir James Knott Trust, this innovative exhibition is being created by visual artist Bethan Maddocks, in collaboration with community groups and visitors through creative activities and workshops.
Noctalgia is a new term invented by astronomers to describe the pain associated with losing access to the night sky due to light pollution: “noctalgia,” meaning “sky grief.” Bethan is working with a variety of people from school children and visitors to The Sill, as well as groups such as North East Sight Matters, Deaf Association NE, parent and toddler groups, and experts from Northumberland National Park who have shared their knowledge of the ecology, management, history, and archaeology of the Park. As part of her research process, she will also visit the Planetarium in Twice Brewed for a ‘Dark Skies experience’ and the Observatory at Kielder, to explore the skies and equipment used to peer into our dark skies.
At the core of the “Dark Skies Matter” exhibition will be a series of sculptures that play with light and cast mesmerising shadows around the exhibition space. Featuring delicately cut imagery of shooting stars, the Milky way, hunting owls, night pollinating plants and insects, the sculpture is a tribute to the visible stars, creatures, and plants that thrive under Northumberland’s pristine dark skies. As visitors step into the darkened gallery, the sculptures will cast intricate shadows of these paper-cut creations onto the walls and sculpted projection screens, creating an immersive and emotional artwork that is nothing short of theatrical.