After 20 years in fashion, an artist moves to garden sculptures
Emma Jane Rushworth moved from fabrics to wirework, and now creates garden sculptures with personalities
The garden can be a sad place at this time of year – all bare branches and decaying foliage. But while this cold and quiet time is a necessary part of the natural cycle, there are ways that we can lift the dreariness. Adding a sculpture is one way to add an extra element to a garden that can be appreciated not just in winter, but all year round. Sculpture can also express the garden...
Subscribe from just €1 for the first month!
Exclusive offers:
All Digital Access + eReader
Trial
€1
Unlimited Access for 1 Month
*New subscribers only
Annual
€200
€149 For the 1st Year
Unlimited Access for 1 Year
Quarterly
€55
€42
90 Day Pass
2 Yearly
€315
€248
Unlimited Access for 2 Years
Team Pass
Get a Business Account for you and your team
Related Stories
The year in review
The best writing and and the biggest stories of 2019 from the Business Post
Newsround: What Thursday’s papers say
Denis O’Brien is back in court, residents continue to fight the Council on halting site and a row surfaces in government over rent control proposals
More cycle routes, expansion of Luas to Bray and new bus network proposed
Greater Dublin Area draft Transport Strategy published