Morag Myerscough collaborates on Joy Garden for Sheffield Children’s Hospital

 

©Gareth Gardner

The project seeks to highlight how artists and brands can work proactively together to catalyse change and bring real necessary good into the public realm.

Morag Myerscough has worked alongside Sheffield Children’s Hospital and its charitable arts programme Artfelt on a project which saw an underused courtyard space on the hospital site transformed into a colourful garden pavilion.

Artfelt is The Children’s Hospital Charity’s art programme committed to collaborating with artists and designers to renovate Sheffield Children’s Hospital’s walls and spaces with vibrant, cheerful art. Its aim is to help children recover in a comfortable environment designed especially for them.

©Gareth Gardner

Myerscough’s first collaboration with Artfelt in 2017 saw four unusually colourful interior designs implemented across forty-six ensuite bedrooms and six wards. She has kept a close relationship with the hospital, its patients and its staff, which is how she found inspiration for her most recent project, Joy Garden.

After Myerscough visited the site with the former head of Artfelt Cat Powell, they decided that the outside courtyard space was undervalued in its current state, recognising its potential to make a difference to children, families and staff. Myerscough says that she “knew that colour was enjoyed and uplifting” after receiving a positive response from her previous project at the hospital.

©Gareth Gardner

The final output of the Joy Garden project is a brightly coloured pavilion and outdoor seating area with crisp painted lines and 3D effects making it look more like a render than a real structure against the backdrop of the hospital building. Geometric patterns have been applied to both the exterior and interior of the main pavilion, and through to the surrounding seating and garden.

Myerscough explains that the aim was “to make a permanent space that changed through the seasons”, allowing people to enjoy the space in all weathers. She adds: “The courtyard can be a quiet thoughtful place or a buzzing hive of activity. My work just sets the scene and hopefully brings some joy just by looking at the colours through the windows.”

©Gareth Gardner

Myerscough raised the money to cover this project by approaching personal care brand Method, which previously collaborated with Myerscough on packaging designs.  With its support – and by making the personal decision not to accept a fee –  she was able to fund the project with no upfront cost to the hospital.

“We built the pavilion, seating for the staff, loose furniture, planting and a screen to check appointments, so every penny was needed,” she says.

A deliberate decision was also made to work with local craftspeople on the build. Sheffield fabricator Design Workshop Ltd made the main structure of the Joy Garden, while the panels were painted by Myerscough in her studio using paint from YesColours, which gifted the paint to the project.

 
 

©Gareth Gardner

The garden’s geometrical colour-infused flooring was provided by Geveko Markings. The floor mural was originally designed for another public artwork in London, but after the project was cancelled, Myerscough was able to repurpose it for the Joy Garden project.

 

Source: Designweek

Words: Abbey Bamford

Photography Credit: ©Gareth Gardner


 
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