MARK-IT: Legacy

MARK-IT: Legacy

Participators in the stone-carving workshops show off their handiwork.
Workshops

The MARK-IT Trail is a celebration of Spalding’s historic markets through a range of public art works, such as Graeme Mitcheson’s beautifully crafted stone sheep and cattle.  However, it also provided an opportunity for members of the public to benefit from Graeme’s expertise and experience in a programme of stone-carving workshops, organised by Transported under the Arts Council’s “Creative People and Places” scheme, in a series of workshops arranged in May 2025.

Graeme was commissioned to run 8 free half-day stone-carving workshops, hosted by Tonic Health charity at their base in Surfleet, Tonic 44. 28 people took part, including members of the Transported team supported by Boston Woodcarvers, who were keen to try the new material and learn new techniques.
 
Graeme supplied limestone blocks and design ideas, and guided novice carvers through the basic techniques of stone carving. 
 

Faced with a foot-square block of limestone – smooth and blank – how do you start? How liberate the hidden Michelangelo or inner Barbara Hepworth? (When disaster is always just a chisel-slip away!)

Graeme had some designs on paper – simple or more intricate – that could be transferred, carbon-copy-like, to the smooth face of the stone. Ready to chip away, under Graeme’s guidance in the basic techniques, into a three-dimensional relief, such as one might find in the porch of a mediaeval church out in the fens.

The stone is soft, easily worked, with hand-pressure sufficient for detail and smoothing. On the dusty picnic tables two dimensions will become three as the morning progresses and the sun shifts round.

One lady, however, emerging from lunch into the sunlight fierce on her morning’s handiwork, looked disappointed. “It’s rubbish,” she said. “It’s just flat.” Until Graeme set the block on its edge, angled it to the sun, and the flower she’d carved sprang into light and shadow. She was really chuffed, and keen to take it home and set it up in the garden – somewhere where the sun would catch it, of course.

Using the template.

The finished artworks took everybody by surprise, the quality and the speed of learning; and in response to their keenness to carry on and develop their skills, Transported funded another phase of workshops. These took place throughout the summer of 2025 to cater for more people that wanted to take part and allow others to develop their skills further. 

Public display 
On Saturday 16 August 2025, the results of their work were displayed to the public in Hall Place in a pop-up stall jointly organised by Transported and Spalding & District Civic Society. Graeme was on hand to demonstrate the carving process, and members of the Society were on hand to answer any questions about the MARK-IT Trail or the work of the Society in general.
Transported stall showcasing some of the creations
Examples of the works created by workshop participators
Member of the Transported team having a go at stone carving.
Our display

Nick Jones, Transported’s programme director said:-

From Transported’s and Arts Council England’s point of view, the legacy from this project couldn’t have been better. Our remit is to get more people involved in art. The popularity of the original four sessions saw more people wanting to get involved in extra workshops, hence the above opportunities. From Day One we were talking to them about establishing an independent Stone-carving group that can go on to work together to take on their own projects, creating new public art works that make the area nicer and more interesting. Graeme has been great, teaching and mentoring those taking part but also inspiring them to want to carry on and do more.

Stone-carving group established
Those who took part in the workshops now desire to keep on improving their skills and, with the support of Graeme and Transported, they are hoping to create their own public art legacy in the South Holland area.