Henry Moore and more landmark sculpture exhibition premieres at Kew Wakehurst, a wild botanic garden in Sussex this June

Release date: 13 May 2026

  • Four Iconic Henry Moore sculptures displayed across Wakehurst
  • Striking contemporary sculptures created by leading international artists: Rana Begum, Paloma Varga Weisz and Rafael Pérez Evans
  • Works respond to Wakehurst’s rich and diverse wild landscapes and globally important living plant collections
  • Organised in partnership with the Henry Moore Foundation, working closely with its Leeds-based Henry Moore Institute, a globally recognised centre for the study of historical and contemporary sculpture
  • With Headline Support from The Nora McNeely Hurley Foundation, additional support from Sotheby’s
  • Tickets available from £1 for Universal Credit ticket and £9.25 ticket for 17–25-year-olds 

Kew Wakehurst, a wild botanic garden and living laboratory in Sussex, will transform into a vast open-air gallery this summer, presenting  Henry Moore and more - a major outdoor sculpture exhibition, bringing together Moore’s iconic forms with three works by leading contemporary artists, Rana Begum, Paloma Varga Weisz, and Rafael Pérez Evans.  

Framed by Wakehurst's spectacular American Prairie, Winter Garden and Mansion lawns, four timeless sculptures by Henry Moore will be exhibited in a unique outdoor gallery, continuing the dialogue that Moore had with nature throughout his prestigious career.  

These innovative contemporary works will take in some of Wakehurst’s most spectacular vistas, from the Grade I listed Elizabethan Mansion, across The Paddock, and among the national collection of Nothofagus beech trees in an evolving dialogue between art and nature.  

These contrasting and evocative new works extend Henry Moore’s sculptural legacy as a bridge between humanity and nature. Where Moore’s forms evoke permanence and history, these contemporary responses explore themes of light, time, change, rest and renewal—continuing the dialogue between body, landscape, and material in an innovative way. These works will allow visitors to Wakehurst to explore art, by walking through, pausing, noticing changes in light and landscape, in this unique celebration across the landscape. 

Contemporary artworks: two world premieres, one UK premiere 

Rana Begum RA – No.1604 Mesh | World Premiere 

Medium: Timber and metal fencing Location: The Paddock 

Internationally acclaimed for her minimalist approach to light, colour, and geometry, London- based artist Rana Begum unveils No.1604 Mesh, a 14-metre-long sculptural installation merging industrial and organic materials. 

A new commission, specially designed for the Henry Moore and more exhibition, No.1604 Mesh is constructed from industrial fencing interwoven with timber from Wakehurst trees, with a zigzag structure that follows the slope of The Paddock meadow. Its rhythmic design plays with the tension between natural and man-made forms, inviting reflection on architecture’s presence within the landscape. Shifting hues inspired by dogwood (Cornus) in Wakehurst’s Winter Garden and changing sunlight and weather conditions mean No.1604 Mesh transforms throughout the day and the seasons. The result is an evolving artwork that mirrors the temporal rhythms of nature. 

Rana Begum says: “The connection with nature, its rhythm and cycles, are important elements in my practice - specifically the use of natural light, which applies especially in projects like No. 1604 Mesh, at Wakehurst. Because the work is site-specific, developing the concept behind the sculpture begins with first looking, feeling and experiencing the site, examining the types of flowers and trees surrounding the piece, and looking at how the sky opens up in relation to the ground. All of these elements form part of the sculpture and the work has been designed in dialogue with these features.” 

Paloma Varga Weisz – Wilde Leute 3, 6, and 18 2023 | UK Premiere 

Medium: Bronze Location: Mansion Lawn 

Celebrated German sculptor Paloma Varga Weisz brings her Wilde Leute series to Wakehurst, showing them for the first time ever in the UK. Paloma Varga Weisz's Wilde Leute are a modern continuation of a historical figure that was described in the Middle Ages as a symbol of the primitive state of man.  The artist began developing the series in 1998 as a collection of small ceramic sculptures, which she later revisited in various sizes and materials such as wood, glass and in this case, bronze. 

The series draws reference to early and medieval Renaissance interpretations of familial intimacy and harmonious communing with nature. Yet, Varga Weisz conveys her figures with abstract fluidity blurring the preconceived boundaries of gender; the varying arrangements of elder and childlike characters envisioning families with manifold and diverse interrelationships of primordial intimacy freed of convention. 

Set within the open landscape, the permanence of bronze contrasts with the mutability of nature, creating a dialogue between transience and stability, individuality and community, past and present. 

Paloma Varga Weisz says “Showing my Wilde Leute at Wakehurst feels like bringing them home to a place where art and nature breathe together. Henry Moore’s work has always embodied a dialogue between the human form and the landscape. That same tension, between civilisation and wilderness, lies at the heart of my sculptures. In Wakehurst’s wild surroundings, these figures stand as they were meant to, as half-human, half-nature, quietly alive within the landscape.”  

Rafael Pérez Evans – Horizontals | World Premiere 

Medium: Wood             Location: Nothofagus Beech tree collection 

Spanish-Welsh artist Rafael Pérez Evans introduces Horizontals, a series of six wooden resting sculptures made from salvaged timber sourced from fallen trees at Wakehurst. 

Each sculpture offers a simple invitation to lie down and form a relationship with the trees above, the sky, temperature and smell of the wood, the ground, and the changing light. Visitors are encouraged to lie down on the sculptures, shifting from the upright pace of daily life to a slower, horizontal, more receptive encounter with the forest canopy. 

Developed in collaboration with Wakehurst’s Arboretum Team, who sourced timber from fallen trees across the landscape, Horizontals grows from Pérez Evans’ new research into rest, exhaustion, and breakdown ecologies. In lying down, the body enacts a quiet resistance – a deliberate slowing against the accelerated pace of contemporary life, and an opening towards the living world.  

Pérez Evans was raised on a lemon farm in southern Spain – a landscape of agricultural labour and rural life that continues to pulse through his practice.  Now a sculptor and DPhil researcher at the University of Oxford, with a major forthcoming exhibition at Mostyn, Wales, his work asks what it means to make space for what the world no longer has time for.  

Rafael Pérez Evans says: “My own experience of the site has shown me how being with nature can retune you – like a radio finding its signal, Wakehurst shifts you into a slower, more grounded frequency, a different rhythm for being alive. I am interested in what happens when a person is permitted to stop – to lie down, and be held by something larger: the ground, the smell of wood, the trees, the sky, the temperature, and the changing light.” 

Henry Moore and more exhibition at Wakehurst opens on 5 June 2026 and will run to 23 May 2027.   

Eva Owen, Programme Manager, Wakehurst says: "Henry Moore and more embodies our mission to care for and protect the natural world. Our contemporary artists have taken inspiration from Wakehurst as a living laboratory and the vital science and research that takes place through our pioneering Nature Unlocked programme and our globally important Millennium Seed Bank.  This exhibition is an incredible opportunity to be a living gallery for these exceptional and iconic artworks that explore the profound human connection to nature. We hope our visitors can pause, reflect and experience the joy and awe of connecting with nature framed by these incredible sculptures through each changing season." 

Laurence Sillars, Head of the Henry Moore Institute says: “At the Henry Moore Institute, sculpture is central to everything we do, from supporting new work to exploring sculpture’s histories and possibilities. This project has been a special opportunity to bring that approach to Wakehurst, placing Henry Moore in dialogue with leading contemporary artists in a setting of exceptional natural richness. Together, these works show how sculpture can transform our experience of a landscape, even as the landscape itself reshapes how sculpture is seen and understood. At Wakehurst, sculpture feels active and alive: rooted in place, responsive to nature and open to new interpretation.” 

In London, Henry Moore: Monumental Nature opened at Kew Gardens on 9 May. This exhibition will be the largest and most comprehensive outdoor showcase of Moore’s work to date, featuring 30 works across Kew’s landscape and inside the iconic Temperate House, the largest surviving Victorian glasshouse in the world. A dedicated exhibition in the Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art will also feature over 90 rarely seen works, exploring Moore’s unique process of ‘thinking through nature’. 

Media Enquiries: For media requests about Henry Moore and more, interviews, and further information, please contact: Jemima Broadbridge, Senior Press Officer,  j.broadbridge@kew.org or  wakehurstpr@kew.org,  

Notes to editors:   

For more information or images, please contact the Press Office at wakehurstpr@kew.org    

Ticket information  

  • Henry Moore and more at Wakehurst runs from 5 June 2026 to 23 May 2027
  • Henry Moore and more is included with day entry. Free for members
  • Tickets available from £1 for Universal Credit recipients, £9.25 ticket for 17–25-year-olds 

 
Visit: Wakehurst | Kew to learn more about the exhibition and check visitor information, opening times, accessibility and ticket prices.  

About Kew Wakehurst: a wild botanic garden and living laboratory in the Sussex High Weald National Landscape. Its ancient and beautiful landscapes span 535 acres and are a place for escape, exploration, tranquillity, and wonder. Its diverse collection of plants from Britain and around the globe thrive within a tapestry of innovative gardens, temperate woodlands, meadows, and wetlands. Wakehurst is a centre for UK biodiversity and global conservation, seed research, and ecosystem science.  At its heart is Kew’s Millennium Seed Bank, the world’s largest store of seeds from wild plant species.  

60 years ago, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew took over the management of Wakehurst from the National Trust. We now work in partnership with the National Trust to care for our collections and heritage areas. Please note that Wakehurst is referred to as Kew Wakehurst, not Wakehurst Place.  

Read about Nature Unlocked, Kew Wakehurst’s pioneering research programme, that uses the site’s diverse habitats as a living laboratory to harness the power of UK landscapes in the face of climate change, as every living thing depends on plants and fungi.  

Nature Connectedness research forms part of Nature Unlocked and aims to investigate how biodiversity supports both our mental and physical wellbeing, and how an understanding of nature inspires us in acting to protect it.  

The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (RBG Kew) is a world-renowned charity and global centre for plant and fungal science, education, conservation, and horticulture.  We work to tackle biodiversity loss and climate change through innovative research, out living collections and influential partnerships. 

The Henry Moore Foundation was founded by the artist and his family in 1977 to encourage public appreciation of the visual arts. Today it supports innovative sculpture projects, devises an imaginative programme of exhibitions and research worldwide, and preserves the legacy of Moore himself: one of the great sculptors of the twentieth century, who did so much to bring the art form to a wider audience. A registered charity, we award grants to arts organisations around the world, with a mission to bring great sculpture to as many people as possible.  

Henry Moore Institute welcomes everyone to visit their galleries, research library and archive of sculptors’ papers to experience, enjoy and research sculpture from around the world. The newly refurbished Institute can be found in the centre of Leeds, the city where Henry Moore (1898–1986) began his training as a sculptor. Their changing programme of historical, modern, and contemporary exhibitions and events encourage thinking about what sculpture is, how it is made and the artists who make it. As part of the Henry Moore Foundation, they are a hub for sculpture, connecting a global network of artists and scholars, continuing research into the art form and ensuring that sculpture is accessible and celebrated by a wide audience. 

For more information about the Henry Moore Foundation, its two venues in Hertfordshire and Leeds, as well as the philanthropic and educational work carried out by the Henry Moore Grants and Research programmes, please visit: henry-moore.org   

Henry Moore Studios & Gardens is the former home and workplace of sculptor Henry Moore (1898–1986). From 1940 until his death in 1986, Moore lived and worked in rural Hertfordshire where he acquired over 70 acres of land and set up various studios, creating the ideal environment in which he could make and display his work and cater to an international demand for exhibitions. Now open to the public, the Henry Moore Studios & Gardens offers a unique insight into the artist’s working practice and showcases a wide selection of Moore’s sculptures in the landscape in which they were created. It is home to the Henry Moore Archive, one of the largest single-artist archives in the world. 

Contemporary Artists Biographies  

About Rana Begum  
Rana is a London-based artist who challenges the boundaries between sculpture, painting, and architecture through the use of light, colour, and form. Her geometric installations shift in tone and perspective as viewers move around them. Attuned to patterns in the surrounding environment, her works play with reflection and transparency, focusing on how light and material interact to continually reveal and renew perspectives. Rana Begum was elected a Royal Academician (RA) — a fellow of the Royal Academy of Arts — in December 2019.  

About Rafael Pérez Evans  
Rafael is a Spanish-Welsh artist whose practice explores agricultural, ecological, and socio-political collapse. Working across sculpture, installation, and sound, his work is shaped by queer, rural, and disabled life, repositioning devalued lands and bodies as potential sites of liberation. In 2021, he was awarded a Sculpture Fellowship by the Henry Moore Institute, in collaboration with Leeds Beckett University.  

About Paloma Varga Weisz  
Paloma is a contemporary German artist best known for her sculpture, drawing, watercolour, and installation work, notable for its blend of traditional craft and a deeply personal, often surreal iconography. Paloma explores themes of transformation and the human condition through organic forms.