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A huge sculpture created by one of Britain's greatest living artists, Ted Stourton, at Camelot Castle Tintagel, is having a timely impact on global awareness. Sculpted in 20 Tonnes of granite rock, carved into the natural landscape of the Cornish headland at Tintagel, Stourton's "Ripples of Peace" has caught the imagination of aerial photographers, school children and international opinion leaders alike. This sculpture is delivering an extraordinary impact that is incomparable with anything ever done by any artist ever before. Indeed there is not one woman or man alive today at this time for whom this extraordinary sculpture will not have instant consequences. Crafted a few yards away from Tintagel Island, the mythological birthplace of King Arthur, (the legendary king who brought peace to the British Isles during the dark ages), "The Ripples of Peace" has been created at a time when its message has never been more needed. As young children play in the grass lined ripples and the granite of the sculpture that Stourton has created, RAF Jaguar Jets make low level passes overhead serving as a chilling reminder of the consequences of a failure to maintain peace. Their booster jets fracture the solitude of a millennia. The tens of thousands of people that are set to visit and walk through this sculpture over the next few months are invited by Stourton to understand and contact the real value of peace. The "Ripples of Peace"

Visitors are invited to walk round the sculpture clockwise and then to repeat the walk round the sculpture anti-clockwise, then to record their experiences or thoughts during the walk in writing while seated at the round table at Camelot Castle. These are collected each day and a copy of each person's individual experience is sent to Downing Street and is published in the Metropolitan Newspapers affiliated with the Mappin and Stourton Art Foundation which has sponsored the sculpture.
"What is rarely understood today is that Peace is not just a state, it is an ability. A failure to maintain peace is a failure in an ability." said Stourton. "This Sculpture is designed for participation. Those that have walked the Ripples of Peace at Tintagel have discovered that it is quite an extraordinary experience."