Clan Cancer Support is celebrating today (Tuesday November, 2) following the ‘Light the North’ lighthouse trail auction finale which took place at Thainstone Exchange last night. The in-person and on-line auction raised an incredible £324,200 for the Scottish cancer charity.
Clan Cancer Support, in partnership with Wild in Art, shone a light across the north-east, Moray, Orkney and Shetland with ‘Light the North’ the lighthouse trail from August 9 to October 17. This was the latest art sculpture trail in Scotland, and the largest displayed in the North-east, to inspire artists, schools and the public from across the country while raising fund for Clan Cancer Support.
The sculpture trail drew people to explore, not only in Aberdeen, but the surrounding communities, Moray and the northern isles to see fifty 2.5m tall lighthouses, which were designed by some of the UK’s most talented artists. The event was made more special as the trail was present in each of the areas that Clan Cancer Support operates.
All 50 large designed lighthouse sculptures, eight small designed lighthouses, two small and two large blank lighthouses took centre stage and were sold in the grand finale in Inverurie, kindly supported by the ANM Group. The highest bid of the evening went to Lot 38 - ‘Riding Out The Storm’ sculpture created by artist Rachel Davies and sponsored by bp. The lighthouse raised £13,500 and was purchased by the Portsoy 75 Club who raised the funds via a crowdfunder to ensure the sculpture returned to Portsoy, where it spent the 10 weeks of the trail.
Fiona Fernie, Clan's head of income generation and business development and project Director for Light the North, says: “We are still coming down from cloud nine. We are so grateful to everyone who generously placed their bids last night to be in with the chance of owning one of these incredible sculptures. We had a figure in mind, but this has surpassed that.
Fiona continues: “The auction finale was the culmination of two years of hard work on this project with the curve ball of CV19 thrown in. It may have taken longer than anticipated to bring the lighthouse trail to the North-east of Scotland, but I think we can all agree it was worth the wait. To see how the people of Scotland took the trail to their hearts and the resulting funds it has raised is something that the Clan team will not forget and are very grateful for.”
Fiona concludes: “Cancer patients have been particularly hard hit during the pandemic due to delays in diagnosis and treatment. Clan has helped people live with and beyond a cancer diagnosis for over 38 years, but we need the support of projects and events such as ‘Light the North’ to continue being here for them and to support even more people which is exactly what the incredible funds raised last night will do. We want to take this final opportunity to thank everyone involved in making the trail, farewell weekend, and auction possible - from the Wild in Art team, artists, sponsors, media partners, schools and local businesses to our incredible volunteers, team at Clan and of course the general public. These vital funds will help people live with and beyond their or their loved one's cancer diagnosis and improve the quality of life for all those who turn to us for support.”
To find out more about Clan Cancer Support and its services visit https://www.clancancersupport.org/