
The North Wales artist whose beach sculptures 'disappear like magic dust'
Tim Pugh, 59, from Flintshire, crafts his artworks on beaches and in woodlands using whatever materials he discovers each day, including old toys, miners' tags and washed-up army parachutes.
He claimed the Adult Artistic prize at the World Rock Stacking Championships in 2019 and 2020, and recently secured second place in the Adult Finalist category at the European Stone Stacking Championships, reports PA.
The full-time environmental artist's creations are intended to "leave a light touch on the land", washing away without leaving any trace behind.
Among his most cherished pieces are colourful flowers crafted from mussel shells, delicately balanced stone towers, and sea creatures fashioned from discarded plastic.
"I like the transience of it – I think that's the magical thing about it," Tim told PA Real Life. "There's a lot of people making stone stacks now, and a lot of people say they despoil the landscape.
"It's not for me to antagonise people, but to show that my work really will fall down and totally disappear within a matter of days."
Tim developed his passion for land art whilst studying at Edinburgh College of Art. His lecturers picked up on his interest in the environment and started taking him to nearby beaches to "look at the impact of waves on clay and things like that".
After graduating, he moved back to North Wales and started working in woods and parks as a land artist.
Tim explained: "I'm one of those people who said, 'I'm going to be an artist and nothing else'. It's an all-consuming thing, this art."
He was supported by his grandmother Beatrix, a "staunch ally" who encouraged him during the difficult early years of starting out as an artist.
"Apart from my gran, most of the family were against it as a way of life," he said.
Through residencies, school workshops and exhibitions, Tim has been able to earn a living as a full-time artist, even being taught in primary schools as part of the Welsh art curriculum.
He spends most of his time on Whitehaven beach in Cumbria and in North Wales, engaged in a constant cycle of creating sculptures out of stones, driftwood and detritus, photographing them and then letting them wash away.
One artwork shows shells fanning out from a tidepool like a sun.
In others, he uses materials like pebbles, twisted chunks of metal and tyres to create delicately balanced sculptures that seem to defy gravity.
"It's great for making sculptures, and it's got lots of fossils and driftwood on it," he said.
"There's a family of ravens that come down and eat my sandwiches every time I go – they trust me now.
"It's like my studio. We've had these storms the last few weeks, and they brought lots of new detritus and materials to play with."
Tim said he sometimes plans ideas in advance with drawings, but they often change depending on what has washed up.
"Often I find really poignant things like miners' tags," he said. "When a miner went underground at the nearby mines, if they don't put the tag back when they finished working, you know they're still down there."
He said he has also found bits of old railway lines, children's toys and even an army parachute. He added: "I went to a beach once in North Wales, and it was awash with baby starfish, unfortunately all dead. I abandoned my ideas and worked with the poor little starfish to make a pattern."
Tim said he is careful not to work with living things, inspecting rocks to remove any snails that might be crushed.
Beyond the beach, he also works with fallen leaves in the woods and snow in the mountains.
He voiced concern about the "worrying trend" of hikers taking stones from ancient walls, cairns and hill forts to build stone stacks.
"Leaving a light touch on the land is very important, because I do understand these criticisms about these stone stacks: they do proliferate," he said.
"The beach I work with, I know it's quite violent with high tides, so all of my work is obliterated, even the chunky stuff."
Tim said this "sheer impermanence" is the "magic dust" in his work. He added that he has a "love-hate relationship" with the plastic that washes up on the beach.
While often "seduced by the vivid colours", he said he despairs about the scale of plastic pollution.
In one sculpture, multicoloured fragments of plastic become smoke billowing out of an industrial tower. Another depicts a sea turtle, one of the species impacted heavily by plastic pollution in the oceans.
Tim regularly collects plastic from the beach and uses it to teach school children about plastic pollution.
"A lot of local people don't notice it any more when they walk, scattered amongst the rocks, because they're that accustomed to the plastic," he said.
"We've all done it, taken toys to the beach and forgotten about them and lost them.
"I like to think there's a narrative to them: they've been loved, they've been lost and they've undertaken a voyage."
Five years ago, while exploring the beach, Tim slipped on some seaweed-covered boulders and broke his arm in two places.
"I had to climb this cliff with one arm and all my camera equipment, because the sea was coming in and it had cut me off," he said.
Three months later in 2019, he was crowned the world champion in adult artistic stone stacking at the Llano Earth Art Festival in Texas – a title he kept the following year.
He will return to Texas next March, having earned second place in July this year in the Adult Finalist category at the European Stone Stacking Championships in Dunbar, Scotland.
"[The European Land Art Festival] is a fantastic event because it's for people of all ages and abilities to come down and have a go," he said.
"It's good for children that think they're not good at art, because they can just have a go and there are no wrongs or rights.
"There's nearly always a gang of lads that are a bit cheeky in class, and you put them on the beach – you have to drag them away in the end."
Tim advised hopeful land artists to "just have a go at a simple shape in your back yard or on a local beach".
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Cambrian News
41 minutes ago
- Cambrian News
National Poet of Wales comes to Aberystwyth for intimate one-night-only gig
The Welsh-Iraqi artist and filmmaker became Poet of Wales in 2022, her works published in the poetry collection My Body Can House Two Hearts and as part of Welsh (Plural): Essays on the Future of Wales.


Wales Online
an hour ago
- Wales Online
The real life Welsh story behind new BBC drama Confessions of a Steroid Gang
The real life Welsh story behind new BBC drama Confessions of a Steroid Gang The series tells the story of father and son Andrew and Macaulay Dodd who ran a million-pound steroid empire from the remote Welsh countryside A new series tells the story of Macaulay and Andrew Dodd who started one of the UK's biggest steroid empires from a farmhouse in North Wales (Image: BBC/Double Act Productions) A new BBC series has revealed how a steroid empire based in Wales was dismantled, partly through a dodgy dog grooming shop set up to launder the money being made. Confessions of a Steroid Gang tells the real life story of Macaulay Dodd and his father Andrew who were jailed after their £1m steroid lab in North Wales was uncovered. The three-part series reveals how Macaulay, portrayed by Rhondda-based actor Garin Williams, first became addicted to steroids at 15 in the pursuit to achieve the perfect body before he would go on to cook up £1.2m worth of the Class C drug. Although anabolic steroids are a Class C drug, there is an exemption for personal use. For the latest TV and showbiz news sign up to our newsletter Struggling with his relationship with his dad following his parents divorce, Macaulay latched onto his older, gym-going brother and his circle of older friends. His trips to the gym soon turned into something darker when he began injecting steroids at 15, becoming addicted to build the perfect body. His dad, Andrew Dodd, was also struggling. A former Dee estuary fisherman, he was desperate to change his circumstances when he had a chance encounter with a man in the pub who introduced him to the world of steroids. Hearing that 1.5 million people in the UK were using the drug, he decided to get involved. The pair reconnected when Macauley was 18 and living out his car in Deeside before they moved to St Asaph, where they set up their steroid lab in a remote farmhouse. Article continues below It started as a small scheme in a garden shed but quickly evolved into one of the UK's biggest underground steroid labs, Renvex. The pair were importing the raw ingredients, mainly synthetic testosterone, from China, and formed a network of members of the public who would accept parcels for them without asking questions. Rhondda-born actor Garin Williams plays Macaulay in Confessions of a Steroid Gang (Image: BBC) Speaking on the show, Andrew said: "I didn't really class myself as a criminal. I'd just seen myself as a business owner." A police operation in London eventually led to the discovery of a large quantity of steroids in a flat belonging to Terence Murrell, an online dealer who was buying from Renvex. Documents at the home led police to find a payment to a dog grooming business that Andrew and Macauley had set up in Ruthin to launder the money. North Wales Police closed in on the father and son's operation. They were arrested in a dawn raid and police finally uncovered the lab at the centre of it all. Andrew said it "felt like a relief at the time", fed up of "deceiving" those around him. Both Andrew and Macauley were sentenced to spend five years in prison in 2018. Despite their court-room bust up, they spent their time in prison together, which Macauley said "saved" their relationship. Including testimony from steroid users, experts and those affected by the culture, Confessions of a Steroid Gang shows how image-obsessed social media, testosterone supplements and a booming black market collided and highlights the health risks of unregulated steroid use and addiction. Speaking on his involvement in the series, Garin Williams, who played Macauley said it was the "biggest project" he'd been involved in so far. "As an actor, you want to show as much emotion as possible on screen and with this story about Macauley's life I had a great opportunity to do so." Article continues below All three episodes of Confessions of a Steroid Gang are available to watch now on BBC iPlayer.


Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac name key to Wrexham success with record set straight
Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac have credited Wrexham's meteoric rise to manager Phil Parkinson and his players, saying their hands-off style lets them bond closely with the squad Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac believe leaving football decisions to the experts has been key to their success at Wrexham. The two Hollywood stars have transformed the Welsh side's fortunes since buying the club in February 2021. The Red Dragons have climbed from non-league obscurity into the Championship after registering three straight promotions. Reynolds and Mac have been praised in many quarters for their approach to running the football club, but the pair insist any success is down to manager Phil Parkinson and his staff, along with the players. The co-owners were in attendance at the Racecourse Ground on Saturday to watch Wrexham's first home game in the second tier in 43 years. Unfortunately, there was no fairytale ending as their team suffered a 3-2 defeat to West Bromwich Albion, but both men were in good spirits ahead of the game. READ MORE: Ryan Reynolds explains awkward moment with Wrexham's record signing - 'Got my leg in my mouth' Speaking to Sky Sports, Reynolds also highlighted another benefit to distancing themselves from playing matters, as it allows them to form a closer bond with the team. "We have a very hands-off management style," said the Deadpool actor. "Our job is to listen, learn, and tell the story, and that's a great position for any owner to be in. "We don't make football decisions, and the great gift of that is that we're able to have relationships with the players at Wrexham, whereas most people in our position can't. We have a relationship with every single one of our players." The positive connection the duo have with players was evident after the final whistle as they caught up with former Wrexham man Steven Fletcher, who was at the match working as a pundit for ITV. The veteran striker was released from the club in May, with the 38-year-old making it clear in a post on social media that he would've preferred to stay. However, there was no animosity on show as he walked across the pitch laughing and joking with the celebrity owners. Mac, who recently filed to legally change his surname from McElhenney, admitted he was also surprised by the plaudits bestowed upon him and Reynolds. "It's interesting to get accolades when you hear people say, 'Oh, you guys have done a pretty good job at the club.' The truth is we don't really have anything to do with what happens out on the pitch," he insisted. "We've got our very specific job, which is to be clowns and to tell the story as best we can, but to be as respectful as we possibly can of what Phil does on the pitch." Wrexham have failed to register any points in their first two Championship games after losing their opener at Southampton 2-1. But Parkinson insists there is no need to push the panic button, despite urging his players to rediscover their "grittiness" in defence. Speaking after the West Brom game, he told The Leader: "The game is won and lost in both boxes ultimately and the goals we conceded were too soft, it's as simple as that. "We've got to find a tenacity and defend our box better. The chances we had, could we have made the keeper work more? Yes of course, but the goals were just too soft. "We've had starts to seasons like this before; in League Two. I remember where we were doing a lot of good things like defending properly, and we've got to get that grittiness back in our game." He added: "A lot of the football was really good and we showed that we can compete at the level. But I didn't see too many times our players were getting freedom and space in their penalty box. We've got to look at that, and we will do, starting on Monday morning." Join our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. Sign up to our newsletter! Wrexham is the Game is great new way to get top-class coverage Wrexham AFC is the arguably the fastest-growing club in the world at the moment thanks to a certain Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney. The Dragons have achieved two consecutive promotions and are cheered on by crowds from not only North Wales but also from all over the globe, thanks to the success of the Disney+ documentary 'Welcome to Wrexham'. But does it have a dedicated, quality source of information piped through to your inbox each week, free of ads but packed with informed opinion, analysis and even a little bit of fun each week? That's where Wrexham is the Game steps in... Available every Wednesday, it provides all the insights you need to be a top red. And for a limited time, a subscription to 'Wrexham is the Game' will cost fans just £15 for the first year.