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The creator of an inflatable sculpture that killed two people after it broke
free of its moorings has been arrested on suspicion of manslaughter.
Maurice Agis was questioned yesterday about the deaths of two women who fell
from his Dreamspace installation when it soared 70ft (21m) into the
air at a park in Co. Durham.
The arrest of the 74-year-old artist followed a lengthy investigation,
conducted jointly by police and the Health and Safety Executive, into the
cause of the tragedy.
Dozens of families, many with young children, were exploring the giant,
walk-in artwork, half the size of a football pitch, when it suddenly soared
skywards on a warm Sunday afternoon in July.
Before it flipped over and crumpled to the grounds of Riverside Park,
Chester-le-Street, a number of those who were inside the plastic structure
fell out. Others were left trapped inside.
Elizabeth Collings, a 68-year-old grandmother, and Claire Furmedge, a
38-year-old radiographer, were killed. Another 13 people were injured.
Among them was a three-year-old girl, Rosie Wright, who fell an estimated 50ft
from the sculpture, suffering multiple fractures and a punctured lung.
Her life was saved by a passing anaesthetist, Dr Peter Evans, who stabilised
her before she was taken to hospital in a helicopter.
Mr Agis, from East London, was arrested yesterday when he attended a
pre-arranged appointment at Charing Cross police station.
He had supervised the installation of Dreamspace in Riverside Park and
was present when the incident happened.
Mr Agis, who was questioned by police in the immediate aftermath of the
deaths, has described the despair and disbelief he felt when his artwork
left the ground.
He grabbed one of the mooring ropes which had broken loose and tried to hold
on to it, but was knocked to the ground.
“It happened completely out of the blue. It went straight up, up 20 metres,
and then across the ground,” he said. “I was in the midst of it, completely
mesmerised. I could hardly move. I was just completely shaken and stunned.”
The abstract artist, who said he felt “desperately sad” for the families of
those who died, first created Dreamspace in 1996.
In the past ten years the maze-like structure, built of 115 inter-connecting
pods, had toured cities across Europe and had been visited by more than
250,000 people.
At the time of the Chester-le-Street incident it was on a tour of Britain,
which was partly funded by a £60,000 Arts Council grant, and was next due to
be installed at Victoria Park in Hackney, East London.
During the early stages of the police investigation, there was speculation
that vandals may have deliberately loosened some of the ropes which tethered Dreamspace
to the ground.
Scientists suggested, however, that it was possible that sunny weather on the
day of the incident may have heated the structure to a point where it
effectively turned into a giant hot-air balloon. Police visited Scotland as
part of their inquiries after it emerged that in 1988 another of Mr Agis’s
inflatable installations, called Clause 28, had slipped its mooring
in high winds during the Glasgow Garden Festival.
Then, the artist and a colleague were lifted 30ft into the air as they held on
to mooring ropes. Mr Agis received back injuries and his co-worker fell into
the River Clyde.
Mr Agis was released on bail last night, pending further inquiries.
Vital statistics
250,000 Visitors at 25 venues across Europe
50m by 50m Size of ‘bouncy castle’
5m Height
115 Number of interconnected cells, made from thin PVC
sheets, inflated to create “a psychedelic cathedral”
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