RED EARTH is an international environmental arts group creating site-specific installations and performances in response to the landscape:

Experiments in ritualised space, physical speculations on elemental processes identifying connections between art, science and nature through research, process, experimentation, exploration, and public participation.

Interdisciplinary collaborations between artists and other specialists in their field: geologists, architects, farmers, archaeologists, historians, ecologists, astronomers, land managers, animals and communities.

RED EARTH has presented work in Britain, Japan, Java, Mongolia and Europe in collaboration with artists from those countries - cross-cultural interface challenging conventional boundaries.
 

RED EARTH is co-directed by artists Caitlin Easterby and Simon Pascoe who conceptualise, devise and produce all RED EARTH events in collaboration with independent artists and other professionals. They also lecture in Environmental Art as part of Sussex University’s Continuing Education programme.

Project fields include
•Live performance
•Site-specific sculpture installations
•Public art/environmental sculpture commissions
•Education: lectures, workshops and residencies
•Participatory arts projects
•Interdisciplinary collaborations with non-arts professionals

 
RED EARTH has received support and commissions from Arts Council, England, Visiting Arts, the BBC, The National Trust, Greenwich & Docklands Festivals, Brighton, Bath, Bracknell, Falkirk and Canterbury festivals; Amiens and Viva Cite in France, and the Roaring Hooves Festival, Mongolia. Plus Zap Arts, Made In Brighton, Interreg, The Natural History Museum, and several regional councils.