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Close-up of a decorative bronze lamppost featuring a sculpted face overlooking a blurred street.

Beryl Cook Sculpture Trail opens free in Plymouth

Five life-size 3D sculptures based on Beryl Cook’s Plymouth paintings are being placed across the city for a free public art trail running through most of 2026.

Visit Plymouth lists the Beryl Cook Sculpture Trail as an exhibition at Various Locations in Plymouth, United Kingdom, from January 29 to December 31, 2026. The source gives the price as free, but does not list daily opening times, booking requirements, accessibility details or transport notes.

Detail Confirmed information
Event Beryl Cook Sculpture Trail
Dates January 29 to December 31, 2026
Time Not listed by the source
Venue Various Locations, Plymouth
Price Free
Best for Residents and visitors planning a free city art walk

Five Beryl Cook sculptures across Plymouth

The trail brings five life-size 3D Beryl Cook sculptures into the heart of Plymouth. According to the event listing, the installations are designed to bring the artist’s iconic Plymouth paintings to life in public locations around the city.

For anyone who knows Cook’s work through prints, galleries or local references, the appeal is the shift in scale and setting. Instead of viewing the paintings as framed images, visitors can encounter sculptural versions of the characters and scenes in the city that shaped the work.

The listing describes the event as an exhibition, but its format is closer to a public trail than a single-room gallery visit. That makes it easy to fit around a wider day in Plymouth, especially for people already heading into the city centre.

Dates, venue and cost confirmed by Visit Plymouth

The confirmed run is long: the Beryl Cook Sculpture Trail opens on Thursday, January 29, 2026, and continues until Thursday, December 31, 2026. That gives local residents, families and visitors almost the whole year to see the sculptures without having to plan around a short exhibition window.

The venue is listed as Various Locations, Plymouth. The source does not name the individual sculpture locations, so visitors should treat the listing as the confirmed event notice rather than a full route map.

The price is listed as free. No booking instruction is included in the supplied event information, and no start or end time is provided.

Why this trail fits Plymouth’s public art calendar

Beryl Cook remains closely associated with Plymouth through her vivid scenes of everyday life, social spaces and city characters. A sculpture trail gives that connection a street-level presence, placing the work in the public realm rather than limiting it to a traditional exhibition setting.

The practical value is straightforward: this is a free cultural activity with a long date range, suitable for people who want a low-commitment way to spend time in the city. It also gives visitors a reason to look more closely at familiar streets and public spaces.

Because the source confirms only the broad location as Various Locations, the strongest plan for attendees is to check the latest event listing before setting out, especially if they want to find all five sculptures in one visit.

What to check before setting out

Visitors can rely on four core details from the Visit Plymouth event listing: the event name, the Plymouth location, the January 29 to December 31 date range, and the free price.

Other practical details are not included in the supplied source text. Daily opening times, exact sculpture locations, accessibility arrangements, food or stall information, organiser details and transport guidance are not listed.

For now, the confirmed event notice is clear on the main point: the Beryl Cook Sculpture Trail is a free exhibition-style public art trail across Various Locations in Plymouth from January 29 to December 31, 2026.

Source: Visit Plymouth Events

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Aisha Bennett

Aisha Bennett

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Aisha Bennett is a Buckinghamshire-focused local news editor covering decisions made by the county’s local authority, planning changes, transport, schools, housing and community services. She prioritises source checking, public documents and on-the-ground context, turning formal updates into clear reporting that helps residents understand what is changing, why it matters and where to find verified information

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