



Sir Stirling Moss was one of the founding patrons of the Festival of Speed, and a regular competitor at the Revival.




The first public race meeting took place in 1802 and, through the nineteenth century, ‘Glorious Goodwood,’ as the press named it, became a highlight of the summer season




The red & yellow of the Racecourse can be traced back hundreds of years, even captured in our stunning Stubbs paintings in the Goodwood Collection




...plan strategy in an ancient woodland, enjoy award-winning dining then drive around a racetrack?


We have been host to many incredible film crews using Goodwood as a backdrop for shows like Downton Abbey, Hollywood Blockbusters like Venom: let there be Carnage and the Man from U.N.C.L.E.





The exquisite mirror in the Ballroom of Goodwood House it so big they had to raise the ceiling to get it inside!









Built in 1787 by celebrated architect James Wyatt to house the third Duke of Richmond’s prized fox hounds, The Kennels was known as one of the most luxurious dog houses in the world!


The first thing ever dropped at Goodwood was a cuddly elephant which landed in 1932 just as the 9th Duke of Richmonds passion for flying was taking off.






Each room is named after one of the hounds documented in January 1718, including Dido, Ruby and Drummer.




From 2005 to present there has been a demonstration area for the rally cars at the top of the hill


Sir Stirling Moss was one of the founding patrons of the Festival of Speed, and a regular competitor at the Revival.




FOS Favourite Mad Mike Whiddett can be caught melting tyres in his incredible collection of cars (and trucks) up the hillclimb


Built in 1787 by celebrated architect James Wyatt to house the third Duke of Richmond’s prized fox hounds, The Kennels was known as one of the most luxurious dog houses in the world!


From 2005 to present there has been a demonstration area for the rally cars at the top of the hill


The Fiat S76 or "Beast of Turin" is a Goodwood favourite and can usually be heard before it is seen at #FOS


Leading women of business, sport, fashion and media, take part in one of the most exciting horseracing events in the world.


The first public race meeting took place in 1802 and, through the nineteenth century, ‘Glorious Goodwood,’ as the press named it, became a highlight of the summer season


The red & yellow of the Racecourse can be traced back hundreds of years, even captured in our stunning Stubbs paintings in the Goodwood Collection










Leading women of business, sport, fashion and media, take part in one of the most exciting horseracing events in the world.



Leading women of business, sport, fashion and media, take part in one of the most exciting horseracing events in the world.


Leading women of business, sport, fashion and media, take part in one of the most exciting horseracing events in the world.


The red & yellow of the Racecourse can be traced back hundreds of years, even captured in our stunning Stubbs paintings in the Goodwood Collection


The Fiat S76 or "Beast of Turin" is a Goodwood favourite and can usually be heard before it is seen at #FOS


The first thing ever dropped at Goodwood was a cuddly elephant which landed in 1932 just as the 9th Duke of Richmonds passion for flying was taking off.


One of the greatest golfers of all time, James Braid designed Goodwood’s iconic Downland course, opened in 1914.








Flying training began at Goodwood in 1940 when pilots were taught operational flying techniques in Hurricanes and Spitfires.


...plan strategy in an ancient woodland, enjoy award-winning dining then drive around a racetrack?


One of the greatest golfers of all time, James Braid designed Goodwood’s iconic Downland course, opened in 1914.


The first ever round of golf played at Goodwood was in 1914 when the 6th Duke of Richmond opened the course on the Downs above Goodwood House.






The iconic spitfire covered almost 43,000 kilometres and visited over 20 countries on its epic journey and currently resides at our Aerodrome.


The first thing ever dropped at Goodwood was a cuddly elephant which landed in 1932 just as the 9th Duke of Richmonds passion for flying was taking off.





...plan strategy in an ancient woodland, enjoy award-winning dining then drive around a racetrack?


...plan strategy in an ancient woodland, enjoy award-winning dining then drive around a racetrack?



...plan strategy in an ancient woodland, enjoy award-winning dining then drive around a racetrack?



...plan strategy in an ancient woodland, enjoy award-winning dining then drive around a racetrack?


The replica of the original Axminster carpet is so lavish that the President of Bulgaria came to visit it before its departure!


Ensure you take a little time out together to pause and take in the celebration of all the hard work you put in will be a treasured memory.


...plan strategy in an ancient woodland, enjoy award-winning dining then drive around a racetrack?




The first public race meeting took place in 1802 and, through the nineteenth century, ‘Glorious Goodwood,’ as the press named it, became a highlight of the summer season




Flying training began at Goodwood in 1940 when pilots were taught operational flying techniques in Hurricanes and Spitfires.




Built in 1787 by celebrated architect James Wyatt to house the third Duke of Richmond’s prized fox hounds, The Kennels was known as one of the most luxurious dog houses in the world!


Built in 1787 by celebrated architect James Wyatt to house the third Duke of Richmond’s prized fox hounds, The Kennels was known as one of the most luxurious dog houses in the world!



The iconic spitfire covered almost 43,000 kilometres and visited over 20 countries on its epic journey and currently resides at our Aerodrome.


The famous fighter ace, who flew his last sortie from Goodwood Aerodrome, formerly RAF Westhampnett has a statue in his honor within the airfield.




Inspired by the legendary racer, Masten Gregory, who famously leapt from the cockpit of his car before impact when approaching Woodcote Corner in 1959.


For the last two years, 5,800 bales have been recylced into the biomass energy centre to be used for energy generation


The first thing ever dropped at Goodwood was a cuddly elephant which landed in 1932 just as the 9th Duke of Richmonds passion for flying was taking off.


Built in 1787 by celebrated architect James Wyatt to house the third Duke of Richmond’s prized fox hounds, The Kennels was known as one of the most luxurious dog houses in the world!


Our gin uses wild-grown botanicals sourced from the estate, and is distilled with mineral water naturally chalk-filtered through the South Downs.
The annual unveiling of the Festival of Speed sculpture has become a highlight of the Goodwood calendar. Meet Gerry Judah, the polymath artist behind these gravity-defying masterpieces.
Words by Oliver Bennett
sculpture
fos
Art
Magazine

Classic roadsters spin around enormous steel arabesques, F1 cars whoosh around tracks like giant Scalextric sets and hang upside down as if frozen in a moment of torque. These vast, hallucinatory sculptures are a magical and annual part of Goodwood’s Festival of Speed and since 1997 they have encapsulated the sheer dynamism and panache of the event. “It’s sculpture as theatre,” says their creator, artist Gerry Judah. “The front of Goodwood House becomes a stage where we perform feats of sculptural engineering.”
Judah is a loquacious deep-thinker with a continent-hopping past, a refreshing candour and the ultimate portfolio career. After attending art school at Goldsmiths and the Slade, he supplemented his life as a fine artist with work in opera and theatre, making props and painting backdrops, then becoming a model-maker and production designer for advertising photography during its 1980s heyday. “If they needed anything – from an Italian city made of biscuits to props for a Nureyev ballet – I did it.”
If they needed anything – from an Italian city made of biscuits to props for a Nureyev ballet – I did it.
Gerry Judah
Around this time, Judah worked for photographic talents like David Bailey, Adrian Flowers and Charles Settrington. Years later, in the 1990s, the Earl of March, as Settrington had become (he is now the Duke of Richmond), rang Judah to commission a triumphal arch for Ferrari. “He realised the potential of a central feature that would define the Festival of Speed, its sponsors, their history and the spirit of the event itself,” says Judah.
Each year since then, Judah has come up with new variations on the speed theme. In 2016 a series of spikes supported three BMW classics, as if leaving steel vapour trails; in 2014 an arc curved over Goodwood House with a pair of Mercedes-Benz racing cars passing each other; while in 2015 a pair of Mazdas followed a twisting track skywards. Uniting all the sculptures is a lightness of touch – they’re never overcomplicated or inaccessible. “Sometimes it can be quite hard to make something simple,” says Judah.
The front of Goodwood House becomes a stage where we perform feats of sculptural engineering.
Gerry Judah
Each sculpture begins as “a dialogue”. Judah comes up with the design, develops it with the Duke of Richmond and presents it to the client and sponsor. The process then takes a further few months, during which Judah creates sketches and models and refines the designs. “I still work with pencil and paper and bits of card,” he says. “I can’t even draw a line on the computer.”
Then everything has to be tested by engineers, as “these pieces have massive wind loads and need enormous foundations”. This summer’s design – celebrating 70 years of Porsche – is the tallest so far at 52 metres, the same height as Nelson’s Column, yet so fine at the bottom that you’ll be able to put your hands around it. All of this needs help from Judah’s engineers Diales and nearby steel contractors Littlehampton Welding. “These are the real heroes,” says Judah. “They have the right attitude. Nothing fazes them.” The vast sculptures are delivered in sections, then bolted and welded together with the classic cars mounted on-site. “This needs great care,” says Judah. “These cars are priceless. Often they’re back racing as soon as they’re demounted.”
From an ancestral background in Baghdad’s Jewish community, Judah was born and grew up in Kolkata and moved to London when he was ten years old: a journey that has informed many of his pieces, which often have climate change, humanitarian and anti-war messages. He’s currently working on a large sculpture that he says will be “Kolkata’s Eiffel Tower”. The Goodwood pieces are temporary and, for the most part, end up recycled, which seems a shame. But one remains intact, his enormous nose-down Jaguar E-Type, which may yet gain pride of place at Jaguar’s Coventry factory.
Often they’re back racing as soon as they’re demounted.
Gerry Judah
One of the artist’s twin St Paul’s Cathedral installations.
This article is taken from the Goodwood magazine, Summer 2018 issue
sculpture
fos
Art
Magazine