27/05/2026
Remembering Tess Jaray
1937 - 2026
We are very sad to hear of the recent passing of distinguished artist Tess Jaray. Beam (then Public Arts) was lucky enough to work with Jaray in the late 1980’s and early 90’s on large-scale public artwork which reimagined Wakefield’s Cathedral precinct. Her impact on Wakefield city centre, on Beam/Public Arts, and on demonstrating the power of embedding artists early on as an integral part of design teams, cannot be overstated. She will be greatly missed.
The following information about the commission with Jaray was researched from Beam’s archive by curator and researcher Kerry Harker as part of a wider exploration of the archive.
“In 1989 Public Arts was asked, by the Transportation Engineering Department of Wakefield Metropolitan District Council, if ideas could be found to help regenerate the city centre pedestrian zones in Wakefield. On Public Arts’ advice artist Tess Jaray was appointed to lead the design team for the Cathedral Precinct at the heart of the city
Tess Jaray, an artist of international reputation with experience of successful inter-disciplinary work and major public art projects in Birmingham (Centenary Square) and Moscow (new British Embassy), took the Cathedral as her starting point and set about devising a scheme in which the Cathedral would play a more prominent role in the city centre.
To achieve this she removed a low stone wall which effectively cut the Cathedral off from its surroundings, and replaced it with a flight of stairs which double as occasional seating for over one thousand people.
Jaray also designed a patterned floor-scape, a series of stone seats with integral lighting and a range of street furniture.
The project was commissioned by Wakefield Metropolitan District Council and won several national awards including the Jerwood Prize and Working for Cities Award.”