Somerset flooding: Exhibition marks ten-year anniversary
- Published
A photographer's images of serious flooding to hit the Somerset Levels ten years ago can be seen in a new exhibition.
Under the Surface will showcase pictures by Matilda Temperley.
The collection will be on display until 19 May at the Somerset Rural Life Museum in Glastonbury.
A series of newly-commissioned photographs will also be on display, reflecting on changes to the Somerset landscape over the past decade.
"Ten years on from Under the Surface, climate change has meant flooding events around the globe are constantly in our news," said Ms Temperley.
"This latest exhibition reflects on the impact of flooding on the Somerset Levels and successes and failures in flood management over the last decade," she added.
A programme of events and activities supported by Somerset Rivers Authority (SRA) is taking place along alongside the exhibition.
SRA chairman, councillor Mike Stanton, said the group was launched in response to the floods of 2013-14 and people "are still very strongly motivated by what happened then".
"We're supporting this exhibition because the more people understand how Somerset is threatened by flooding, the more we can do together to protect ourselves and to adapt," he added.
Follow ´óÏó´«Ã½ West on , and . Send your story ideas to: bristol@bbc.co.uk
Related topics
- Published6 February
- Published5 February
- Published9 December 2023