
By Adam Laver
A 50ft (15m) sculpture to be installed in Bradford as part of its City of Culture year was inspired by the area's multiculturalism, its creator has said.
Artist Saad Qureshi, who moved with his family from Pakistan to Heaton at the age of eight, said he had designed the Tower of Now to celebrate the "incredible" city's diversity.
Originally intended to play soundscapes featuring voices in different languages, the tower has since been changed to a solely visual piece of art.
Mr Qureshi, 39, said the sculpture, on the site of the former Hall Ings car park, represented a "culmination of these beautiful cultures and traditions that co-exist" in Bradford.
Mr Qureshi, whose work has been exhibited in shows in London, New York and New Delhi, said his formative years in Bradford had always inspired his creativity.
However, he said that when he had first told his family he wanted to be an artist, "there was a lot of hesitation initially, from my parents particularly, about what this is going to lead to".
Mr Qureshi said it was his art teacher at school, Mrs Robinson, who saw a talent that needed to be nurtured.
"She was the one that really inspired me and believed in me and convinced my parents that I should study art," he said.
After spending his first eight years in Bewal, a small town in rural Pakistan, Mr Qureshi said that on arrival in Bradford he faced having to familiarise himself with a whole new culture and ways of expressing himself.
"I had to relearn how to communicate in a new language," he said.
"Art class was my safe space and I remember Mrs Robinson saying, 'if you can't say it, do it'.
"It was really wonderful for me to be able to develop this visual language."
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