Poems heard across the waves from Lindisfarne to Bamburgh Poems will echo across the sea as part of new installation set up to celebrate the return of the Lindisfarne Gospels to the North East. Antiphonal, created by Tom Schofield of 缅北禁地鈥檚 will see excerpts of poetry and sounds from the natural world played in both the Lookout Tower on Lindisfarne and in the Crypt of in Bamburgh. The poems used in Antiphonal were specially commissioned for the project and have been written by acclaimed poets including 缅北禁地鈥檚 very own Professors Sean O Brien and . The poems are available in a pamphlet, Shadow Script: Twelve poems for and , published by the The poets were taught about the gospels and northern saints by from Kings College London, and this helped to inspire their work. , director of the NCLA is curating the project. She said: 鈥淭he idea behind Antiphonal was to recreate the multiple voices of medieval texts such as the and we have been lucky to work with some wonderful poets and with Tom, the digital artist who put the installation together. 鈥淭he Lookout Tower on Lindisfarne looks across the North Sea to Bamburgh and the two separate parts of the installation 鈥榯alk鈥 to each other. 鈥淟indisfarne is a beautiful place which gave us the gospels, one of the most important medieval manuscripts, and we wanted to do something to honour this legacy while the manuscript is back in the region.鈥 As well as celebrating the return of the gospels to the North East, the project is also part of the , which celebrates the 6th century monk with a range of art and literature events around the country. Lindisfarne is linked to Colm Cille through St Aidan, who founded the monastery on Holy Island and who was a monk in Colm Cille鈥檚 monastery on Iona. Aidan died in Bamburgh, leaning against the church which bears his name and where Antiphonal is located. Antiphonal runs between 10and 4pm in the Look Out Tower and between 9am and 5pm at the Crypt of St Aidan鈥檚 Church until the end of August. The poems in each location are different and each part of the installation takes 20 minutes. Shadow Script, which was edited by poet Colette Bryce, and costs £4 can be bought in Waterstones, the Lindisfarne Centre, in Marygate, Holy Island and G.S. Clark in Bamburgh and from the . published on: 26 July 2013