A WEST Devon sculptor has been chosen to exhibit at London?s Natural History Museum this summer.

Peter Randall-Page of Drewsteignton has exhibited his sculptures all over the world. His latest work to be exhibited uses glacial granite boulders with which he explores the human bias for pattern recognition and the way in which art and science derive from the desire to find order and meaning in the universe.

Mr Randall-Page said he was inspired by the natural world.

?My work is underpinned by the observation of organic form and my interest has always been in a subjective response, how things make us feel as well as think.

?This way of working reveals as much about the structure of the human psyche and imagination as it does about the visible and tangible world,? he said.

Mr Randall-Page first came into contact with the world famous history museum at the age of eight.

He said: ?I wrote to the Natural History Museum about my own fossil collection. I was absolutely delighted and amazed when I not only received a personal reply from one of the curators but also a box containing a dozen small fossils.

?This experience really encouraged my interest in natural history and I?m sure it helped to lay the foundations for my fascination with organic form, which is fundamental to my work.?

The sculptures on display at the museum this summer are flayed Stone II, Bronze Dreaming Stone, Sum of the Parts, Stone Bearing Stone and a new work, as yet untitled.