Friday 28 July 2017

Light and Illumination.




What is it with sunsets? I do love the magical transitory times of a day, the times when the light changes, and as I am not a regular early riser, I especially love the transition between day and night. Dusk is a wonderful slowing down time, especially in the Summer when the spectacular sunsets can be enjoyed by the whole family on the beach.

Tankerton sunset.


The reflection of the setting sun in the sea is a natural gift if we choose to observe it and even more special is the feeling of swimming in the sea, eyes closed, heading towards the warmth of the setting sun. A treasured memory indeed in the depths of any cold, grey winter!

The path up to the sky.

A few weeks ago we had a log burner installed in the living room of our home and I surprise myself by now looking forward to the darker evenings and the increasing chill of the next season. We needed to make a hearth to put the burner on so we laid some concrete and I have been busy playing with the surface. I collected some beautiful leaves from the garden and used them to imprint their delicate undersides and overall form into the damp concrete. The result is a very personalised hearth that hold precious memories now of an abundant summer. The leaves I chose were Honesty, Passion fruit, Grape and Hop. Not only are their leaf forms very beautiful but they are also imbued with another layer of symbolism that could be the start of an interesting tale or two on a long dark winters evening.

Laying the leaves in wet concrete.


I enjoy observing the way that the light changes due to the season or the time of day. Recently whilst walking along the coast the sun was very low, about to set but had seemed to shoot out its last rays along the surface of the water towards the shore and it lit up the yellow Horned Poppy in a way I hadn't anticipated. It glowed! Luckily I had remembered to take my mobile phone with me and the camera on that is great for recording such sights. It's not the best, I also have a small digital Olympus and a larger digital SLR Cannon, but the mobile always allows me to capture any moment, to record it so that I can revisit that feeling of discovery and joy another time. It helps with my artwork too, I can revisit that time and place and refresh my memory if I am struggling to obtain the variation of colours needed in a piece.

Sunset glow.

This week I have been collating all my past blog posts so I could pass them onto a friend who will help me edit my book. It's been a long time coming but I am keen now get it out there. Re-reading the blog posts has been very interesting, seeing how each season often inspires walks, reflections and illumination. Themes seem to come up year after year and it is encouraging to know how much in tune we are with nature if we are able to get out regularly and walk amongst it.


Yellow beauty.


I came across a really nice article via a Facebook group that I follow called Treesisters, there is a link to it here. The article looks at 3 ways to connect to nature, one is to create a 'sit-spot' where you go regularly and observe the natural world around you and another is to go on a walking quest, a practice where you walk alone for 2-6 hours.


Walking with others is a joy too.


Personally I find even a daily 15 minute walk can bring great awards such as peace of mind if you allow yourself to be immersed in the very act of walking. This can be achieved both in a busy city and in the countryside. It is the act of giving yourself permission to just be, to walk and to observe without judgement. Perhaps this is why sunset walks are so attractive and satisfying. I for one, cannot help but be affected by the phenomenon of a setting sun. It quite simply 'fills you up' and when the experience is shared with loved ones it is truly wonderful.


A well worn path towards the sunset.

I will be opening the doors of my beautiful straw bale studio once again this year to exhibit my own and Alison Lees work as part of the Canterbury Festival, the theme is still 'The Spirit of Place' as it is an ongoing art project based in Kent.


Sunset and bubbles, could it get any better?!


You can keep up to date with our explorations and discoveries by looking at www.facebook.com/EastKentSpiritOfPlace

Open times are 11-5 daily on the weekends from 14-29th of October. We can be found at house number 25 on the Whitstable trail. Please see the webpage www.ekoh.org.uk for more information.

 I can be contacted on 07432679164 or clare@people-to-place.co.uk

Friday 14 July 2017

The Spirit and Sense of Place




A friend shared a BBC Travel link on Facebook this week about the The Broomway in Essex, that she rightly thought I'd be interested in. I have included it here so you can read the article and sense how unique this isolated place must be. When reading the article by Robert Mac Farlane you cannot help but feel a sense of disorientation that this landscape creates. It is felt in the transient otherworldliness caused by a mirror effect of being out on a causeway off the coast, in the North Sea, just above the mud which is constantly lapped by water, under a huge sky and with no discernible landmarks to be seen.

'My brain was beginning to move unusually, worked upon and changed by the mind-altering substances of this offshore world, and by the elation that arose from the counter-intuition of walking securely on water. Out there, nothing could be only itself. The eye fed on false colour values. Mirages of scale occurred, and tricks of depth.'

'Conceptually, it is close to paradox. It is a right of way and as such is inscribed on maps and in law, but it is also swept clean of the trace of passage twice daily by the tide. What do you call a path that is no path? A riddle? A sequence of compass bearings? A Zen koan?' Robert Mac Farlane.

Being.


This sounds like an easy place to recognise a sense of it. We constantly sense our surroundings and adjust our behaviour accordingly. When I studied for my MA I realised this awareness has a name, Phenomenology. It is 'an approach that concentrates on the study of consciousness and the objects of direct experience'. I first read about this understanding in a wonderful accessible book by David Abram called 'The Spell of the Sensuous'. I was pointed to far more academic books during my study such as those by Merleau-Ponty and Husserl but 'The Spell of the Sensuous' was the one that I went back to time and again for inspiration and understanding. I highly recommend it.

Ali woodcutting in Jane Mowats studio in Somerset.


Tomorrow I open my studio door to visitors for an open day. I have been collaborating with another artist, Alison Lees for nearly 2 years on a project called 'Spirit of Place'. This collaboration has been mutually supportive and we have learnt many new skills whilst working together, including both woodcutting and drypoint etching and printing. This has enabled us to create new pieces of work inspired by the spirit of place in which we both live and work. Over the course of the project we have taken it in turns to visit and sense the place in which the other one lives.

Drypoint etching, the 'reveal'.


Ali lives inland in Kent, on the downs which are very curvy and create a sense of movement to the landscape. They are quite intensively farmed and the strict agricultural year informs their surface layer which sometimes accentuates the underlying topography sometimes making the cereal crop seem to blow in the wind across one field and into another. The ancient woodland close to her home has inspired me. I have loved the immersion of exploring this place throughout the year and especially at Bluebell time, seeking out of a place to sit to draw and paint them, listening to the birds, noticing the insects and generally really feeling/sensing the place.

Immersed in a Bluebell wood.


In contrast, I live on the coast in a built up area in a suburban street a few minutes walk to the sea and its pebbly beach. My garden is therefore my closest wild place, the area in which I can sense in general, the season, the daily weather, the wild visitors that use the garden on a regular basis and the never ending cycles of growth and decay that every living space provides.

The path to the beach.


I swim in the sea every summer and enjoy a similar feeling of immersion that I did back in the late spring in the Bluebell wood. Swimming in the sea I notice the birds flying overhead the seaweed floating around me, the wind rippling the surface of the water as it gusts about and gently as if from a distance I hear the pebbles being moved beneath the water by the waves. This is all sensing the place, the land in which we live. Ali and I are now exploring beyond this keen sense of observation and wonder to another level of understanding. We have come to start to recognise a spirit of both places and it is on that level that we continue to work, discover and create artwork together.

My painting of the sea at Tankerton.


Our mid year Summer exhibition is tomorrow the 15th of July. The doors of the studio will be open from 11-4 on Saturday when refreshments will be available and all are welcome. The address is 'Lucknow', 67 Northwood road, Tankerton, Whitstable, Kent. CT5 2HB.

Also for your diaries I will be opening the doors of my beautiful straw bale studio once again this year to exhibit my own and Alison’s work as part of the Canterbury Festival, the theme is still 'The Spirit of Place' as it is an ongoing art project based in Kent.
You can keep up to date with our explorations and discoveries by looking at www.facebook.com/EastKentSpiritOfPlace

Open times are 11-5 daily on the weekends from 14-29th of October. We can be found at house number 25 on the Whitstable trail. Please see the webpage www.ekoh.org.uk for more information.

 I can be contacted on 07432679164 or clare@people-to-place.co.uk