24 April 2015

Road works

The dip in the road just outside the house, which causes the house to shake alarmingly when heavy vehicles go over it at speed (especially buses, late at night and early in the morning) has had many temporary repairs, and finally various sections of the road, including "mine", have been properly done. It's been interesting....
Day 1 - surface removal
The culprit - a pipe that prevents a thorough treatment of the roadbed
First layer - gravel
Exciting moment - airborne delivery of roller
Cement is down, ready for tarmac
Add your own caption
How many men does it take to spread some tarmac?
Next layer
Four days later - all done! 

23 April 2015

Poetry Thursday - Bertolt Brecht, on acting

"permitting the spectator / to experience this Now on many levels" (via)

So you should simply make the instant
Stand out, without in process hiding
What you are making it stand out from,
  Give your acting
That progression of one-thing-after-another,
  that attitude of
Working up what you have taken on. In this way
You will show the flow of events and also the course
Of your work, permitting the spectator
To experience this Now on many levels, coming from
  Previously and
Merging into Afterwards, also having much else Now
Alongside it. He is sitting not only
In your theatre but also
In the world.

-- Bertolt Brecht, from "Portrayal of past and present in one", part of Four Theatre Poems (in Poems, 1913-56)

"What Bertolt Brecht wrote about acting in one of his poems is applicable to such a practice [putting a photograph back into the context of experience, social experience, social memory]. For instant one can read photography, for acting the re-creating of context" wrote John Berger in his 1978 essay, Uses of Photography, where this section of the poem is quoted. Undoubtedly instant and acting can be replaced by words relating to any art form; the "attitude of working up what you have taken on" is the process of making any form of art.

The poem is a reminder of that important question in making art: "Who is your audience?" and a spur to considering what the audience/spectator/viewer will bring to the work to "complete" it.

22 April 2015

Nine realms of Norse mythology

"Magicking the Norse World to Life: 42 Poets & Artists, 3 Musicians & a Viking boat!"

The campaign, which runs for 28 more days at time of writing, is to fund the commissioning of a boat and lots of poetry, art, and music - and take it on tour, especially to schools. It's got academic as well as artistic credentials - overviews of each realm with be given by a Norse PhD student at Cambridge.

"From today [20 April], for the next 30 days, woodcarver Mark Crowley will be LIVE CARVING a Viking boat made from mahogany and oak, which will act as the focal point and heart of a 5-day Norse-inspired Interactive Combined Arts experience to be held between 11th-15th September 2015 in Hanse House, King's Lynn, Norfolk, UK. Our project is a continuation of the '2015 Year of the Hanse' celebrations and the National Heritage Open Day in Norfolk and England. It is our intention to take the whole experience (and the boat) on tour: locally, nationally and internationally.

"Bringing to life the 9 realms of Norse mythology, The Nine Realms pulls together 45 talented creatives from around the UK and the world who have worked together online for over 9 months celebrating the myths, characters and stories from the 13th century Icelandic Norse Sagas through poetry, writing, art and music."

Photos via the Norse Mythology site
Good stuff, and what gives the campaign that extra touch is the levels of funding, which correspond to the 9 realms, from Asgard at £3 through to Alfheim at £60. How to choose the level of funding? by the perks, or by how much the realm appeals to you? For instance, Alfheim is the home of the Light Elves, beautiful creatures, "guardian angels", minor gods of nature and fertility that can help or hinder humans with their knowledge of magical powers and deliver an inspiration to art and music. 


Or Vanaheim, home of the old gods, masters of sorcery, known for their ability to predict the future?

Or Niflheim, the first of the nine worlds, with its "bubbling, boiling spring" protected by a dragon?




Sketching at Ally Pally

Alexandra Palace has a fabulous view and a palm court, complete with sphinxes - so even if it had been raining, we would have had plenty to draw.
The view (via)
The Palm Court (via)
I'd been looking forward to the vegetation, but the piped music (from the cafe/bar) drove me out into the sunshine, looking for "something" ...
Glimpse of an architectural view 

Could be interesting...

More fractured patterns
One criterion was to be able to sit somewhere, another was to be out of the wind, and finally I settled down to try the criss-crossing on the historic aerial, or rather, the bristly aerial that's in a historic place, the site of the first television transmission in the UK -
Looking up and looking down repeatedly, I soon felt the aerial was about to topple. Or is it an optical illusion?
The interlaced geometry of pylons is intriguing - might be my starting point for the Structures quilt challenge later this year (so many possibilities with that one!). The lion's head, of which there are many around the building, was a prelude to going to draw the Assyrian lion hunt the next day. Here's what they really look like -
On the way back to the Palm Court, convenient seating enabled an attempt to capture this -
The angles of the glass and the spacing of the girders was minutely, intensely frustrating ... and based on an entirely wrong angle: it tilts! How could I not have noticed that!
The medium is soluble graphite, but no solubility took place in this instance, just a lot of erasing. Lots of valuable lessons here, so instead of tearing out the page or whatever, it'll stay ... and the first thing I'll rework is those windows on the left: they tilt! How could I not have noticed that!

What joy to go inside and draw leaves -

And to see what others in the group had done -
On the way home, a visit to the garden centre, where the groupings of pots called to my pencil -
But it stayed in the bag. Something for another day?

21 April 2015

Drawing Tuesday - medieval gallery, V&A

Downstairs in the medieval section, it was "the lady in the window" that caught my eye - actually a 15th century English alabaster (another such in the V&A is here). The lady is St Catherine of Alexandria, the one represented by the spiked wheel, which shattered when she was strapped to it. So the nasty emperor beheaded her, as well as promptly killing the 200 soldiers who she converted to Christianity while imprisoned - and his wife, who also converted.
The point of maximum frustration occurred about halfway through the morning, when having worked first on the figure on the right, I realised that my hand had obliterated him while drawing the figures on the left. That wasn't such a bad thing really, as the reason for moving on to those figures was the knowledge that Mr. Right(side) was in the wrong position. So out came the rubber and it was on to a second version.
The vignette at bottom is St C. in the window, sideways on. I love the ribbons - medieval speech-bubbles (write your own text?) - and the dove/holy spirit blown down from heaven.
Unwilling to start on anything else of a similar scale, I found an old (1738!) bit of paper tucked into the sketchbook and drew St C. et al from memory. The folds of the cloaks weren't easily remembered. It will be interesting to draw it again from memory today or tomorrow, given that a week will have passed since the first attempt and since writing this blog post.

Emerging into the sunshine on the way to the cafe, we found the courtyard crowded and a multitude of happy tots splashing in the pool -
Caryl had been revisiting a sculpture of St Michael, using watersoluble crayons, but hadn't quite finished nor had she decided whether or when to add water. Sue's focus was a piece from 11th century Spain, each saint in the frieze with individual haircuts and gestures. She had used watersoluble graphite and crayon, and had applied water only to some areas -
 On the way out of the building I saw this chap and was intrigued by the "tassels" on his cloak -
 He's one of four figures in niches on the west staircase -
 From the side you can see that he's got a serious weapon -
 ... which I hadn't seen when sitting down on the convenient bench to draw him.
His colleague, with the elaborate scabbard and different dangly bits on the cloak, is further up the stairs. 

Bristol High Cross, the source of these wood sculptures, is shown in Robert Ricart's map (about 1500), the first such plan of an English town -
Erected in 1373, the cross was enlarged in 1663 to add four more statues of kings. It was moved to the Stourhead estate in 1730, and the statues of kings John, Henry II, and the Edwards (if indeed it is they) were replaced by copies in 1980. A replica of the original cross was started in 1851 and finished in 1870.

20 April 2015

Interesting shapes - spoons

Seen in a shop in Shoreditch. Collector's items, definitely. Jeux d'esprit? - maybe.

Closer to home, these sleek beauties arrived at xmastime -
and these soup spoons came direct from the carver in Morocco -

19 April 2015

Landscape collage

Caterina Rossato, made from postcards (via)
Megan Coyle (via)
Eileen Downes, Stinson Beach Series No.3 (via)
Katherine J, Homage to Tom (via)
Martha Marshall, Collage 041, handmade papers (via)
Besen (via)
Jennifer Tucker, Bush Landscape (via)
Erin Case (via)
Misteldin, made from scanning objects (via)
Sue McKee (via)

Video by Theo Tagholm- at https://vimeo.com/123006429