Tuesday 26 June 2012

Walk in Progress:Towpath


Both the drawing and the film are finished.
Due to adverse weather conditions the general feel is a little dark - but hey, cannot deny it was a little cloudy over recent weeks/months. 

Here is a sneeky preview of the scroll. Film to follow. Now that the film has a soundtrack by the talented Michael Fairfax it feels complete. Thank you Michael. 
Am looking forward to seeing all the Cargo come together next week. Chrys



Thursday 21 June 2012

Mencap and Gateway Centre, Melton Mowbray

My final Cargoes workshop could not have been a happier and more inspiring day...... talk about ending on a high.!
The first two sessions were with 8-13yrs,  with clipboards, cameras and our own special projects we set out across town to the park, and then back to the centre to transfer our findings onto a shared artwork. This was punctuated with songs with Harry ( Frankie Valli and other 50's and 60's favourites) and generous supplies of tea and biscuits. Am still humming 'Walk Like a Man' days later.




My heart sank when they left .... and then the  rain began to fall. The following session with the adult group had to be confined to HQ, because of the rain, but hey, 70 'round' things in one hour in one room must be a record by Olympic or any other standard!! Lots of other inspired projects and then a good time was had drawing recorded sounds. A great day, and a great quote for us - 'usually when we do art projects, we don't do this much thinking' !!

Thank you for a great day, Lorraine and all your helpers.
Chrys

Walking on Monday 18th June with the narrow boat Megan along the Grand Union Canal

Drawing Flag Irises found in the canal
For the first part of the journey (Thurmaston Lock to Birstall Lock) I travelled on the boat with Debra, the skipper, from Nottingham City Council and her group booking.  On the boat were Rachel, John and their group of young people from Newark.  I asked Debra to hold some of the Mountain Labels on loan from Alec Finlay http://www.the-road-north.blogspot.co.uk/ as we travelled down the Grand Union  Canal.  This was so that I could continue my walking theme of overlaying the memories of walking, and contouring in Skye, Torridon and Glencoe on to my walking in the East Midlands, and along the canals.

Thank you to Rachel who took the photographs of me walking beside Megan, John for cups of tea and the young people for their interest and helpfulness, and Debra for letting me jump on and off the boat, and handing over camera and labels without dropping anything in to the canal.
Stopping to let me off Megan so that I can begin my walk beside the narrow boat








Debra and John waving me on
My route along the Grand Union Canal from Leicester to Loughborough


Thursday 14 June 2012

Cromford Post - The one that got away- 22nd May


A fantastically frantic couple of weeks. Not had time to write it down until now. So here its is!
First off were workshops with PT Foundation A&D students. Ros Westward talking about the Derwent Valley Mills World Heritage Site Enlightenment Collection of artworks and objects; excitedly meeting to explore Katherine's chiming artwork; exploring Cromford, the canal and its mills; and finally meeting to see what had been generated. Bells figured strongly, inspired by Katherine's piece and the bell at Cromford used to summon workers. The mill is seen by many as the forerunner of factory manufacture, so the bell's first chime marked the shift from labour on the land to labour in the factory. Working time was no longer to be measured by the length of a day and the seasons of a year but by the hours of a mechanical clock.



First Cromford Mill Bell



Cromford Wharf



Student Responses


Also started was Sound Track. Inspired by Richard Long's Walking Music, a list of songs carried in his head while walking in Ireland, a group of intrepid students quizzed Bank Holiday walkers about the music they sang in their heads while walking the Cromford Canal. Everything was fine till the rain came, shortly before lunch. So we'll return next Bank Holiday to finish the piece.



Flying the flag at Cromford


The next weekend saw Night Vision, an overnight walk from Langley Mill to Cromford. Despite incredible work by Friends of Cromford Canal to restore sections of this old waterway, much is lost or ruined. Night Vision was a redrawing of the canal across the landscape by light. An incredible site as a centipede of 13 walkers, led by Alison Lloyd, marched along 15 miles of the old canal tow path. I'm keeping hold of the images - I think you might see them later. But here's a taster of the walkers as they steamed past Whatstandwell station …


Steaming past Whatstandwell Station

And finally, for now, Stone's Throw to be revealed on Monday.  The students were so taken with Katherine's chimes, especially when coupled with the Cromford bell, I took a different direction - well eight different directions - taking a lead from Katherine's maps and charts. The Derwent Valley below Cromford is said to be unique in containing four major channels of communication which can, it is locally said, be encompassed by the 'throw of a stone'.  Cromford was the site of Richard Arkwright's first mill in which water power was used to power his Water Frame in the mass production of cotton thread.



Charles Monkhouse

Monday 11 June 2012

Voices from the Past at Leicester Riverside Festival June 9/10


130 small objects wrapped up with brown paper and string- no tape or glue. 
130 names concocted from Victorian first names and Leicester family names. 
Stories to be written with dip pens and ink on crisp white labels and tied to the object. 


We had 124 stories but many were family/friend collaborations and many people stopped to read the stories so probably about 250 people engaged at different levels with the project.  


Being in the Eco Tent worked very well; we might not have had so many participants on the boat. People would have had to seek us out rather than being passersby.


Left handed and right handed writers, those who had never used a dip pen before... all produced beautiful scripts.


I prepared 90 objects for the 2 days; 70 stories were written on Saturday so we found 40 more objects to wrap. 


Lots of conversations about 'the olden days'; older people's memories and younger people's imaginations from what they had been told.


The stories have great depth and variety. They are an intriguing snapshot of Leicester imagination on June 9th and 10th 2012.


Some were written in the writer's first language and translated verbally.


Some stories had additional drawings, others were embellished with motifs.


And this is just the first 70... they will all be part of the Cargoes exhibition at Loughborough and Nottingham in July. 

Thursday 7 June 2012

Transit of Venus


http://soundcloud.com/ignitebofa/transit-of-venus

I was supposed to be running workshops at Watermead park for the transit of venus, but for certain circumstances couldn't attend so I thought it best to create a piece of music with my band 'Gimlet-Eyed Mariners's' to celebrate the 'transit of venus' a totally improvised piece, played on computers, homemade instruments, keyboard and ipad this piece needs time, so lie down and close your eyes and let the music transport you to the outer reaches of space. Let the transit commence.
michael

Transit of Venus

As the latest photos show, we were a select and enthusiastic band of celestial watchers on Tuesday night and Wednesday morning at Watermead Park in Leicester.  It rained on Tuesday afternoon and evening, but we constructed mobiles of the solar system, held a meteorite, learned about astronomy from Nishad Karim from University of Leicester, and covered our viewing tubes in safety film.
Next morning, reveille was 4.00am, the sky was a blanket of cloud, and it looked like the bank was building up in the north east sector of the sky, where we expected the sun to rise.
At 5.30 we prepared ourselves for disappointment; at 5.40 the sun burst above the cloud layer and we were rewarded for our patience with a clear sighting of the dot of Venus at the edge of the disk of the Sun.  Jubilation and cheering broke out.
Grinning and laughing, we returned to camp to eat ToV pancakes, cooked with Delia style skill and enthusiasm by Amy.  Blobs of chocolate spread showed where Venus had been in transit.
Thanks to all who turned out, and to the team for another demonstration of the joy that accrues when creativity, science and the community gather in one place.