29 October 2015

Austerlitz




Three Men Walking
Mixed media with table and casters
Dimensions variable
October 2015


Rooms all painted grey and 'picture patience'.

Austerlitz told me that he sometimes sat here for hours, laying out these photographs or others from his collection, the wrong way up, as if playing patience, and that then, one by one, he turned them over, always with a new sense of surprise at what he saw...

Sebald, W G.  (2001).  Austerlitz.  London.  Penguin. Pp167-168.

19 June 2015

William Dyce , Pegwell Bay: Swimming Residency



















The Dyce family is fully clothed.  The women shawled and heavy skirted, gather souvenirs and shells from the beach, beyond them the lowish chalk cliffs stand over a receded tide, above the whole scene, the distant tail of Donati's comet.  William Dyce's painting of Pegwell Bay[i] depicts an activity unchanged, and the bay itself, with its cliffs and strata, sweeps to the west towards Sandwich and the Stour Estuary.  Little moved over time, a site of ancient disembarkation and more recent travel by SR.N4 hovercraft.  Hoverlloyd (later Hoverspeed) operated cross channel services from Ramsgate to Calais until 1982; the modern archaeologist or dog walker can explore the remains of the hoverport where the ramps enter the bay with white markings still visible and where delineated parking zones are partially covered in scrub.  The SR.N4 cossetted in a great heavy skirt like the ladies in Dyce's painting, was powered by four Bristol Proteus engines, one of which is currently on display at Bristol M Shed museum.  These powerful but thirsty engines propelled the craft and also inflated the black skirt that acts as a cushion between hull and water and land.


Slipping into the sea below the West Cliff beside the harbour, some children were playing on the sand, occasionally running and paddling up to their wastes.   Here the water takes on a milkiness, chalk leaching a fine sediment that drifts with the current until a point some twenty yards out where it meets deeper bluer water, the whole mixing in swirls of khaki, white and cyan.  May sea temperatures are around ten or eleven degrees Celsius, offering a bearable first swim.

From Swimming Residency Club, 2015.  





[i]  William Dyce (1858-60) Pegwell Bay, Kent - a Recollection of October 5th 1858.  Oil on canvas.  Tate Britain




31 May 2015

Spike Open 2015



From The Cast Room
Mixed media
Dimensions variable
May, 2015

In 2012, I embarked upon a project that has been influenced by or makes reference to a variety of texts.  The project broadly looked at the workings of the inner and outer worlds of experience, landscape and the need for convalescence during and after a non visible illness.  The texts include Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer, The Waste Land by T S Eliot, Nancy Holt and Robert Smithson in England, 1969, Smithson's A Tour of The Monuments of Passaic, New Jersey, the poem Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley and Patrick Keiller's The View From The Train.
The project has six parts, of which the one shown here at Spike Island Open 2015, is Part 5, a version of The Cast Room (Things To Do While Convalescing). Parts 1 and 6 are video works or brief films: Voyager, shot in Paris and Margate, Rollright/Silbury recorded at the stone circle in Oxfordshire and the earth mound in Wiltshire. The other parts are: Part 2, a text, Logbook, Part 3 Alpines and Part 4, a set of paintings made on card and art related publicity material.

9 April 2015

Energy Drawing


Energy Drawing (Track 1)
pencil on paper
29x21 cm
2015

Slow down
Social participatory activity
Destroy all cars
Real world
Souvenir
Now
Warm city vents

S bahn to the Tiergarten
Steps to the sea, Penzance

Blaumeise blue tit
Things to do when convalescing

The burning of energy through oxygen,
a great fire that becomes consumptive

Priestley, Lavoisier, Sebald.

25 January 2015

Rootballhead


Rootballhead  
digital photograph
2015

Oscillator



Oscillator  (2015) digital video, 1min 37 seconds, colour, mute