Agricultural objects, detritus, artefacts from the
consumer-age lay to rust, surfaces weathered, worn and washed with time, light
travels across coastal vales, misty veils and illusions of by-gone places,
nostalgia, memories, horizons, distances and journeys. Nothing is ever fixed.
Nothing stays ever the same. In the words of Percy Shelley's famous poem, ‘Nought may endure but mutability’.
Mutability is a good word, I’ve decided. Its official
that I also think it is a good word to describe the transformations of the
landscape and our place as equally changeable beings within it; and how that
process works both ways for both better and sometimes not. This should be
nothing of a revelation to many, countless poets, writers and artists have
been writing on mutability and the landscape for years before the idea settled
into my post-arts degree addled brain. In fact, it was the word, muted rather than mutability,
that first sprang to mind upon seeing the work exhibited in ‘The Transformed
Land’ currently on show at The Brewhouse Arts Centre in Taunton.
Eleanor Goulding, Linn O'Carroll and Russell Denman's work exhibited as part of 'The Transformed Land' |
Muted, in that
the colour (or lack-of) and general sense of a feeling of quiet or mute
distilment, permeated the works within this exhibition. Featuring the work of 14
artists there are one or two exceptions to this observation, notably David Daniels’s bold, bright, graphic,
stylised, Julian Opie-like digital prints of lonely winding rivers, streams and
hillsides. Where there is colour in other works it is controlled, reserved,
sparing. Jason Miller’s watercolours quietly hum with the delicate quivering, glow of a
Rothko and David Smith’s collaged mixed-media pieces also use traces of colour but
in a formalistic way. They appear considered and reflective rather than
spontaneous. Andrew George’s egg tempera pieces of big, dramatic coastal
landscapes are executed with superb scale and technical ability with a colour
palette that is both natural but also nostalgic and reminiscent of post-war
landscape artists such as Eric Ravillious’s paintings. And they really are BIG paintings with fine detail that do a great job at drawing the viewer in.
I have no problems
with my perceived lack of colour in this exhibition, it demonstrates that the
work within it is on the whole very contemplative; these are artists whose work reflects that they must spend time in the places they depict, go for walks, take
photos, make sketches, match colours, collect objects, materials and see how
the landscape changes over time. The only perhaps pitfall to this is that
perhaps there is too much work in this exhibition that is careful and not enough
that appears as a spontaneous or immediate reaction or capturing of the
landscape. This reflects perhaps, the interests of the exhibition’s curator,
Paul Newman whose own work, graphite drawings of trees and landscapes is very
precise and technically masterful as they are sensitively observed. Similarly,
the wood engravings of Howard Phipps are competent as they are crowd-pleasing
images of countryside it’s just that personally I would like to have seen in
addition to these some more work that took less caution, reflection and
tranquillity and perhaps demonstrated an immediate reaction or the wildness and
sometimes fearful relationship we have with land and landscape.
One artist’s work who does counterbalance this slightly
in this exhibition is Andrew Lansley whose drawings show a lot of personality
and are taken from views sometimes literally on his doorstep. They have more of that
sense of immediacy that I was looking for, the other is Clive Walley whose depictions
of trees are amongst the more painterly works in the exhibition. The other, for me
personally is Linn O’Carroll. Based on the lived-experience of walking in South
Wiltshire where the artist has lived for the last twenty years; found,
discarded rusty objects ranging from a shopping basket, hay forks, hooks,
pliers and hundreds of nails lay seemingly systematically placed in a circular
motif on a weathered (what I presume were former carpet tiles) surface on the
gallery floor. It is a calendar, a Tony Cragg meets Goldsworthy and amazing
Dutch artist herman de vries all at once; an infinity of lists and one of
possibly three pieces in the whole exhibition that refers to the manmade in the
environment and that our relationship with land may not always be a harmonious
one. These are honest fragments, readymade art in some ways and for me, greater
reflect a real sense of time, weather and the relationship some humans have
with land than some of the representational or abstract works.
Andrew George 'Coastal Path Dorset' Egg tempera on gesso panel. |
Howard Phipps 'Malacombe Bottom' Wood engraving. |
Linn O'Carroll |
Elsewhere in the exhibition Russell Denman’s wooden models
of huts continue the manmade theme and whilst fascinatingly constructed I am a
bit less sure of where they fit into the overall exhibition other than as
posing as possible designs for dwellings within the landscape? Eleanor
Goulding’s digital HD video ‘Spring Observances’ is beautifully shot depicting
a stranded, made derelict by rust, ship
on the coast. I am visually biased being drawn to such images, finding the
traces of where humans have interacted with land more fascinating than the
idealised, haunting or romantic emptiness of ones without. Is it possible, I wonder to ‘know’ the landscape without the human in it? If not then it seems
a relevant decision that so many artists try to detach the human presence from their work.
Andrew Lansley 'Leaving Dartmoor' Egg tempera |
Where ‘The Transformed Land’ really excels is at having a
diverse array of mediums on display, from woodcut, to painting, to drawing,
sculpture and conceptual as well as representational based practices. At the more
conceptual end of the scale, Deborah Westmancoat’s work combines weather-like
processes of evaporation and flooding with materials of handmade oak gall ink
and collected water from glaciers. It shares its approach with several other works in
this exhibition that imply a response to landscape that is seasonal, site
specific or one of measuring, collecting and documenting. It feels museum-like,
a form of attempting to preserve it through documentation.
It is rewarding to
have been introduced to the work of so many new artists in this exhibition, my only small regret is the unfortunate timing that makes this exhibition the
third show in a row at The Brewhouse to explore the theme of land, landscape, the sea or the
environment and I hope that it doesn't dilute people's interest in seeing this exhibition or thinking it is the same as previous ones, as it is quietly captivating and deserves to be seen with open eyes.
You can visit ‘The
Transformed Land’ at The Brewhouse Arts Centre, Taunton until April 29th
2017 www.thebrewhouse.net
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