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Video installation
with eight loops at The Portland Quarry Sculpture Trust, Portland, Dorset,
UK.
July - October 2009
As part of SEEING THROUGH STONE exhibition at: The Drill Hall, Easton Lane, Isle of Portland,
Dorset, DT5 1BW
Download exhbition
details pdf
Collaborative project with Amy
Cunningham and Connall
Gleeson working as
The
Oolith Project. The project incorporates the collaborative performance
practice of its members, making use of sound, movement, photography, film,
video and local materials.
The project investigates and responds to the unique
landscape, geological features and the particular history of Portland.
Read Claudia's blog post on the exhibition.
Catalogue extract:
Our first impression of the Independent Quarry were fairly similar; Amy spoke
of an epic landscape full of romantic potential, Conall of a silent landscape,
which still echoed former quarrymen, and I saw the material for tragedy
in the vast quarried space that lay before and below us.
Remnants and reminders
of industrial-size activities were all around, deep wide tyre tracks carved
into the mud, mountains of shingle and discarded stone blocks left behind
and vertical rock faces exposing all sorts of geological features such
as vertical cracks, horizontal layers, caves and fossils. The scale of
the space dwarfed any individual, or, perhaps it was the small presences
of human bodies that made the space so huge and strange.
A small poppy had grown on one of the tall, pale, vertical stone walls,
drawing one’s eyes upwards to the tiny red spot in the distance way
above eye level.
The expansive scenery seemed to call for small actions as if contrast was
the only way to establish some kind of relation. Our explorations created
different sounds that drifted though the quarry every now and again. The
metal hydro-bags which had been left behind by the quarry workers and the
high tension wires which Conall had brought in and strung between rocks began
to sound with deep eerie tones, amplified by umbrellas and plastic bottles,
which hung off the wires as resonating chambers.
The construction allowed
objects and materials to resonate in unexpected ways, vibrating as if charged
with high voltage. In the silence of the disused quarry noise carried a long
way. Amy sounded out a big metal tank with high and low chants and wind blew
noisily through our clothing and through the wings I had made for myself.
In another exploration I placed a small trampoline into different parts of
the landscape alongside the massive stone blocks, and used it for bouncing
up and down in quick rhythmic patterns. Looking back over the video footage
it feels as if the intense repetitions mirrored and relieved the intensity
of the open space.
(…)
The fragments we take with us in the form of video or sound are traces
of our investigations of the site, they don’t make up a story and don’t
form a coherent whole.
There is a video clip of an umbrella vibrating for
no obvious reason, another clip of a waterbottle roaring like a Jimi Hendrix
guitar, the projected image of a building scattered over a group of stone
blocks, a photograph of a poppy and another of a black, head-size hole
in an old tank, images of a figure standing on a pile of stone blocks
gazing
into the distance, a figure caught in mid air and a video of a hand tracing
fossil imprints on the surface of a rock.
With thank to the University of Brighton, The Portland
Sculpture Quarry Trust and Albion Stone plc.
Seeing Through
Stone’ exhibition
supported by Natural England, Aggregates Levy Sustainability Fund.
Thanks
to Bob Ford for sharing his knowledge and insight about
Portland’s
ecology, Bill Fairhall for technical inventiveness and Andrew
Yale and Andrew
Downs for photographic documentation.
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