Visual art exhibitions and events with a platform for critical writing
By: Judith Alder & Roz Cran: Breaking Ground
NEXT BREAKING GROUND RESIDENCY IS "UNDER GROUND" AT THE PINE GALLERY, CLAREMONT, HASTINGS FROM 14TH TO 23RD OCTOBER 2008. Breaking Ground is an ongoing, experimental project which has developed through several phases. Breaking Ground events include "Two Artists in Residence on an Allotment" including "Allotmenta", an open day; a residency at the University of Brighton, and "Outside In", a residency at Phoenix Arts, Brighton.
Judith Alder and Roz Cran are based in East Sussex. They currently work together on two projects: BMPD is a programme of professional development and networking events for artists in the Eastbourne area; Breaking Ground is a collaborative project which was initially supported by a NAN New Collaborations Bursary. Stage 2 of Breaking Ground is supported by The National Lottery through Arts Council England.
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click to see snails
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# 54 [3 October 2007]
SITTING STILL AND RUNNING ABOUT
An onion head nodded and waved as I sat and stared today. At first I did not see but I stayed, looked longer and saw them: nestled inside among the seeds were small snails - lots of them. A ladybird came stepping quickly over the round seeds, seven black spots on her back. An abundance of circular shapes on the allotment.
The last lesson was PE. Certainly I was in need of exercise. How many hop, skip and jumps does the allotment measure?
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# 53 [2 October 2007]
DAY 2 - MAPPING
Tasks:
mark out the individual plots on the allotment with stringidentify which plots are Jeannie's and which are Roz'sdraw a plan, marking the plots A - K
47 canes used
47 blue flags to mark them
5 balls of string
Outlook for Thursday to Saturday:
Generally dry, bright or sunny spells by day but with patchy mist and fog at night. Rather warm.
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# 52 [2 October 2007]
GREEN WHITE CUBE
On a mild grey morning we struggled with metal tubes and flapping plastic and succeeded in creating a dry area to make and display - our own white cube.
The second thing I noticed as I stared was this mullein covered in raindrops, a rose opening to the day.
At the end of the afternoon I made a posy for the teacher.
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# 51 [1 October 2007]
LAST THINGS FIRST
Despite my lucky 3 leaf clover it teamed with rain. Rain I wished for over the summer to swell the vegetables arrived today. Plans turned back to front - we worked inside on the kitchen table, printed leaves, made invitations for 'allotmenta', the Open Day - our last event became our first.
We had a drawing lesson - drew nasturtiums picked from the allotment yesterday. Five things I noticed: 1. Ridges on the old runner bean reminded me of ridges left by the sea on sand. 2. Hollyhock leaf had 13 little round holes in it. 3. Nasturtium flowers have a pointed tail running down behind. 4. The veins on nasturtium leaves join up and form small five-sided figures. 5. Snails eat curly jack leaves between the veins, leaving a lacy pattern.
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# 50 [1 October 2007]
Two Artists in Residence on an Allotment - Day 1 - Rain, rain, rain.
London and Southeast England: Cloudy, with a little more rain or drizzle for most. This Evening and Tonight: Cloudy skies generally, with outbreaks of drizzle and mainly light rain. Low cloud will give mist and fog over the hills but it will be mild.Tuesday: A good deal of cloud, with a little light rain or drizzle in places. A few brighter spells may develop here and there in the afternoon.Outlook for Wednesday to Friday: Mostly cloudy again on Wednesday, with some rain likely later. Cloud and patchy rain slowly clearing during Thursday. Mainly fine on Friday.
Despite the weather today I collected leaves from the allotment and we made:
over 50 prints
some drawings
tea and coffee
some wet puddles on the floor
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# 49 [30 September 2007]
I've just eaten the allotment. It is inside me. For supper I had mash made from the last of the potatoes, greens: spinach, curly jack, sorrel and oriental greens, and a yellow courgette.
As well as providing food for the stomach the allotment gives food for thinking, food for feeling. It is an open space apart from the day to day. On my visit today I thought about the 2 weeks' residency to come. I looked with slightly different eyes at the grass, the earth and the sky - I stared at them. I looked at the water in the baths and the metal of the empty wheelbarrow. I decided I will start each day of the residency by standing and staring. I will see what happens, what I notice, what I think. What I noticed today was the clover. There is a mass of three-leaf clovers. I love them. There is no need to search for a four-leaf clover, all the luck you need is here.
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Checking My Boundaries
A length of string marks the boundary of the allotment.
# 48 [29 September 2007]
CHECKING MY BOUNDARIES
My recent work has been concerned with location and locating oneself; finding one's place. A little while ago I worked on a project in which I was looking at strategies which blind and visually impaired people use to locate themeselves, to get a sense of the space which they are in. One blind person explained to me that to understand an indoor space, she liked to walk the length and breadth of the room, touching each wall to "feel" the space.
On Wednesday I walked the boundaries of the allotment, feeling the extent of our space, marking the boundaries with string looped around tall canes. Remarkably, the perimeter of the allotment was exactly equivalent to one whole ball of string.
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# 47 [28 September 2007]
ANOTHER PRIZE AWARDED
Autumn has arrived on the allotment. Leaves, flowers, vegetables are dying back. The juice is retreating into the earth. I was struck by the beauty of some deaths. The dead heads of the artichoke stand proud, strong, brown. I have one more prize to award. The MERIT goes to this dead artichoke head. This one has to represent the team of heads. I remember the brightness of their purple hair in mid Summer. But their silvery brown crowns stand up straight and true.
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# 46 [28 September 2007]
LAST PREPARATION DAY
We have had our last prep. day. We hauled pallets from the garden centre car park - they may be the start of our shelter which we will build next week. However we decided to put up a white gazebo on Monday 1 October, the First Day of our Residency - so that we have immediate shelter from rain and a place to lay out materials.
I have become interested in the original measures used to lay out allotment plots - rods, poles, perches - all these measure the same i.e. approximately 5.5 yards. Many old measures came from using the body like a ruler: a cubit is the average length from finger tip to elbow; hands are still used to measure horses. A foot needs no explanation. I decided to measure my allotment with my body. I loved lying face down on the grass and earth, like kissing my allotment. The plot is 12 bodylengths long by 4 bodylengths wide.
Crops were also used to measure: 3 barleycorns = 1 inch. I used runner beans grown this summer: the plot is 110 runner beans long by 47 runner beans wide.
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A wonky structure not stable enough to support a roof.
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A section of the bamboo house at Eden Project
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Wall painting by Peruvian "vegetalista" at the Eden Project
# 45 [26 September 2007]
On our last preparation day 3 weeks ago, using canes lashed together with string, I tried to make a 3D drawing of the shelter we hope to build. The result was a wonky bamboo frame which wouldn't stay upright long enough to support the outline of a roof, a strong reminder of the need to develop my design and construction skills.
Last week I visited the Eden Project and was pleased to be able to take a close up look at a very solid bamboo construction together with information on various ways of using bamboo to build strong frames, walls, floors, roofs and screening panels.
Also at the Eden Project were wall paintings by two "vegetalistas" from Peru depicting the intertwined relationship between people and nature.
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