Visual art exhibitions and events with a platform for critical writing
Tremenheere Sculpture Gardens, Penzance
29 April 1 May
Reviewed by: Zoe Shearman
Stravinskys ballet score The Rite of Spring was inspired by his dream of a virgin dancing herself to death in a pagan ritual of self-sacrifice. The dance, a climax of transitory beauty and death, is demanded by the forces of nature to bring about a change in the seasons, from winter to spring. The little death of the cut flower, sacrificed for an ephemeral display of beauty, mirrors this transformative moment of becoming and is central to Jyll Bradleys concerns and her latest collaborative project Rite van de lente (Dutch for Rite of Spring).
For over one hundred years west Cornwall provided Britain with a promise of spring through its early crop of flowers. The local trade is now pressurised by imports from the global flower market that is controlled by the Dutch, who grow under glass, so resisting the rhythms of nature. The relative cheapness of aviation fuel compared to that of diesel, compounds the problem, as does the demise of the flower train that once took West Country blooms to urban markets.
On a steep grassy slope at Tremenheere, reached via an ancient pilgrims route, a second-hand Transit van is parked and decorated with garlands of spring flowers donated by local flower farmers, so hybridising it into an object of beauty. The van faces east, overlooking St Michaels Mount, the traditional direction of migration for local people. The garlands, a west Cornwall tradition made by local students and flower arrangers with the artist, include anemones, bluebells, lily of the valley and late daffodils. Crowned with a headdress of strong smelling white lilies, the van represents the spirit of May Day, creating a visual metaphor for the migration of flowers and their cultures, and communicating what the Romantic poet William Blake called the two contrary states of the human soul. After May Day, and the garlands transient display, the work will be undressed and transformed back into a van in a process of circularity. It will then be buried in the earth and the burial mound planted so that the van returns to life next spring.
Rite van de lente is part of an ongoing series of projects, Fragrant, which has journeyed to China, Hong Kong and Colombia, amongst other places. Fragrant involves different flower growing customs and their social networks to reveal the cultural significance of flowers, the local/global flower trade and enable flower growers, workers and arrangers to engage in making the meaning of the artworks.
The Flower Power movement of the hippies, with its closeness to nature and resistance to Western capitalism, is amongst Rite van de lentes influences. The work can also be understood as heir to the Romantic movement. The Romantics regarded themselves as inspired facilitators, enabling others to see familiar things in a new way. Revolution, Nature and Transcendence were at the very heart of it, as they are in Bradleys projects.
Writer detail:
Zoe Shearman is a curator and tutor on the MA Curating course led by Spacex Contemporary Art + Dartington College of Art
zoe.shearman@relational.org.uk |
Venue detail:
Tremenheere Sculpture Gardens
, Penzance
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