Visual art exhibitions and events with a platform for critical writing
FeedbackInappropriate material?
Ideas? Technical issues?
» Feedback to a-n
By: Mette Larsen & Louise Tett
Originating from different countries some of our earliest memories revolve around the beech woods. Again separated to different places we are using this connection to form a joint body of work - SYMBIOSIS - using the trees as a starting point to symbolise our relationship, interaction and shared existence.
Today is the Autumn Equinox, a good day to start the blog! Thinking about why some of my earliest memories are of walking in the woods, I realise it is not actually the trees that draw me, but the detrius and the sheer multitude of what drops off! I still cannot pass an acorn or a conker without picking it up. The pleasure that is rooting in the dead leaves for fungus, the lifting of old bark revealing a juicy white bug, the smell and the sheer feeling of discovering the previously unseen and overlooked.
Louise
[enlarge]
# 7 [15 January 2010]
I have today recieved Louises book! Immediately I was taken back to Croft Castle and started to think of the different things we did and saw there. I particularly remember the small shed full of used books, in which we spend quite some time laughing at some old Blue Peter annuals. The orchard where the children where kicking rotten apples about, the lovely peaceful chapel where we were looking at some fantastic tiles. The walk down hill to the swampy ponds where we were looking for creatures, and not forgetting the constant noise of the 'small' boys nattering in the background.
The book is fantastic and I am not yet sure how to respond to it. I just wanted to make a comment here, especially with all the memories that came flooding back. I find it very interesting that the things which has stayed with me in my mind, has been about what we did together as two families, and not about the art exhibition we went there to see.
To me this is becoming a project about staying in touch and how it still is possible to grow together even if it only is by sharing short moments in life.
I think my response to this book should be called 'A short moment in life'.
Mette
Login to post a comment »
[enlarge]
Louise Tett, 'Lend me your eyes so that I can remember', altered book, January 2010.
[enlarge]
Louise Tett, 'detail'.
[enlarge]
Louise Tett, 'detail'.
# 6 [14 January 2010]
As always the new year is a time for reflection. Thinking about how the project was progressing made me remember a research trip Mette and I took to Croft Castle in November to see the 'tell it to the trees' exhibition. On that visit I bought an old used book from the castle, fittingly 'The Knight of the Burning Pestle'. This book has it's own history, having been annotated and lent for many years. From it I have created an altered book, to reflect my memories of that shared time, and adding another layer of history. I have chosen not to include images I took on that day but have cut the paper and added thread to form a physical representation of our experience. I hope it will trigger the same memories in Mette, I am sending it to her so she can respond to it.
Louise
Login to post a comment »
Comments on this post
I love this Louise. It looks like a living organism and it make me feel a little affraid. Chris x
posted on 2010-03-15 by Christine Taylor
Hi Louise, the book is beautiful and the ongoing connection and exchange between the two of you adds a real sense of depth to the work. I haven't had time to condiser the artconnector thing. I need to look at all group applications and see. I tried google but the layout is confusing. The beauty of it is though is that it emails members everytime there is activity on it. Facebook may be a better option. I will be in touch soon.
posted on 2010-01-15 by Susan Francis
[enlarge]
Louise Tett, 'Small Refuge'.
[enlarge]
Louise Tett, 'Small Refuge lined with crochet fungi'.
[enlarge]
Louise Tett, 'Small Refuge lined with grass'.
[enlarge]
Louise Tett, 'framework for larger refuge'.
[enlarge]
Louise Tett, 'Shadow pattern'.
# 5 [6 November 2009]
The trees are on fire, molten leaves carpet the roads, leaving exposed what was once hidden and nurtured by the tree. Nests and drays, empty of their fragile inhabitants remind me of the essential nature of the tree for me - as a refuge.
When I was small we had a huge oak tree that dominated our garden. In this oak lived my imaginary friend - Monster - I have no idea why he was called this as I was afraid of the dark and anything remotely unsettling! He lived in the branches and I sat in a hollow in the base of the trunk to talk to him. Sometimes I lined this hollow with grass or blankets, but this was my refuge from the world, enclosed by the roots.
I have been weaving willow refuges, I actually find this process more like sewing; from the multiplying willow stitches emerge organic nest like forms of contorted twisted withies that invoke these childhood feelings of safety. It's a very physical process and I enjoy this. To line these I am also crocheting fungal forms in white wool, primal and comforting at the same time. With practice these refuges are getting bigger, hopefully eventually big enough for me to get in!
Whilst photographing the refuges I have become obsessed with the intertwining shadow s, I am thinking of making huge cut paper templates to 'dust' with white pigment like spoor patterns over the floor.
Login to post a comment »
[enlarge]
One of my small knitted trees.
[enlarge]
Detail.
[enlarge]
Big tree, week 1.
[enlarge]
Detail.
# 4 [29 September 2009]
The last week I have been knitting trees! As a research for this project I have knitted small trees using old sheets which I have ripped. They work really well as they are very sturdy and can stand by themselves. For this project though I feel I need a much bigger and less sturdy construction, to illustrate the more fragile side of nature and relationships. Even though things appear fragile they can be very strong.
So I have bought some huge yarns of wool and have started knitting my tree. To follow the progress I have decided to photograph the work every week. It shall be interesting to follow the growth of the tree as well as the shrinkage of the yarn.
Mette
Login to post a comment »
[enlarge]
Fungal form crocheted in wool
[enlarge]
Fungal form crocheted in hemp.
[enlarge]
Hemp dipped in paper pulp
# 3 [25 September 2009]
This week, as they say, I have been mostly crocheting fungi!
I love crocheted things, but have never really done much. So I am sitting with a hook and a ball of wall just letting the crochet form itself to reveal organic fungal forms. I am getting carried away, I envisage wading through great heaps of crocheted matter. The wool version is soft and tactile, clinging and hanging, changing it's shape. I have a go with hemp string, this is much harder to work forming a more rigid structure. It is too hard somehow, so I dip it in paper pulp, not to obscure the stitches but to build another dimemsion. The pulp clings on, its delicate fibres smothering the original form; and strangely as it dries it sucks the colour from the hemp which stains the paper. Now it looks like a fossil. These are experiemental pieces, I buy some more wool - I'm hooked (!)
Louise
Login to post a comment »
# 2 [25 September 2009]
Our lovely friend Jeni sent me this link, I thought it was so great I decided to share it. It's the sound of a tree growing - image if we could hear them all!
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/8267151.stm
Login to post a comment »
# 1 [22 September 2009]
I have spend most of my childhood roaming through the woods, building dens, climbing trees and looking for creatures. The woods with the tall trees is to me a very safe, warm and happy place, it is home! Seeing the tall beeches surrounding my home town always makes me feel that I am home!
I am drawn to the idea of the tree as a living ting, how it reaches out and interfers with other trees. Trees are not just what is visible, they have giant roots which also spreads and creates enormous landscapes underground. Trees gives life to almost all living creatures, some animals physically live on/in trees and we all need the trees to transform the carbondioxide we produce into oxygen. We need the trees and they need us, symbiosis!
To me each tree can symbolize a network of people, it being families and friends. How these together makes a strong healthy structure. This is what this project is to me, building on our tree, making it bigger and better. The bond Louise and I have build and all that we have shared during our four years of doing the degree can not be ignored. Together we have created a strong branch which I certainly haven't finished developing yet.
Mette
Login to post a comment »