Page 4 of 5 :

This project blog »

Project blogs

Artist in Residence - New Ferry Butterfly Park

By: Carol Ramsay

Thought I would start a separate blog about the trials and tribulations of my residency at the Butterfly Park.

The next 18 months are sure to have highs and lows, maybe even some tears and tantrums but will hopefully prove to be very exciting.

click to expand/collapse 

'Caravan with Bunting for the Butterfly Park'.

[enlarge]
'Caravan with Bunting for the Butterfly Park'.

# 31 [16 March 2011]

Still not well so no more work done but Butterfly Bunting for the van arrived today, thought I'd post a cheerful pic.

# 32 [25 March 2011]

I did a talk at a primary school assembly this week for the whole school, that was a bit daunting but actually went very well. Lovely kids and a really good reaction to the project.

I presented them with a buddleia plant for them to put in their school garden so that butterflies will be attracted to it when in flower. Then in April I have a full day of making butterflies with them and a further half day of them assisting me in planting up the mobile allotment.

I have an old wooden trailer and when I say old I mean truly knackered, it fell apart when delivered! So it needed a total rebuild but is now looking pretty fabulous, ready to have an A-frame fitted (primarily to protect any plants when in transit) 

It will contain edible plants that attract butterflies and bees and will be used as an educational tool to tour local schools and community groups to show how easy it could be to plant in any small space and have butterflies and bees come to visit.

Will be planted with Marjoram, Thyme, Mint, Sage, Garlic, Chives, Oregano, Sorrel, Cabbage, Courgette, Runner Beans, Fennel, Strawberries and Lavender. I have local people growing seedlings at the moment.

Part of the trailer will be partitioned off with  small self under which I can store small gardening tools/gloves/watering can and sat on top if the shelf will be planted items such as an old tin kettle, a boot (think Wall-E) and some pots/cans to prove to people that this can be done.

People can grow their own food and be at least partially self sustainable in any environment.

I had to give a presentation about the project as a whole last week as a trial for a much larger presentation this week and so did some research into other mobile allotments. There is some really great work going on out there.

Nils Norman's 'Geocruiser' I have long admired. It's a mobile greenhouse and educational resource centre, I think this was probably where my ideas first originated for both the visitor centre and the mobile allotment. Since I heard about Geocruiser in about 2006 I wanted to work on a project that had similar ideals.

http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/artists_stori...

 

Kim Holleman's 'Trailer Park' an amazing public park INSIDE a caravan that includes a park bench and a waterfall!

http://kimholleman.com/home.html

Lisa Cheung's mobile allotment is another.   http://www.mobileallotment.blogspot.com/and

Also there are plans for a mobile garden in Chicago (on a train) this has a particular resonance to me as the Butterfly Park was once an old railway sidings and is still situated right next to Bebington Train Station.

http://www.themobilegarden.org/mobilegarden/welcom...

I had so many other fantastic projects I wanted to talk about in the presentation but will do so for my Contextual Report that accompanies the project as part of my MA.

 

 

 

 

'Mobile Allotment sketch'.

[enlarge]
'Mobile Allotment sketch'.

# 33 [7 April 2011]

I can't quite believe that its only a month until the Open Day.

Sunday 8th MAY

 

So much to do yet, panic is starting to set in. The Caravan Visitor Centre actually has no floor at the moment as it was so rotten it fell through but I have every faith in my amazing husband/technician who is the worker of miracles.

The Butterfly Park has a work day tommorrow with 20+ volunteer workers coming from UniLever to help out, this is great and means that I can get some help with some of the projects. I have a whole day workshop making butterflies with schoolchildren Friday so can't be there but my husband has taken the day off work and is going to supervise 2 volunteers to fix and fill the twigwam as it has some storm damage and 2 other volunteers will help him finish off the partition in the mobile allotment and make a roof cover so that I will actually be able to transport the trailer without the plants blowing away. I'll be poppong to the park in the school lunch break just to make sure it's all going well.

The only downside of Friday's activities is that I'm missing the Opening of the Jaume Plensa exhibit at Yorkshire Sculpture Park AND the opening of Rebecca Chesney's work there too, I was really looking forward to both, gutted that the date clashes.

I will be going up next week but would have loved to attend the open day, have my ticket ans everything :(

 

 

On another note, I really need a lesson in how to reverse with a trailer on the back of the car too, I'm all over the show at the moment.

 

View comment icon View 2 comments »

Comments on this post

Good luck with your open day Carol. I like that drawing as well, very nice. Are you going to re-draw the trailer with a bashed in corner though!....... Bad luck on the dates clash.

posted on 2011-04-08 by Rob Turner

I like the sketch of the allotment...

posted on 2011-04-07 by Clare Maynard

'Sandwich Bag Butterflies'. Some of the butterflies made by the New Ferry School kids.

[enlarge]
'Sandwich Bag Butterflies'. Some of the butterflies made by the New Ferry School kids.

'The Planted Mobile Allotment'.

[enlarge]
'The Planted Mobile Allotment'.

'Planted Sorrel'.

[enlarge]
'Planted Sorrel'.

'Herby teapots'.

[enlarge]
'Herby teapots'.

# 34 [14 April 2011]

Two days spent at the local school, the first making butterflies, sandwich bag ones, splat painting ones and some beautiful drawings. Today was spent planting up the mobile allotment, each child choosing a plant, given them the task of finding out which particular butterfly is attracted to their specific plants.

Great day though, the kids were all part of the school eco council and were just so keen. A few haven't got gardens and were delighted by the idea of planting in teapots + shoes etc. They were going home to tell their Mums they can have herbs growing in tin cans on the wondow ledges :)

I had to get the planting done before thetrailer is fully finished or the plants might have died so now I have to spend some time painting the trailer with the park name and some butterflies probably.

An A-frame detatchable roof will have to be made after that too, once the plants get much taller I wouldn't be able to tow the trailer far without them breaking. I didin't want a 'glasshouse' type roof in the end,the plants are all specifically chosen to attract butterflies and bees, it seems daft to then trap them in a greenhouse. They need to be in the open air in order to do their job. So the roof will just be put on when we're out and about travelling.

The caravan is coming along, more damp found so we've had to basically strip all the internal walls out and treat it, waiting for it all to dry out now and then we're back in putting new walls in soon. Can't have the Lepidoptera drawersI originally wanted as they won't fir through the caravan door haha, never thought of that!!!

Decided instead to keep some of the old cupboard carcasses and will make drawers to fit, much narrower but it was only ever meant to reference an actual museum, it's not like the butterflies in them will be real so it should be ok.

It's an artwork at the end of the day,a working visitor centre yes but it will be more than that really.

'New Ferry Butterfly Park Mobile Allotment'.

[enlarge]
'New Ferry Butterfly Park Mobile Allotment'.

# 35 [19 April 2011]

My (non existant) sign writing skills came into play this week, I hand painted a sign onto the allotment - it took me all day!! 

I'd have much preferred to have a real butterfly painted on the side, the comma, which seems to have become our 'logo' but I had to use specific wood paint and we had no black or orange to I had to use a bit of artistic licence on the butterfly front.

I'm not sure what the scientific types will think of that but it looks ok to me.

Planted on the Mobile Allotment are:

Sorrel, when young can be eaten as a salad leaf and is a larval plant for the small copper.

Marjoram, thyme and mint are good nectar sources for several butterflies.

Cabbages for the whites is also great.

Nettles for comma, red admiral, small tortoiseshell and peacock.

Garlic chives
fennel
lavender (edible in small quantities as flavouring)
pot marigold (Calendula sp.), which has edible flowers

Most of the herb bed is attractive to bees and butterflies when in flower:
Particularly marjoram (especially the perennial, sometimes called pot marjoram)
And thyme.

Then borage, sage + rosemary (all for bees)

All the bean family (broad, French and runner beans and peas) are attractive to bees, indeed bumbles are essential to pollinate runner beans as honey bees are too light to open the flowers.

Courgettes too are bee pollinated.

Wild strawberries attract butterflies + bees but are also loved by birds (of which we have may at the park).

 

 

Concentrating on the caravan now until the opening + then i can start planning out a wee tour with allotment I hope.

# 36 [20 April 2011]

Flyers going out this week but for now I'm off to the park for a picnic with the kids to have a few hours relaxing for a change!

# 37 [2 May 2011]

One week left until the Open Day and I am praying that the weather stays so great. 

There are butterflies in abundance at the park this week, it's too early for a lot of them but the sun has brought them out regardless.

If it's cold or rainy next week we wont see a single one....however there will be a lot of new artworks to see.

Carolyn Shepherd has installed her piece of work, it looks great already though will grow with the park and will look even better over the course of the summer when the nettles at the back have grown up more. The work will then blend into its surroundings more.

Julie Dodd has begun the install of her plastic bottle butterflies, the shadows through the plastic onto the container are beautiful - more realistic than the butterflies themselves, though their simplicity is a vital part of the piece, the shadows seem to tell a different story.

Roy Lewis work is next to go in, a sundial made entirely from old motorbike parts. It's stunning but Roy is an ex motorbike mechanic he doesn't class himself as an artist at all, after seeing the piece I beg to differ.

Terry Hayes is having trouble with his resin casts, he assures me all will be well and will install Friday. Fingers crossed.

Leandra Holder + Chris Turrell-Watts will install Saturday, this piece is certainly more craft based than contemporary art but I'm sure once the sun catches the light on the recycled glass butterflies hanging in a tree the effect will be quite lovely.

Will the addition of craft into the trail make it a provincial art show? I'd like to think not, I think though we are a small nature reserve in an off the road Urban Wirral setting we seriously could stand up against some of the more well known contemporary art trails. I worry about the 'craft' effect but then I think there is something for everyone at least. The Open Day will have a small village fete kind of feel I hope but will nonetheless contain some very credible artworks.

The Mobile Allotment is growing well, I've only had to transplant one parsley plant and that was simply because I'd forgotten to put drainage holes in the bottom of a teapot.

The Caravan Visitor Centre is on something of a tight schedule.

SO much work has had to go into refurbishment that though all my plans are done I've yet to start making it into a visitor centre.

Presently it is rot free and has had a respray. The lepidoptera drawers are made, most of the art books are made , the posters, photo's flyers, brochures etc are all done.

My husband/art technician has worked ridiculously hard just to get it in a road worthy condition, walls are going in finally today + tomorrow. I will be painting on Thursday and then have one day left to actually put everything in place before install on Saturday. 

There will be very little sleep happening this week.

View comment icon View 1 comment »

Comments on this post

I am pretty excited about seeing this caravan Carol. Sounds like you've been working like a maniac on it too. I have replied to your comment in a new post (probably ill-advisedly speaking my mind, but hey-ho). I may just be a cynical misery, but I hope not!

posted on 2011-05-02 by Emily Speed

'Alison McGovern MP checking out the childrens lepidoptera drawers'.

[enlarge]
'Alison McGovern MP checking out the childrens lepidoptera drawers'.

'Official Opening of the New Ferry Butterfly Park Caravan Visitor Centre'.

[enlarge]
'Official Opening of the New Ferry Butterfly Park Caravan Visitor Centre'.

'Open Day for the Mobile Allotment too.'.

[enlarge]
'Open Day for the Mobile Allotment too.'.

'Our Lepidoptera drawers'.

[enlarge]
'Our Lepidoptera drawers'.

'Inside the caravan visitor centre.'. Photo: Terry Hayes.

[enlarge]
'Inside the caravan visitor centre.'. Photo: Terry Hayes.

# 38 [16 May 2011]

Exhaustion has led to me not updating my blog - apologies.

 

The New Ferry Butterfly Park Open Day last week was fantastic, the caravan was finished in time and the day went really well.

Amazingly well, we had over 500 visitors during the afternoon.

Our local MP, Alison McGovern opened the caravan visitor centre officially and really seemed to love all the work, which is great.

My lecturers came and one of the ladies from my MA course, an old family relative I'd never met that my dad hadn't seen for 50 years turned up after finding out about it on facebook - quite remarkable.

Lots of the local shops sponsored the day in some way and so many of the people attending lived close by and yet still I had people saying 'I never even knew this place existed'.

The headmistress of the school that i have been doing all the workshops with came by and loved seeing all their work in one place. I recognised a good few of the kids too.

A few people approached me about doing art workshops in their schools and I've made some great contacts for workshops in the park over the summer.

The artists all got their work up for the trail in time and ALL of them looked fabulous, so many positive comments flying around.

4 of the art stall holders let me down, one I knew about a few weeks before which was absoloutely fine, 2 let me know a few days before and one just didn't bother turning up, how rude! When I emailed her afterwards to check all was ok I got a one line email saying, 'sorry got my dates mixed up'.....that was it.

As it happens the artists who did come along were all so good we didn't need the others, the work on the tables was beautiful and I just wish I had some money left to actually buy some for myself.


The caravan did look really professional by the end,(unrecognisable compared to when I started)  some friends came to help that last 2 days for one last push and one (thanks Julie) stayed with me til midnight the night before to help with the artifying of it all.


It was very well used during the day, lots more childrens drawings to add to our display folders. Success and such a relief!!!!


I have spent all week trying to recover but amidst a hospital visit (I dropped a table on my foot on the open day), work, a studio Open night (light night)and making  work for a charity fundraising day and a *different* charity art auction I failed to succeed with any rest so this week I will mainly be catching up with some sleep.


 

View comment icon View 5 comments »

Comments on this post

It looks fantastic!

posted on 2011-05-17 by Clare Maynard

Thanks Rob, I really hope it does lead to bigger and better things for the Butterfly Park and for the surrounding community, it's fantastic how much they're getting on board now. I do think Art can be any kind of different, whose to say what's art and what's not? I'd like to think that the visitor centre is a viable artwork and the mobile allotment though promoting self sufficiency and biodiversity is still an artwork, an active growing one. Bring on the funding and the partners. But...even if it's just me and the volunteer team, I'm still loving every minute :)

posted on 2011-05-17 by Carol Ramsay

Carol I hope this project leads onto something. You have really pulled it off with so little resources. You should highlight this as much as you can its an exellent example of an artist doing something just that bit different, which I am sure will be noticed by a future funding body and working partners. Very impressed...... from North Kent.

posted on 2011-05-16 by Rob Turner

Thanks Hayley :) your work still looks brilliant in the park.

posted on 2011-05-16 by Carol Ramsay

So pleased for you, that all your hard work paid off. CONGRATULATION.

posted on 2011-05-16 by Hayley Parfitt

'One of our first visitors to New Ferry Butterfly Park Visitor Centre.'.

[enlarge]
'One of our first visitors to New Ferry Butterfly Park Visitor Centre.'.

# 39 [18 May 2011]

I am loving twitter lately, found so many great people + ideas to follow. (inc @artists_talking obviously)

 

I tweet as @cazramsay but also for the Butterfly Park as @wirralbutterfly.

I've found @wearecaravan today. An Edinburgh based gallery/creative space in a caravan http://wearecaravan.tumblr.com/

With them + the caravan gallery (@caravangallery) and my own wee visitor centre caravan we are invading the art world, maybe this will be a new thing.

The caravan gallery have been going for a few years now and are really successful, maybe they have set a precedent and more restored caravan creative spaces will come out of the woodwork. 

 

Every city should have one :)

 

Also discovered @allotinabox which does exactly what it says on the box - it's an allotment (well, all the seeds you need to start one) in a box. I'm going to look into this more, would be great to be able to hand out allotinaboxes when I'm out + about with the mobile allotment, obviously only if some of the plants tie in with our butterfly/bee attracting ideal.

 

View comment icon View 1 comment »

Comments on this post

The caravan thing is here in kent as well there is one going around for various arts organisations to use. I seen adverts for prosposals but never wrote one. Some good friends of mine ran a project near to where I live from it........ workers-of-art.co.uk/whitstableiswhereiwoa.html have a look !

posted on 2011-05-18 by Rob Turner

# 40 [24 May 2011]

I am obviously becoming addicted to vintage caravans, when I said in my last post that every city should have it's own caravan artwork I meant it - now I have come across this little gem opening in June 2011.

 

Huttenpalast in Berlin, an old warehouse, transformed into a hotel by going vintage. Each *bedroom* is a vintage caravan or hut of some form.

 

http://inhabitat.com/huttenpalast-salvaged-campers...

 

What a simple and yet amazing idea.

 

I'm loving it :)

 

I want to build a hotel now too.

 

I'm not sure if I've posted this either but here's a link to the facebook photo's showing my caravan visitor centre from murky start to sparkly finish.

https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.20234851...

Page 4 of 5 :

This project blog »

Carol Ramsay

Recently completed a Fine Art BA with First Class Honours at Wirral Metropolitan College. Now studying part time at UCLAN Preston for an MA in Fine Art, Site + Archive Intervention, whilst being a full time Mum to two young boys, holding a residency at New Ferry Butterfly Park and working Part time as a Public Art Programme Assistant with Liverpool Biennial.