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As I reach the end of my residency the last few days have been very productive, including lots of studio time and a climb up Cadair Idris.

In previous blogs I mention man made interventions and this seems to have lost focus in current developments. The mappings I am working on looking to generate a dialogue between map space and experience of walking. The works developed seeking to place, plot, deconstruct experience and understanding of being in the landscape.

In thinking about how to plot I have started some pieces working on acrylic, attempting a more physical approach to the mappings. The transparency of the acrylic allowing me to explore layers within the work.

The process exploring the relationship between points (steps made) established on a surface referring to the OS map, against much freer line drawings made whilst walking (of the path ahead). These initially being traced, but in my last walk up Cadair Idris drawn into my sketchbook to test out a different approach. Using a pin tool to scratch, along with pens, and some waxy pencils I am beginning to develop some work on the acrylic.

Acrylic piece being developed in response to Cadair Idris walk, 61 x 61 cm, against a plaster wall.

Acrylic piece in response to Aberllefenni slate quarry walk, 61 x 61 cm, against both a white wall and detail against plaster wall.

A larger acrylic piece where I hope to bring together the walks I have done.

An earlier unfinished mapping which I showed in my previous post is also beginning to feel quite important, in folding it becomes something to un fold, suggesting an interactive element to the work. The idea that the works could suggest something to follow, but is impossible is an exciting direction I would like to consider.

Pictures from walk up Cadair Idris on 28/8, stone walls traveling over the undulating hills below, and the lake Llyn Cau at the top.

I’m very sad as this will be my last blog post from Stiwdio Maelor, it has been an extremely valuable intensive and exciting period of work in a stunning landscape, with the friendliest and most welcoming people.

Once home I plan to continue to develop and finish the works made here and share the results. I would also like to spend some time reflecting on the work and processes being explored here in relation to previous works made in response to urban space, there are definitely key cross over points. The residency has also opened up some new areas of research which I will enjoy looking into.

 


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Over the last few days I have continued to work with what I have gathered on walks. Thinking about my place within the landscape being walked, it being dramatic in its scale and impression on me, mountainous, and very isolated at points. The other day I found myself walking down a path surrounded to head height by a tall green bush, the path narrow and my pace becoming faster as I went through. Considering how to plot my place within this territory.

Whilst continuing to collect pedometer notes I have also continued to trace interesting interventions within the landscape that suggest a structure, or structuring of land by man. The relationship of straight line to surrounding land still feeling very important. On 25/8 on a walk through the Aberllefenni slate quarry I began to question the role of these in the work, whether they are a part of the plotting works I have been attempting, or another element to be explored, also whether they need to be traced or not. However, the tracings of paths have been very interesting to investigate within plotting pieces, but whether these need to be traced directly from the landscape, or can be drawn, I am unclear at present.

Here are a few examples of plotting pieces being developed, working on tracing paper, and an acrylic sheet, scratching into the plastic.

The Aberllefenni quarry walk being an extremely interesting walk, landslide amounts of slate on the hillsides, alongside the remains of structures from the quarry still attempting to hold form amongst the slate spill around them.

The plotting process has involved developing a strategy for how to plot points, referring to the OS maps layout in order to strategize how the footsteps are mapped. Also looking at the graphic layout of the map and how this can be thought about within the work. I was given a wonderful opportunity to have a look at an OS map from 1901, the graphics and look of the map very different from todays. It showing a definite change in the landscape due to the increase in Coniferous trees planted.

Being well into the second week of my residency I am increasingly thinking about the relationship of this experience to the focus of urban space within recent work, both very different landscapes.

An interesting quote by Denis Cosgrove that I found whilst reading Julie Mehretu City Sitings ‘Cartography acts not merely to record the various ways that the city is materially present, but as a creative intervention in urban space, shaping both the physical city and the urban life experienced and preformed here’, Denis Cosgrove, ‘Carto-City: Mapping and Urban Space’, in Mapping a City, eds. Nina Montmann and Yilmaz Dziewior (Hamburg, 2004), 49.

This is increasingly making me think about the creative intervention I hope to have within the works I have been making here but also previously, and how this can manifest itself.


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Studio window view.

In the last couple of days I have started to think about how I can work with what I have collected from the walks I have done.

The pedometer steps provide plotting points and I am interested in the relationship of this to the ordnance survey map being used. Referring to the ordnance survey map and drawings made on walks when arranging points onto paper. Considering the real experience of the walk vs accuracy and abstraction of the map.

The onsite tracings made of man made interventions are from a particular viewpoint. How they hold and define surrounding space I feel relates to the points plotted, both can define and structure a space.

Scale of mapped area onto paper in relation to onsite tracings is important to further think about as well, whether traced imagery ought to stay in the scale taken in, or increased/decreased. Thinking also about the best way to work with it.

On the 20/8 I began to trace paths being walked, this I thought might bring actual walking perspective to the work. Layered together the acetates of these create their own landscape/map, whilst translated onto the mapped area, become a series of sections.

At present working with the above I am interested in plotting, and in how man made interventions found hold and define the space around them.

Here are some images of things I am working on.


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Arriving Sunday 16th August to begin my residency at Stiwdio Maelor in Corris, staying until 1st September.

Corris is located in a beautiful setting at the edge of the Snowdonia National Park. I am immediately taken with the relationship between town and surrounding landscape.

On my first day (17th August) I set out on 2 walks with the intention being to explore but also to begin to consider how I might work with the landscape. Using a pedometer, map, and compass, looking for footpaths I began walking. Becoming very interested on my walks in the points where man made structures and interventions meet the landscape.

Finding these points I began to trace them directly from the landscape onto acetate to take back to the studio, hoping these might provide some start points for abstracting and mapping alongside information gathered from the pedometer, map, and compass.

Ideas I want to explore: mapping territory walked and points where man made interventions meet landscape, landscape as continually evolving, archaeology of it. A map in motion, unravelling layers as it is passed through.

Seeking in the work to open up, develop, and further understand recent drawing process and ideas, wanting to work with material obtained from site, then develop techniques and approaches to it. Giving the process greater physicality.

 

 


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