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Revolution and Resonance 2017
two films the build and the burn
Review, a-n.co.uk.
'On a gloriously sunny afternoon we drive out into the Sussex countryside, across the Pevensey Levels and inland towards the Weald. We turn off the main road along a wooded drive and approach the long, low façade of a country house, situated at the centre of a stunning Capability Brown landscape. Leaving the car we continue on foot, eventually emerging through trees onto the lakeside where a man and some boys are pushing a small rowing boat out onto the water. Another boat is already far out on the lake, rowing close to a giant ball of tangled wood. The ends of loosely woven timber strips protrude unevenly from the object, disrupting the roughly spherical outline, marking its maker’s refusal to be bound by the rules of convention and creating a sense of energy.
I had been to this place before in very different weather, on a day when cold rain dripped through the leaves, and the steep steps up to an unheated loft space were slippery with moisture. This was the place that Felicity Truscott had made her base during a year-long experiment to discover what might happen if nature was allowed to direct and govern her art-making. At the time of this first visit the little studio was crowded with drawings: rhythmic charcoal loops, energetic spatterings of ink and scoured chalky paintings stood propped against flaky walls. A spiral of swept ash covered the floor, the broom that had made it leaning to one side. All of these works were created with a dynamic physicality typical of Truscott’s practice. They echoed the movements in the landscape - spiralling leaves, swaying reeds, rotating eddies made by wind on water, the ever changing patterns of sun and shade, dark and light, marking the cycles of time and life.
The Oxford Dictionary defines revolution not only as “an instance of revolving”, but also as “a forcible overthrow of a government or social order, in favour of a new system.” For Felicity this project formed part of a revolution in her practice as she searched for new meaning in her work, and challenged herself to find ways of responding to the energy of the natural world through her own physicality. There was a need to create work on a new scale and in a form that could sit within the landscape, not separate from it, acting as a force which would somehow amplify the energy of the environment in which it was born.
On a chilly May morning, after months of planning, the challenge began. Felicity and her team of supporters met beside the lake. A lorry load of oak strips had been delivered. A scaffold had been erected. Six metres long, sixty millimetres wide and only four millimetres thick, the strips of oak were thin and whippy. First soaked in the lake to make them supple, the lengths of timber were then pulled out to rest on the grassy bank until the artist and her team were ready to wrestle them into place to form a roughly woven structure. The object began to grow, suspended from the scaffold which supported its weight while the process took place. The milled strips, not long since part of a living tree, were hard to manage: while one end could be brought under control, the other flapped and flailed. Eventually, woven under, over, under, over, the strips of oak were forced to submit and a roughly spherical shape began to take form. Pushing against each other the slats set up a tension, the woven mesh began to dry and the wood shrank, self-locking into a taught sphere. Finally tamed, the object was rolled down the sloping grass to the water’s edge and onto a floating raft. Plastic canisters filled with air were lashed to the underside of the raft, supporting the object at the exact point, on the surface of the water, where the world above met the world below.
In 2012 artist Alex Hartley discovered a freshly exposed island in the High Arctic and, naming it Nowhere Island, declared a new nation which he would bring back to the UK. The project, part of the 2012 Cultural Olympiad included an epic journey in which a small tugboat towed Hartley’s floating platform of glacial morain 2500 miles back to UK waters. In a sort of victory procession, the tug dragged its load along the south coast of England, stopping here and there to celebrate the arrival of the new nation. I am reminded of this: the little tug, the tow rope and the raft carrying the rock making their way across the surface of the open water. Here, five years later is Truscott and her life-jacketed companion, paddling a small boat out onto the lake: the little boat, the tow rope and the raft bearing the outsized sculpture. The tethered object dwarfs the artist and her tiny boat. There is a sense of adventure, of risk, of celebration. A mission has almost been accomplished.
In another Capability Brown landscape 160 miles away at Compton Verney, there is art in the parkland. One of Brown’s artistic devices was the use of viewpoints to draw the eye; now the landscape becomes a magnificent composition in which works of art such as Henry Moore’s iconic sculptures can be framed and admired. Sometimes however, the art becomes a means to view the landscape differently, or to disrupt the view. In Hilary Jack’s Empty Nest, a giant nest-like structure constructed in an ancient Cedar of Lebanon tree overlooking the Compton Verney lake, visitors climbed up into the sculpture to experience the landscape from a new perspective. Previously, in the same setting, Simon Patterson’s installation, Landskip, released plumes of brightly coloured smoke across the parkland, creating dramatic clouds of colour which dispersed into an incongruous tinted haze. To the visitor approaching the lake at Ashburnham Place, Truscott’s floating intervention provided an unexpected interruption to the view, prompting the viewer to pause a moment to reflect and question.
The floating object drifted and blew with the wind. More than once it ran aground or had to be rescued from the reed beds and towed back into position. The anchor rope was lengthened, secured, and dropped four metres in the centre of the lake until it rested upon the muddy floor. It resisted the drift, holding steady: the sculpture above, the raft on the surface, the anchor below. There for six months the objects remained, the sculpture slowly changing in colour and shape as the weather worked away at it.
But how to end? Reluctant to leave the object to a process of slow deterioration and collapse, Truscott debated: sink or burn? Before the final act though, there is one more exploration to be made: a foray into the world beneath. A video camera is lowered on a rope, into the depths, down to the lake bed. The film footage captured during the slow immersion and re-emergence triggers an urge to revisit Bill Viola’s film works with their themes of ritual immersion, near death experience, rescue and re-birth. Or Simon Faithful’s work, Reef, which explores the cycles of life and death in a less direct way, charting the sinking of a small boat, the Brioney Victoria, and her transformation into a new habitat for sea creatures to populate.
Finally, there is no more to be done and the decision is made. Burn. A last dramatic act as the sculpture becomes a funeral pyre floating on the glassy surface, completing what has perhaps become a rite of passage; a journey of transformation through air, water and fire. The project has brought to mind thoughts about control and restraint, adventure and risk; about the relationship between mankind and nature, the known and the unknown, the inevitable cycles of birth, life and death, and of celebration and mourning.'
Judith Alder
December 2017