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Background
Ideas & Concerns
For some time I have wanted to make an outdoor video installation
that responded to it’s environment. Working with Catherine
Elwes and John Calderbank in the early 1990’s, I conducted
a period of research into the feasibility of building a permanent
outdoor video sculpture for the Chiltern Sculpture Trail at Cowleaze
Wood in Oxfordshire. Although this early project did not proceed
beyond the report stage, I drew on this experience to produce a
number of gallery-based video installations which utilised solar
and wind power including Perpetual Motion (1994), Fire, Ice &
Steam (1995) Mothlight (1998), Mothlight II (2001) and For William
Henry Fox Talbot (The Pencil of Nature) 2002.
The
notion of constructing an outdoor video installation in the landscape
contains many of the contrasting and contradictory aspects that
I enjoy working with. It juxtaposes the natural and the artificial,
making use of technology intended for interior use and placing it
outdoors. I want the strength and fragility of the technology to
be contrasted with the durability and vulnerability of the tree
it is fused with and the landscape it is placed within. I am interested
in highlighting and contrasting different notions of temporality,
permanence and impermanence. The specific video images produced
by the installation are in themselves of no direct consequence-
they are simply part of a flow of very subtly changing ephemeral
moments. For me, the relationship between the light and the wind
is at the core of the work. The light and wind provide the source
of the images both in terms of the generation of the electrical
power which supports the video and electronic apparatus, and in
terms of the direct physical and visual experience which become
part of the work. (Day/night, ambient light and the movement of
clouds, and foliage, the changing weather conditions, etc.)
It
should also be noted that the work itself, like the image-sequences
it produces, was transient. The components which constitute the
work were clamped to a living tree for a period of ten days. The
various bits of inexpensive technology - wind turbine, solar panels,
video cameras, image switcher, LCD video display, cabling, etc.
were temporary modifications, which, once removed, left no trace.
During the period in which the prototype installation was functioning,
it was left switched on, running night and day for as long as the
technical systems remained operational. Designed to be self-powering
as long as the weather conditions provided sustaining light and
wind, the installation was equipped with two large capacity rechargeable
batteries capable of powering the installation for approximately
72 hours. Located on Forestry Commission land, it was relatively
inaccessible, although accessible via an unpaved road. From a distance
the solar panels and the wind turbine would certainly have aroused
the attention of curious by-passers. However, the casual visitor
coming across the installation would find no explanation or context
for the piece, what it was, why it was there, or what purpose it
might have. Visitors were free to respond (or not) and to offer
up their own explanation for it’s existence.
The
Site and John Ruskin
The location of the prototype outdoor video piece at Lawson Park
was significant, as the site was on land once owned by John Ruskin,
the influential Victorian English writer and critic. Ruskin’s
passionate enthusiasm for the landscape of this area is well documented,
not least in his published lectures and prolific diaries. His detailed
descriptions of the ceaselessly changing views of the “Old
Man” above Coniston Water, of cloud formations and vivid skies
provide a compelling sense of this dynamic landscape.
From the west the wind blows fiercely towards you out of the blue
sky. Under the blue space is a flattened dome of earth-cloud clinging
to, and altogether masquing the form of, the mountain, known as
the Old Man of Coniston.
The
top of that dome of cloud is two thousand eight hundred feet above
the sea, the mountain two thousand six hundred, the cloud lying
two hundred feet deep on it. Behind it, westward and seaward, all’s
clear; but when the wind out of that blue clearness comes over the
ridge of the earth-cloud, at that moment and that line, its own
moisture congeals into these white—I believe, ice-clouds;
threads, and meshes, and tresses, and tapestries, flying, failing,
melting, reappearing; spinning and unspinning themselves, coiling
and uncoiling, winding and unwinding, faster than eye or thought
can follow: and through all their dazzling maze of frosty filaments
shines a painted window in palpitation; its pulses of colour interwoven
in motion, intermittent in fire,—emerald and ruby and pale
purple and violet melting into a blue that is not of the sky, but
of the sunbeam;—purer than the crystal, softer than the rainbow,
and brighter than the snow..
For
me, a connection to the cultural history of the site is an important
element to the context of the work and deeply connected to a sense
of the location. My intentions in the long term are to create a
landscape installation that is a part of the landscape in which
it is sited, a work that responds directly to and in relation to
its location.
The
Item Project
This research, funded by NESTA (National Endowment for Science,
Technology and the Arts) and the Arts Council of England, is one
of six projects selected by FACT (Foundation for Art and Creative
Technology) in Liverpool. Each of the projects specified that an
artist work in partnership with a technologist The goal of my project
was to construct the prototype for a planned semi-permanent work,
and as such it is subject to further experimentation and modification.
The opportunity to make and install this prototype has given us
the chance to uncover further creative challenges which we have
yet to meet. Making and installing the piece at Lawson Park and
observing the problems that have emerged has moved us much closer
to our final goal.
Chris
Meigh-Andrews, London Sept. 2004.
1. In
this aspiration I have drawn on two artist’s films made in
the 1970’s: Michael Snow’s La Region Centrale and Chris
Welsby’s Seven Days. See www.meigh-andrews.com for more background
information on my previous work.
2. See Panorama, a feasibility study, Meigh-Andrews, Elwes &
Calderbank, Arts Council of Great Britain, 1993.
3. See “Chris Meigh-Andrews, Sculptural Video Installations,
1989-95”, Experiments in Moving Image, Jackie Hatfield, ed.,
Epigraph Publications, 2004, “Chris Meigh-Andrews, Video Tapes,
Installations & Projections; 1978-2001”, Art In-Sight,
Film Waves, Issue 15, 2001 and “Mapping the Image”,
Digital Creativity, 2001.
4. John Ruskin, Lecture, 1876.
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