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RESTORATION

interpreting place

In contribution to the Re-Drift online exhibition, three temporary site-specific artworks were created and curated by Irene Rogan, selecting fragments from Norman Nicholson's poetic works and landscape photography by Phillip Green.  The artworks were all produced in response to the experience of place; specifically the intellectual and emotional engagement with Hodbarrow a site formerly dominated by industrial iron ore extraction and situated near the town of Millom in South West Cumbria.  The ironworks closed during the 1960 and following the removal of all the buildings and machinery the site has largely been reclaimed by nature.  It is now the location of an RSPB sanctuary and nature reserve.

 

 

The first series of images 'Bloody Cranes-bill' drew inspiration from a work by the Millom poet Norman Nicholson.  The work examines the tracery of former industry and land use as it is interwoven into and amongst the now restorative vegetation.

 

The second series of images 'Between Brine and Vapour' introduces a theme often incorporated into Irene's work.  Specifically, Irene examines the way in which elements of the natural world are often unique to their location but only become visible when viewed under a microscope.  The photographs follow the process of collecting both fresh and sea water from Hodbarrow alongside the microscopic specimens this activity produced.

 

The final series of images 'Flaming Fleeces' reflect on the landscapes visible from Hodbarrow and against which industrial Hodbarrow is set in constant juxtaposition.  These are landscapes in which it is possible to trace human settlement back over thousands of years and in which ways of living are subject to an ongoing process of adapting.  Specifically, flaming fleeces offer a lament to the region's heritage as a wool producer; it reflects upon the ways in which this once-valued fibre has now become little more than a waste product.

BLOODY CRANESBILL - RESTORATION

 

A barren slack of clay is slurried and scaled-out over

All that living fracas of top-soil and rock. A town's

Purpose subsides with the mine; my father and my Uncle Jim

Lie a quarter of a century dead; but out on its stubborn skerry,

In a lagoon of despoliation, that same flower.

Still grows today.

 

The Bloody Cranesbill

Norman Nicholson

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Photo: Phillip Green

RED ROAD

From Mainsgate Road to Hodbarrow

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NEVER GONE

Ever waiting hidden life, wrenching back to claim the land our place, restored.

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Photos: Phillip Green

clinging to cliff Re-Drift-colour-63

Photo: Phillip Green

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Photo: Phillip Green

Hodbarrow Quarry Wall

withought Irene

Photo: Irene Rogan

TOWSEY HOLE DRIFT MINE

A drift mine is an underground mine in which the entry or

access is above water level and generally on the slope of a hill, driven horizontally into the ore seam.

BETWEEN BRINE AND VAPOUR

The artworks drew inspiration from a work by the Millom poet Norman Nicholson 'Bloody Cranesbill'.   'Between Brine and Vapour' introduces a theme often incorporated into Irene's work.  Specifically, Irene examines the way in which elements of the natural world are often unique to their location but only become visible when viewed under a microscope.  The photographs follow the process of collecting both fresh and sea water from Hodbarrow alongside the microscopic specimens this activity produced.  this is exploration of the waters surrounding Hodbarrow  through water collections, observation and microscopy.

white rock from kayak

Photo Irene Rogan: White Rock,  Millom

 

‘But inches below

The enveloping film

Between  brine and vapour

The lesser energies

Explode into self-propulsion

Single cells

Developing fins

Tentacles, tails;

A tiny octopus

Rayed like the sun

That moves as the sun can’t’

 

Extract from Plankton by Norman Nicholson from series in the Shadow of Black Combe 1978

Photo: Member of the public  Irene  during  water coillection at Haverigg

FLAMING FLEECES

Flaming Fleeces is Irene Rogan's  response to the current plight of Cumbrian farmers – who are burning and burying fleeces - unable to sell them in the UK, where market-value is just forty pounds for six-hundred fleeces.

 

The work is an exploration of a contentious issue within the agricultural community and the strong opposition to sheep farming, through long-term problems with agricultural industry in UK.

 

Burning a number of fleeces was a significant act - part of a series of interventions - giving exposure to the amount of waste and loss - loss in a practical and financial terms of the rearing of sheep, and through that of the burning of an organic, sustainable, biodegradable material.

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IRENE FLEECED
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Photos: Phillip Green of Irene Rogan's  performanative Flaming Fleeces installation.

the rocks shore

Photo: Irene Rogan White Rock tide line

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Photo Phillip Green of Fleece Industria'  installationl by  Irene Rogan

flaming shore 4

Photo: Irene Rogan 'Flaming Fleeces' instllation

ARTIST IRENE ROGAN DISCUSSES  FLAMING FLEECES WITH ADAM DAY MANAGING DIRECTOR OF THE FARMER NETWORK CUMBRIA

Norman Nicholson Estate

Beckside Farm, Whicham Valley

Lowscales Farm, Millom

Jem Freiesleben

Duane Farren

The Freshwater Biological Association, Hawkshead

Adam Day The Farmer Network, Cumbria

 

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WATER COLLECTIONS

Photos Irene Rogan: Water Collection  at Hodbarrow broken inner barrier

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rocks towsey micro1ss
16) WALL AND MICRO1a
17) BLACK PIPE ORANGE
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kayak film strip3

WITH SPECIAL THANKS

Left Photo Philip Green quarry pool   Right photo  Irene Rogan  & Microscopy

Photos: Irene Rogan: Microscopy and landscape

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Photo: Irene Rogan from Flaming Fleeces video  filmed by Jem Freiesleben

Photo: Irene Rogan

Photo: Irene Rogan

Photo: Irene Rogan

Photo: Irene Rogan

Photo: Irene Rogan

Photos: Phillip Green

Photos: Irene Rogan: Microscopy and landscape Haverigg Point

Flaming Fleeces
between brine
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