Writing prompt – Spyhole

Spyhole by Judy DarleyI confess to being the kind of person who can never resist peeking though a hole in a fence, door or indeed historic wall. This particular spyhole is part of a stately home in Cornwall, and reveals a rather elegant room with no public access, though it seems some volunteer has chosen to stow their trusty steed there. Quite appropriate, really, as it adjoins the stables.

What secret might be uncovered through nosiness? What mystery could be solved by one detail easily overlooked?

If you write or create something prompted by this, please send an email to Judy(at)socket creative.com to let me know. With your permission, I’ll publish it on SkyLightRain.com.

Book review – The Bees by Laline Paull

The BeesThe beautiful book is one of the most unusual tales I’ve read. Told entirely from the point of view of a single bee, Flora 717, it encompasses a whole life and society, from the confines of a hive to the surrounding orchard and beyond.

Flora is a sanitation bee – the lowest caste of her community, assumed by all to be without voice and without thought. When she learns to speak, she finds herself overcoming the preconceptions and prejudice of her sisters to rise through the ranks, and gradually comes to understand the politics and hidden dangers of her home.

The Bees is an exhilarating read – initially somewhat claustrophobic but expanding as Flora’s perceptions develop. The first time she experiences flight is a wonder that may leave you breathless, while her encounters with treacherous wasps and the ‘myriad’ are as enlightening to us as to Flora herself. Continue reading

Writing prompt – lakeside

Vondelpark barbecues cr Judy DarleyI took this photo in Vodelpark, Amsterdam, during a heatwave some years ago. As the sun began to dip, dozens of people arrived and began to settle down for an evening of revelries.

The scene is so atmospheric with the smoke from barbecues and bonfires drifting skywards. What could happen here in this hinterland between day and dusk?

If you write or create something prompted by this, please send an email to Judy(at)socket creative.com to let me know. With your permission, I’ll publish it on SkyLightRain.com.

Film review – No Idea Complete

No Idea Complete Dan Martin framed in doorway

Dan Martin, No Idea Complete

A man enters a warehouse and immediately begins to dance. Standing framed within a doorway, Dan Martin’s movements are immediately arresting, as he twists his torso and limbs, and the notes from a piano pour over him – like water, like light.

No Idea Complete is elegant film that brings together a harmony of music, dance and location. Our focus is on three exceptional dancers who each bring their own blend of experience and talent to scenes they embody as solitary beings, their only company the shifting sounds that bleed in and out, adding texture and atmosphere. Jo Butler’s original piano composition weaves around the dancers, whose feet and hands add occasional percussion.

To me it felt like a haunting, with Dan Martin, Luke Antysz and Sara Mather playing the role of the ghosts. These are the people who have been here before, who have left an impression of themselves on the air – I almost expected incomers to walk through them, none the wiser.

No Idea Complete is a title open to interpretation, but I like the idea that it is an allusion to each life that passes through a space. It is a rare person who finishes living before moving on. In a sense, we are all destined to become ghosts.

In one brief sequence, Sara appears on a staircase executing stunningly exquisite ballet moves, her expression contemplative.

Dan brings a different speed to the mix, at times angst-ridden, at others content. Luke is perhaps the most ethereal, glimpsed fleetingly as he springs, cavorts, spins, then disappears.

No Idea Complete Luke Antysz1

Luke Antysz, No Idea Complete

The setting at Paintworks Bristol itself has a distinct presence, as the dancers appear framed by brickwork, wood and metal, within sweeping spaces or in silhouette.

The power of the three individuals, each self-contained within their own space, is a phenomenal thing, building quietly with the music to a silent crescendo whereby each holds the camera’s gaze in a moment of stillness that is utterly compelling.

Director: Grant Pollard (Films Gb)
Producer: Polly Crockett Robertson (3rd Stage Dance).

The premiere of No Idea Complete was on Sunday, 13th March 2016 at 6pm on Big Screen Bristol, Millennium Square. During 2016, it will be screened in London, Paris, Seville, Cadiz, New York and Nashville. Find details of future events at 3rdstagedance.com.

Are you an artist or do you know an artist who would like to be showcased on SkyLightRain.com? Get in touch at judydarley (at) iCloud.com. I’m also happy to receive reviews of books, exhibitions, theatre and film. To submit or suggest a review, please send an email to judydarley (at) iCloud.com.

Writing prompt – memory

Seascape for Pad by Judy DarleyToday is my dad’s 77th birthday. A pretty impressive age. Buying him gifts has always been a challenge, and now that he’s enduring the ever increasing losses of Alzheimer’s disease, the big thing is to find something he can connect with in the moment he opens it and gain some simple pleasure from.

I decided to paint him a seascape. It took me back to being a small child painting pictures for my dad, and already knowing the pride that would shine from his eyes when he saw it. There’s some irony in that given that my dad no longer knows I am his daughter, or that he ever had children, but that’s a story for another day.

The man who I will give this painting to is kind and caring, and loves art. My hope is that the sea in the scene will make him smile.

As today’s creative prompt I invite you to consider how you might attempt to connect with someone whose memory is failing them, and how that interaction might turn out.

If you write or create something prompted by this, please send an email to Judy(at)socket creative.com to let me know. With your permission, I’ll publish it on SkyLightRain.com.

Off-Centre Innovations

Relics by Peter Ford

Relics by Peter Ford

Half way down a quiet residential street in south Bristol, Off-Centre Gallery is an unexpected discovery. Open by appointment and only on certain days of the week, it takes a bit of determination to gain access, but it is well worth the effort.

Climb two steep flights of stairs and you’ll reach a pair of rooms that flood with light on even the gloomiest February or March day, and exude a sense of contentment. It’s the kind of space where you can feel at home within moments.

Peter Ford, Feb2016

Artist Peter Ford, February 2016

This is no doubt at least in part to do with the artwork layering the walls, stacked in glass cabinets and swinging gently from the ceiling or in front of windows. Sculpted from handmade paper or printed using salvaged or sought out surfaces, they represent almost a lifetime’s worth of explorations by artist Peter Ford.

In the room to the left of the stairs, two comfortable chairs invite you to sit and take in the art around you – and all the shades, textures and forms it encompasses. My attention is immediately drawn to an arrangement of repeating images labelled Office Work, which Peter later explains were printed from a metal plate made for commercial printing, to advertise a bank, dating from the 1950s. In Peter’s world, nothing is without potential for creating a new work of art.

The first time I visited Off-Centre was during an art trail several years ago, when I was attracted by a number of prints Peter had carried out using scraps of fabric he’d found by a Chinese river. The idea of printing from so many different sources intrigued me. At first I thought the forms I was seeing were the fabric itself, painted and collaged.

Peter came to his investigative form of printing after realising that the fumes from etching could be hazardous, but had come to etching many years earlier in an equally serendipitous way. Wanting to train as an artist but aware of his father’s disapproval, the young Peter came to “a compromise” and instead qualified as a teacher of Art and English. He continued to create artwork in his own time. “Several people told me my drawings reminded them of etchings, which interested me.”

When the opportunity arose, through his art teaching, to learn etching, Peter was immediately captivated. “At the time I was living in a commune in Ramsgate, Kent, and there was space for an etching press, so I bought one, and began experimenting.”

It was the beginning of a new phase in Peter’s artistic life.

In his mid-30s, Peter retired from teaching so he could devote himself full time to his art. “It was a liberation.”

Bringing together his two early loves, Peter soon devised a form of text art, taking a single word and typing it in shades and shapes that accentuated the meaning. “Using a typewriter I made three books, each based around a single word – Innovative, Strong or Challenging.”

A collection of crosses and zeros become an artwork titled Migration. The fact these symbols have come to mean kisses and hugs in today’s text-speak gives the piece an extra layer of meaning speaking about alienation and loss.

Migration by Peter Ford, cropped

Migration by Peter Ford, cropped

But another obsession was taking hold, and before long Peter has gained an expertise in creating intricate bookplates – decorative typographical labels intended to be pasted into books to denote the owner.

Organisations, including Bristol Museum and Art Gallery, began commissioning him to create bookplates to commemorate periods in their history, or represent their different departments. As his reputation grew, Peter received invitations to exhibit in Beijing and Łódź, Poland, as well as to curate an exhibition at the RWA in Bristol.

By this time, Off-Centre Gallery already existed, initially called Hard Times Gallery, with a tagline reading: “Hard to Find – Open Odd Times”!

The gallery gave Peter an opportunity to bring Polish and Russian print works to the UK, showcasing the work that drew his attention.

In the meantime, he’d realised that working with the chemicals used to etch metals was threatening his health and he developed an alternative way of working using found materials, such as “discarded kitchen equipment, things I see in charity shops or find in the street – bits that have dropped off other things.” With an ability to see the potential in all kinds of objects, Peter then transforms the items and uses them to create bold graphic images. The repeating motifs shown in the artwork below, he tells me, is made from “a flattened out cheese grater – those things that look like insects with four legs, that’s where I cut into the metal to enlarge some of the shapes.”

Peter had already begun making paper, developing different means of creating impressions. One of my favourites is this lunar landscape created by falling raindrops rebounding against the surface of pulped paper.

Handmade paper sculpted by falling rain close up

Handmade paper sculpted by falling rain, cropped

“I get my ideas partly through the materials I use,” Peter says. “When I started making paper in the mid-1990s I mainly stopped making figurative artworks and my creations became far more abstract.”

He admits to a passion for “fiddling about with materials – I like the combination of brain and hand, discovering what I’m doing as I do it.”

Recent projects include Peter’s Pulse series, which began as a single work of text art he created using ink and a pencil eraser he’d carved into. “The word PULSE is printed 4 times before re-inking and then repeating this so that a rhythmic pattern is created across the whole page,” he explains. “This first one was created during my time as artist-in-residence at Ningbo Art Museum, near Shanghai. I decided to do the same process with the Chinese characters for Pulse.”

Today Peter has nine of these complementary works – in English, Greek, Japanese, Russian, Korean, Hindi, Arabic, Hebrew and Chinese, each in its own script.

To me, that sums up Peter’s approach, in which the whole world represents a potential work of art – the trick is to identify what to collect, and what to hold onto.

Find Peter Ford at www.peterford.org.uk or make an appointment to visit Off-Centre Gallery, 13 Cotswold Road, Bristol, BS3 4NX by calling 0117 239 6784 or sending an email to peteraford@icloud.com.

Are you an artist or do you know an artist who would like to be showcased on SkyLightRain.com? Get in touch at judydarley (at) iCloud.com. I’m also happy to receive reviews of books, exhibitions, theatre and film. To submit or suggest a review, please send an email to judydarley (at) iCloud.com.

Writing prompt – an extra day

Askew cr Judy DarleyTwo significant dates occur this week – February 29th and March 3rd. The first is a relative rarity, returning just once every four years to mess up our calendars and fill people with the urge to make the most of a so-called extra day.

The second is World Book Day, encouraging reading, writing and creative thinking.

For this week’s writing prompt I invite you to imagine waking one day and discovering that for the next 24 hours every little thing will be slightly off-kilter, out of whack, askew from the world you normally live in.

What happens?

If you write something prompted by this idea, please send an email to Judy(at)socket creative.com to let me know. With your permission, I’ll publish it on SkyLightRain.com.

Book review – Reasons She Goes To The Woods by Deborah Kay Davies

Reasons She Goes To The WoodsShared in vibrant, powerful single-page snapshots, Reasons She Goes to the Woods is the story of Pearl, a girl with a curiosity about life, nature and the possibilities of her own self that is both savage and familiar.

The brevity of each missive gives it a startling potency, as each compact and perfectly precise little tale builds up the atmosphere of a childhood riddled with darkness and wonderment. Pearl is a formidable character, unflinching in her examination of the world. Becoming her friend is something of a trial by fire as she strives for dominance over each child who comes into her life, not least her baby brother, The Blob.

Pearl is a succinct reminder of the wilderness we explore of childhood. She seems to feel no fear, a factor that’s clearly part of her hold over others, as we encounter her unconscious allure as much through their responses to her, than through the actions she chooses to take.

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Poetry review – Learning to Make an Oud

Learning to make an oudI have an ever increasing respect for poets. The skill and confidence to reduce an emotion, a story or an entire history to a few sparse stanzas is breathtaking. I recently re-read Ruth Padel’s simmering collection Learning to Learning to Make an Oud in Nazareth, which takes in Middle Eastern politics, culture and religion with a deftness I aspire to.

From generously crammed paragraphs to glimmering non-rhyming couplets, the poems examine the richness of beliefs in conflict with uncommon grace and intensity.

In the title poem, we’re walked through the steps of making a traditional musical instrument, and in Padel’s clear, thoughtful words, the act becomes unexpectedly sensual: “He damascened a rose of horn/with arabesques/as lustrous as under-leaves of olive”.

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Let’s talk about death, baby

Death the human experienceWhat are your thoughts about death? Do you think of it freely, with curiosity or turn from it with dread? The current exhibition at Bristol Museum and Art Gallery invites us to face our fears and explore the myths and realities surrounding our eventual expiration.

death: the human experience is an unexpectedly beautiful, contemplative exhibition, displaying archaic associations with death (from an exquisite death’s head hawk moth to a Victorian mourning dress. There are insights into burial practices across the world, including a piece on ‘sky burials’, examples of items left at gravesides and buried with the deceased, and a cheeringly rambunctious Ghanaian coffin shaped like a lion.

You can listen to funeral and mourning songs from a variety of cultures, admire memorials intended to honour the dead or display how well they were loved, and perhaps reconsider or identify your own attitudes to these rituals, and what’s important to you personally.

The subject matter is handled sensitively and thought-provokingly, with special separate sections where you can consider darker aspects such as infant mortality and cannibalism, with small doors to open on exhibits that may be especially distressing. For me the mortuary table from a former Bristol hospital was a more sobering sight – something about its clinical contours just seemed very cold. There are also videos of commentaries for and against assisted suicide, which tackles the important issue of quality of life.

Whatever your feelings on death when you enter, I think you’ll emerge able to speak about death more readily – this is an aspect of life we’ll all experience at some point, whether as the deceased or as a mourner, and being able to talk about it can only help.

As the Mark Twain quote emblazoned on one wall states: “I do not fear death. I had been dead for billions and billions of years before I was born, and had not suffered the slightest inconvenience from it.”

What a curiously comforting idea.

death: the human experience runs at Bristol Museum and Art Gallery until 13 March 2016. Visitors are invited to pay what they feel the exhibition is worth.

To submit or suggest a review, please send an email to judydarley (at) iCloud.com.