Lockdown – a change of scene and a new way of working

So much has already been written about the situation we find ourselves in due to Coronavirus.  It has had a massive impact on the lives of many and my husband and I count ourselves to be very fortunate that the impact on our lives has been very small.  I propose to restrict my comments here to focus on how lockdown has affected my days as an artist.

Firstly, my daily routine is now to walk from our house around Chichester Harbour, specifically taking in three different routs from Fishbourne to either Apuldram to the edge of Bosham.  I cannot beach comb here, for although there is water, there is no beach.  Instead of picking up trash and treasure, I have collected images of the wildlife that I have encountered each day.

Secondly, I have found myself feeling the need to have a clear out in the studio.  As you might imagine, I have accumulated a mass array of beach combed items – metal, wood, rubber, plastic, leather, paper – some are kept to be used as a collection, maybe to make an environmental point.  Others remain simply because they appeal to me in some way.  Quite a lot has now gone (of course, it cannot literally “go” anywhere at present, so it is round the side of the house!)  This has been quite liberating.

Thirdly,  through necessity, I am working with what I already have.  It had become a habit to walk a different beach each day and to collect and I confess to spending more time collecting and less time making.  The work that I do all obviously firstly about “the found” but is next about curation.  I need to know what I have to work with and decide which piece fits with another.  For me this is intuitive – I don’t plan ahead but work with what my hand and eye tell me to do.  This does not always work first time and I can spend a day without achieving anything pleasing.  Sometimes, however, I just seem to be “in the zone” and things come together.

My working style grew out an appreciation of the found, the worn and the distressed.  Now that there is no longer a constant stream of materials entering the studio, I can knuckle down and work with what I have.  This is more challenging but I hope it will be just as rewarding.  I plan to revisit my drawers of papers and fabrics, accumulated over several years.  These are not “found objects” in the truest sense but the work that comes from them will be made using “recycled” materials in the sense that I will re-use discarded or unfinished starting points.

Muntz waistcoat
“Muntz Waistcoat” 50cm H x 40cm W x 8cm D

“Muntz waistcoat” is made from found “Muntz” metal, copper and leather, all collected from the Chichester Harbour area.

Muntz metal is an alloy consisting of 60 per cent copper and 40 per cent zinc, named after the English businessman George F. Muntz, who patented it in 1832.

Over the years, I have many pieces, large and small, which are probably fragments of 19th Century ships’ hull sheathing. I am told that there are many wrecks off the coast and, particularly after a storm, metal is left along the shoreline. Although the wooden hulls have disintegrated, the hull sheathing usually remains. I also find large and heavy lumps of wood with copper nails and bolts on a fairly regular basis.  Pure copper sheathing is more reddish in colour, and much harder to find, as it was used mostly before 1832, before Muntz metal was patented.

One of the best examples of a Muntz metal sheathed hull, is the restored stern draft and rudder of the famous British Clipper Ship Cutty Sark that was built in 1869 for the Jock Willis Shipping Line.

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The restored stern (with stern draft and rudder) of the Cutty Sark elevated 3 metres above its dry-dock under its glass-roofed visitors’ centre in June 2012.

Her Dark Materials

My first set of “Found Materials” works are back from Terry at ReFrame and I am delighted with them!  Thank you Terry!

Thank you to Elaine Bolt for her encouragement – you will see a little of the ceramics made with her at West Dean College recently.  These pieces will be on display at Venue 79  of the Chichester Art Trail over the first two weekends of May together with my mixed media and collage work and the beautiful monochrome photographs of my husband Alan Frost.  It will be interesting to see how his work and mine work together – there is definite similarity in terms of colour choice but whilst his is about technical perfection my work is much more rustic!

I am looking forward to seeing the last pieces framed and also to the arrival of a wooden plinth for my trio of sculptures … watch this space!

I hope that these items will not only appeal to some people as pieces of art but also raise awareness of the amount of debris that is thrown into the sea.  All of the found elements here came from the Chichester Harbour Area – I walk here most days with our dog and carry one bag for collecting discarded plastic and the like and the other for the items that I feel I can use – thank you to Chichester Harbour Conservancy for the work that they are doing in this beautiful area of West Sussex – perhaps more of us can do our bit by collecting rubbish when we are out and about.  Here are the lids I picked up this morning during an hour at Church Norton.  Maybe you can beat the number that I found?

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