Three Stone Circles (Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion)

While on the residency with Crew, which is very enjoyable, we all had to dash to Frameries, near Mons, where Eric had to take part in a panel at the Fabrique du Théâtre:
As it was in French, I didn’t feel too rude to get out my laptop (nearly everyone around me had one on their laps, so my cover wasn’t blown). I used the time to get round, finally to presenting the three stone circles I visited in Cumbria, side by side at the same scale. I thought they might look a little like Francis Bacon’s ‘Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion‘.

Three Cumbrian Circles

Three Cumbrian Circles


Left to right, they are Long Meg and Her Daughters (see previous entry), Birkrigg and Swineside. Despite the seemingly devout title of Bacon’s triptych, I always found it an atheistic or even pagan work.

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A Portrait of the Artist Lost in his own Artwork

Lost
Today, Eric, Vincent and I went to visit Crew’s installation ‘No Horizon’ at Hasselt as part of Superbodies. While there, we experimented with showing other material in the installation, including my own GPS tracks of Berlin in animated form. As the traces curled around me on the floor, I truly felt lost in my own artwork.

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In Mons with Crew

I’m going to postpone reporting about the two other stone circles I visited and just briefly mention that I’m in Mons, Belgium at Le Manège this week at the invitation of Eric Joris of Crew. Today Eric and I were joined by Guy Vanden Bemden who now works for Numediart at the University of Mons. We’re here to explore ideas of new media and cities in the context of Crew’s immersive and augmented reality work.

In our wide-ranging talks today, we discussed the ability to mine old film footage for extra information it contains, such as Frank Hubner’s work with Automated Lip Reading which enabled someone to dub the private colour films Eva Braun took of him at Berghof, as well as Surface Capture which could be employed on moving footage of a scene to reconstruct a 3d model of, for example a building that is no longer there. We talked about data mining video, like this Ted Talk about an MIT professor who has analysed the speech acquisition of his baby for the first two years of his life. The sense cam also put in a brief appearance as we touched on the ability we now have to build prosthetic memory prompting systems, something that Soph and I are thinking about a lot with our data collection practices. Visual ways of navigating archives (like Siobhan Davies’ RePlay) and

It promises to be a very interesting week.

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At Last – Long Meg and Her Daughters

My first stone circle of the trip – hooray – and the family came too (and my Mum). I think it is a good one, not being an expert, but Burl says that Long Meg is the sixth largest stone circle of them all (other sources say that it is the third largest in England) and as you can see on Google Earth, there’s a road running through it.

Long Meg Soph GPS Traces

Long Meg Soph GPS Traces


Perhaps because of this, we were not the first, to paraphrase von Däniken, in fact there were quite a few goretexted nerdy families, usually headed by an enthusiastic parent (no, not necessarily a Dad) passing through while we were there. Like art galleries, I am quite surprised at how quickly most people, even the nerdy-looking ones, ‘do’ things like this.
Long Meg Dan GPS Traces

Long Meg Dan GPS Traces


Because we had several things on the agenda, our time with the stones was longer. We took photos, observed the previous offerings…
Long Meg Offerings

Long Meg Offerings


…recorded sound (bit windy) and dowsed with the divining rods.
Dowsing at Long Meg

Dowsing at Long Meg


I think I said this in Suffolk, but what I like about divining is that you just do it without much ado and everyone seems to be able to get some sort of result. They also seem to match up i.e. people find that the rods cross at the same point (this is what I want to further test with the digital dowsing rods). Kids like it too, if you can get them interested.
Dan Dowsing at Long Meg

Dan Dowsing at Long Meg


I mostly tried crossing the threshold of the circle which always seemed to produce a crossing (with Soph and Ruby too). When I tried to walk round the circumference between stones, the rods stayed crossed. It seemed to me that I was able to find a centre point, at which there seemed to be a sort of hump in the grass. This was lining up with the axis made by Long Meg herself, standing as she does outside the circle and the East/West axis which is accentuated by prominent stones. Burl mentions that there was charcoal and bones found at the centre.
Long Meg Stone Plants

Long Meg Stone Plants


One detail I noticed was that the stones were undermined by rabbits who seemed to like making their burrow entrances under the stones, introducing little crops of plants feeding I thought on the nitrogen-rich soil their droppings were leaving.
After this jaunt, we made a stop, as most seemed to do, at a great flour mill/art gallery/tea shop, The Watermill at Little Salkeld. One of the best Earl Grey teas I’ve had in ages.
Watermill at Little Salkeld

Watermill at Little Salkeld

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Pen Plotter Replacement Pen DIY IV

Pen1 In Action

Pen1 In Action


I know I said that I’d update when I’m back after Easter, but I did actually manage to get a working pen together before I left the studio. This is it in action. It seems to work ok – it certainly gets picked up and placed back because of course the shell is made for purpose. The ink is however, a little fainter than I’d like but has a rather nice pencil-like quality.

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