6 ° West — Inch Kenneth
An Exhibition by Artists’ Collective 6 ° West at St Oran’s Chapel, Isle of Iona 15th – 22nd October, 2001
Veronica Slater
Transit 24 Hour Tor Mor
An Roth Community Enterprise Centre
Craignure
Mull
Until March 31st 2012
In June 2011, the four artists who comprise the collective 6 ° West – Anne Devine, David Faithfull,
Mhairi Killin and Veronica Slater – completed a week-long residency on Inch Kenneth
(Innis
Choinnich), a
small island in private ownership a few miles north-east of Iona at the mouth
of Loch na Keal. Curated by Alicia Hendrick (the fifth member of the
collective), the current show, which is open to visitors for one week only, is
an essential response to the island, consisting of a one print each by Devine,
Killin and Slater, and two by Faithfull.
Although the response by each artist to the geology, history,
landscape and genus loci of the island is unique, there are a number of
striking threads of continuity to be found in the artists’ prints. A wider
understanding of both the residency process and the individual approaches of
each artist to the challenges and opportunities of the isolated island
environment has been provided in a remarkably fine collection of photographs by
Shannon Tofts. Tofts’s work is both technically accomplished and artistically
motivated so that he achieves a rare combination of record and response. Tofts is in
a very real sense a collaborator in that his vision derives from a
sympathetic and emphatic response to the individuality of each artist.
Working in a recognisable personal idiom Faithfull (working at
Edinburgh Print Studios) has created a three-part image focussing on the
relationship between the island’s geology, landscape and fragments of text from
William Golding’s novel, Pincher Martin,
in an approach which might be termed
‘geopoetic’. Faithfull’s approach is predominantly stylised and graphical; and
although it’s clear that he is a gifted draughtsman and designer, his work can
seem devoid of feeling. Here, however,
the central image, derived from a photograph, shows a cave on the shore of the
island which might be read as a metaphor for a mouth and all the associations
of noise, language and song which that connotes. In an allied work, more technological
than geological, the image is of Inch Kenneth as plotted by a GPS system.
The central image of Devine’s print (made with print-maker
Elspeth Lamb), is, somewhat coincidentally, Agnus
Dei, ‘the Lamb of God’ and Devine is the only one of the artists to have
acknowledged the religious context of the Island’s history in an explicit
manner (Inch Kenneth houses a chapel of similar age to the 12th
Century St Oran’s on Iona and like St Oran’s has a collection of ‘Celtic’ cross-slabs). In a complex image, Devine has conflated
religious vision with a geological perspective, suggesting, perhaps, that both
views have a validity and a mystery.
Mhairi Killin’s ancestors were silversmiths on Iona and she
combines this ancient art with her contemporary artistic practice; each feeds
into and complements the other. Here, various images such a stone markings,
inscriptions and objects are woven together by silver wire suggesting a
continuity between past and present. Underpinning these images is a faint
reproduction of a shipping chart, allowing for the introduction of idea of
visual, historical and cultural ‘plotting’ and the contemporary metaphor of
‘mapping a territory’. A piece of text
in the form of a silver tag describes a ‘grass covered cairn 550m North East of
Inch Kenneth House’ suggesting a much older, Neolithic context to the island’s
history. Killen’s work is at once
delicate and strong, tentative and forceful.
Continuing the cartographical trope Veronica Slater has
chosen to create an emotional and experiential map of her time on Inch Kenneth,
concentrating on the dilapidated interior of the house itself as well as
referring to aspects of the island’s history and landscape. The house belonged at
one point to the Mitford family and it was here that Unity Mitford, a Nazi sympathiser,
lived on following an attempted suicide; she died in Oban in 1948. Such strange
and traumatic histories inform Slater’s image which seems like the visual
representation of layered memory where suggested synaptic events trigger series upon series of recollection.
In a similar way Slater has created a series of twenty four
works which are on show in Craignure on the east of Mull. Some of these images
link to the Inch Kenneth residency while others range more freely in their
diversity and scope. However, central to
Slater’s approach, is an over-layering of imagery which suggests that seeing
and the process of perception is complex, involving various stages. One work which might stand as a useful tool
in deconstructing Slater’s approach is her representation of the head of a
golden eagle. This is what she describes
as “an image of an image” in that it is derived from an ubiquitous postcard on
sale on the island. But Slater’s eagle suggests a new way of looking, as if an
‘icon’ had somehow become “de-iconized” allowing for a fresh approach to seeing
the reality of things, despite the fact that most people will never see a real
golden eagle.
GILES SUTHERLAND

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