Archive for the 'Meetings in the Middle of Somewhere' Category

A weekend of fabulous festivals for Send a Book to Mali

A love poem written in my specially made Send-a-Book-to-Mali mini-book. Written at Wenlock Poetry Festival, by Mark Niel.

What a weekend! The Send a Book t0 Mali stand was seen at two very special  festivals this weekend; The Shrewsbury Children’s Bookfest and the Wenlock Poetry Festival.

A grand old time was spent running the Send a Book to Mali stall in St Alkmund’s Church in Shrewsbury where the Book Swap and free story telling were being held. It was lovely to meet my friend Andrew Fusek Peters as he was about to launch his exciting new novel Ravenwood –  a thrilling adventure set in the tallest trees in the world. The story was snapped up by the publisher who discovered J.K. Rowling and is due to be released in 15 countries. I can’t wait to get my hands on a copy!

A special thanks to Jed and Co who’s enlightened Dads treated them to my handmade mini books, then allowed them to pose with the mini Send a Book to Mali banner.

Gratitude to Wenlock Poetry Festival for having me and giving Send a Book to Mali the opportunity to be seen in the same party along side two Poet Laureates and some of Britain’s best poets! This festival is small and beautiful! 

http://www.wenlockpoetryfestival.org/photos/index.shtml

Thank you’s too, to all those this weekend who stopped and chatted, those who donated money and children’s books and those who such wrote lovely things inspired by the appeal.

Poet, Mark Neil wrote:

Love in different Lands.

I don’t speak your language

We live in different lands

These words are sent with love

Our way of joining hands

Remember you are not alone! 

And from The Poetry Takeway, poet, J.Osborne wrote, and then delightfully and amusingly read aloud to me……

Timbutku.

There is a camel burdened with copies of
George’s Marvelous Medicine
The Twits. Revolting Rhymes.

Tribes sit cross legged
absorbed in Michael Rosen Poems.

A thousand author’s ears are burning
sensing their stories are being read out
on the sand dunes of Timbuktu.

Well, well

Well, well.

An extraordinary thing happened today. I was pulling up a half filled bucket of water from the well at the studio, and Madou, the guardian of the Atelier I am staying at, bless him, decided to show me how to tip the bucket at the bottom, to get more water (this I already know having drawn water in his absence many, many times!) I gave him the rope and he jerked it, yes the bucket tipped more, and took more water, but with that weight extra he let the rope slip out of his hands and down it fell to the bottom. No rope to pull up the bucket any more.

Now that well is deep, and dark, perhaps 25 feet deep. He looked surprised that I didn’t have the rope in my hand. Hmmm.

Scratching heads time. I started looking at the longest poles in the garden next door. Could I rig up a hook on the end with wire? Nope. Madou shouted to his cousin Yubah who just happened to be watering his garden, to come and help. As he approached, Madou explained and it became very clear that he was going to climb down. I tried talking them out of it, in my moderate to awful French. “The water at the bottom was deep, yes?”. “Yes”. I admitted I was afraid. What if he was to drown at the bottom, would we ever be able to forgive ourselves. “Oh its OK, Yubah is strong, he will do it“. However much I tried to persuade  them not to send him down, I couldn’t win, so I grabbed my camera and all I could do was hope that he would be OK.

Madou, Téy and I watched him climb in and lower himself in to the ‘pitch dark, narrow concrete tube that forms the walls of the well. Somehow he found foot and hand holds and being a strong lad, he got down in next to no time. I have to say I definitely don’t recommend doing this EVER.

I can hardly believe he did it. I was both petrified and fascinated, clicking away. At the bottom he answered to my feeble ca va? Oui. He held himself above the water and fished about for the rope, once caught, emptied the bucket, placed it between his teeth and commenced climbing up again steadily. I could hardly breath, I was so terrified that he’d fall or never get out again. Then there he was, head about to pop up over the brim of the well, smiling. What a relief!

Recycled Book sculptures – to Mali with love

My work has developed into other ways too…..

Since creating the recycled book sculpture ‘Drink Deep’, shown at my first solo show, Meetings in the Middle of Somewhere, I now appeal for, collect, sculpt with, and then arrange the transportation of the undamaged books to people who need them in Africa.

So since returning back to the UK, I’ve collected over 1000 English paperback books and made temporary sculptures with them. Next, I will drive the books to Mali and there I will make a centre piece for my solo show at Gallerie Maison Carpe Diem in mid December. After this, they will be moved to the Festival Sur le Niger, be transformed into another sculpture, and then finally, once dismantled, they will be donated to the very impoverished public library in Ségou, the second city of Mali.

Why to Mali?

Over the past eighteen months, since i first visited the country, Mali has given me inspiration, love and a motivation to think wider about humans and our interconnectedness. It feels appropriate to give something back.

Mali is a gentle, safe country full of smiles and positivity and the most incredibly beautiful music on earth. All this is despite the poverty and the climate change felt as encroaching desertification, which threatens livelihoods and food production in the country.

Why English books?

Mali is one of the poorest countries in Africa. Learning to communicate in our shrinking world is seen as essential. Although French is widely spoken, there is a little basic English taught at school.  Those who have learnt some English get little or no access to any resources to continue to improve their language learning. Its rare to see English written, and rarer to hear it spoken. This is start.

Wren Miller's Hive

A drawing by Beverley Fry of me and my Book Hive made live with public help and participation at Wenlock Poetry Festival 2010

Next year im planning to take English books to Timbuktu.

There are ways in which you can help me do this. Someone very kind could lend me a van, or could pay for some fuel.

Someone very kind could order books from African publishers who employ Africans writing in English.

If you are that very kind person, please contact me. Id love to work with you.

Aren’t vegetables brilliant?

I spent the morning with the Fulani Tour Group who were returning from the Festival of the Desert in Timbuktu. We visited the Ndomo Bogolan workshop, on the outskirts of the town. The group were invited to sit and listen, and take part in a hands on explanation of this textile dyeing process.

Bogolan is a kind of cotton textile decorated with iron rich fermented mud and other vegetable dyes, such as indigo, which produce a range of colours from palest grey, to black, to yellows, blues and oranges. The professor here is Monsieur Boubacar Doumbia, an ex art teacher, who now  has an international reputation for starting the first Bogolan place in Segou (a few of his students a have peeled off and started their own) and now runs a conservatoire. He gets orders from around the world.

I’d visited before, so I chatted to the staff who were busy creating beautiful textiles. I found it very relaxing to see them making, dots, wavy and long straight lines, with such confidence and great results, something like watching a good potter throw a pot on a wheel.

The shop at the end was full of treasures, and the Fulani Group homeward bound later today, set to a shopping frenzy to use up their CFAs.

Segou

A central street in Segou

After driving along the river, they dropped me at the end of my road. Fond farewells said, and off they went. As I wandered down my mud lane, I recalled just how nervous i’d been last time they had left me in Segou on the 30th December.  Now I was feeling safe, confident, relaxed and very happy, all worries extinguished by the welcome received here.

Breaking up clay

Madou breaking up clay watched by Dolo

Madou’s great gang of friends and helpers have been continuing to apply the Banko to every wall in sight, almost every crack has been repaired too. Even the toilet has a smart coat. Alasanne the taxi driving friend, seemed to be the least employed, on tea making duties, and wanted to borrow my pen. I sat with him and drank green tea while he wrote an A Vendre  (For Sale) sign for his old Mercedes. He wants 1000,1500 CFA’s  for it. Madou joked; why didn’t I buy it then he could drive me everywhere and then he could use it, then when I came back id have a driver again. I said, yeh great, so you can drive me home, across Mauritania, Morocco, Spain, France, then be refused a visa for England. I’m still mad about Seydou’s being refused last summer.

After, I asked if he had time to wander up to the road with me to buy some salad vegetables. He  took me straight over to the gardens next door and we negotiated three leafy lettuces and three beetroots for 125 CFA, pulled straight from the ground, fed and nourished by the river.

Along the edges of this great river are winter gardens, opportunistic plots of land, fertilized by riches left during the rainy season floods. It’s now the dry season, and the water has receded. These flood margins are covered in salad vegetables, potatoes, cabbages, beetroot, and onions. Its like living on the edge of one huge allotment. No hoses are needed; the water is right here.
Watering is done constantly through the day, from dawn to dusk. Sometimes in large tin watering cans, but more often than not, from round calabash gourds, with one small  (6 cm) hole in them. Filled in the river, these are then rocked to create a kind of surging spray.
Malians are so resourceful. Having carried their water, they are not about to let it escape too fast. The vegetable beds are built up with low walls of mud, just enough to contain, and to be used to separate crops. These provide pathways; which you can with some balancing, walk along.
Eating freshly grown, freshly harvested vegetables has to be one of the simplest, most delightful things available to us as humans.

Mango tree

The mango tree spot

At night the lights along the river’s settlements, twinkle, like any seaside scene. I can see that the rivers edge meanders in and out. Ive always been drawn to live on the coast. Landlocked Shropshire, where I live, has the greatest, longest British River flowing through it.
Here, the Niger River is my sea. This is my coast. If I stay long enough, the seasons will bring me tides.

Ségou, where I am staying, is known as the city of the Balanzans, as it was built in the ancient Balanzan forest. The word Ségou means at the foot of the Balanzans’. As you enter the town from the west, (my side) the road is lined with mature Balanzans, with incredibly knobbly tree trunks, looking rather like heads poking out. They provide welcome extra shade for the cyclist and pedestrian.  Balanzan trees remarkably, lose their leaves in the rainy season, providing nutrition at their feet, so it’s common to grow them interspersed between crops for this reason.

Shea Butter , is derived from the Shea tree (Karité) via its nuts, it is also used to make soap. Mali is a very dusty, dirty place, and soap here is vital to keep those clothes and people looking sparkling clean. Soap balls are sold at the market, and very good soap it is; natural and pure.

New worlds unfolding
I spent the rest of the afternoon working, cutting away the edges of a piece of paper, the Wall Street Journal to be precise. Then tweaking two semi visible worlds and assembling one complete new world. Its rather like making a mosaic, as each piece has to be balanced and in the correct relationship to the next, while maintaining believable shaped continents, and a circular shape. I enjoyed putting some tiny scraps into the oceans, to create Islands.

I reflected while I did this, that my sisters voyage in her sailing boat across the Atlantic, from Cape Verde to the Caribbean may have some bearing on why I’m thinking about the world too. The next practicality is to glue the dried pieces to the painted board. Sylvie has gone to Bamako so I’ve asked her if she can get me some extra strong glue. Something like Bostik at home would probably do. If I cant get strong enough glue here, I may have to leave them as floor pieces. There is something attractive to me about that idea; they could be viewed from all sides that way; viewed as if we are the Gods looking down on our play thing, the planet below.

Atelier news
You never know who is going to walk into the Atelier at any given moment. Today the French Ambassador to Mali, (based in Bamako) stopped of for a chat with Dolo. Then more Tourists who have got wind of the great artists workshop, trailing a very endearing Elage Keita; a confident young sculptor from Senegal. His work sounded interesting, Metal I think, used in street theatre performances. He was certainly good at talking about it. I didn’t have the French to tell him I’ve performed on and off rivers in Britain, but did mention the big scale work I’ve been doing.

The building works here are hotting up too. Any number of electricians came this morning to fix the light fittings and put up a fan. I admit defeat. I scuttle to my room. I cannot work with this much disturbance.
It’s cool and bright outside, so I decide to visit the gardens again. I had just missed most of the gardeners, they’d just returned to their home to eat, and rest; still it was beautiful. I found it wasn’t so easy as I thought walking along the river. There are barriers and obstacles erected along the way dividing up land. So I had to zig-zag to and fro from the river, I tried to stick to paths that were used for watering. There did seem to be one major path just back from the river, which I walked along too, but this wasn’t as satisfying. The waters edge was uncommonly tranquil with many pirogues tethered to the shore, no sand men, no washer-uppers, no fishermen, no gardeners.  As I walked along my eyes met the accumulated rubbish – its no different on any English beach. Detritus; discarded clothes, plastic, broken, useless stuff. I spotted what I thought was a huge crab shell. Id not seen those on any market stall, but why not freshwater crabs? This great river brings gifts in so many ways. On closer inspection, this wasn’t a crab shell, it was a group of very large spiny Oyster shells cemented together by time and Oyster glue.

Being seen
The other night while dining with Dolo he told me that it was Seydou’s Father who taught him, nurtured his creativity and set him on the path as an artist. I mention that my father did the same for many people, in the time he was a teacher in Shrewsbury. A great teacher sees your potential and encourages it. A great teacher, you will remember, with gratitude, all your life.

My bike has had a series of problem, sometime they appear resolved, then I learn otherwise. I abandoned the idea of riding into town this evening, and walked along the river instead. I could see the huge ferry in the far distance, which is docked during their dry season, as the river is too shallow for it to go anywhere. It was a lovely walk. Why hadn’t I done it before?
There were lots of people still watering, even tho the strength of the sun was disappearing. The nearer I got to the festival site, the more hassle I got. That’s why. I will remember to avoid the Quai des Arts, until the festival proper.

Workshop in Pictures

Yesterdays a.m.  cob  workshop:

pic6

pic1

pic2

pic3

Kids chilling out having learnt to play Omali – a game played all over Africa.

pic5

The original œuvre footprint painting is up

The original œuvre footprint painting is up, and looks well with the two other larger mixing pit paintings.
Oeuvre is a noun denoting a man-made object
Synonym body of work; oeuvre; work

A recipe for success?
Question.
What do you get when you put:
four helpers,
300 Oxfam books,
250 pairs of shoes,
2 four foot square paintings, and one smaller.
Bubblewrap,
pallets,
a giant TV screen,
white paint, green and fired bricks.
Lights,
tracing paper,
water,
paper plates,
glasses,
sand,
plastic sheeting and
tool boxes galore.
Answer; a party!

£1 for fish and Chips!

We setting up crew were needing a lunch break, and suddenly felt like we were in a time warp when we found a chip shop in down town Caldmore (pronounced Karma) the area the Chameleon Gallery is in Walsall,selling fish and chips so cheap. £3.50 is the normal price pretty much every where else. They were delicious. Come to the show and i’ll point you in the right direction!

Studio News

Two mountains of cob made…but first had fun with Sarah my first technician ever, creating a mixing pit painting. We went round and round treading and mixing together the clay, sawdust and straw. Then, not getting it dirty (hah!), we carried it through the door into Ruth Gibson’s studio to dry. I carried on working until I was on my knees, literally.

mudfeet

Got another recycled terracotta based batch mixed and a white clay + money + hemp mix done by hand instead of foot, then Ruth arrived and needed her space! So that mixing circle painting is back in mine again now. Not even sure where I’m going to paint the larger canvas when I do it.

Got the enormous soaking bins outside filled with the hard dry clay again. Ruth and I recycle her old waste clay, by wetting it down, I love that about clay, you can endlessly recycle it, till its fired that is.

Going to move the making to home for next few days so things have a better chance of drying, with the wood burner constantly on.
Blessed be.
W

Meetings in the Middle of Somewhere

My show called ‘Meetings in the Middle of Somewhere’ is part of Black History Month, and is a response to travelling for two months in Mali, West Africa, studying the incredible mud architecture and meeting Mali’s unique mix of Muslims and Animists, in the Tuareg, Dogon, and Bambara tribes.

The show is open from Wednesday October 28th – November 4th at Walsall’s Chameleon Gallery. 10.30-5.00pm daily.

mms3

Increasingly my art works are of a temporary but giant nature. I will be showing some mass recycling artworks and some experiments combining earth, recycled and waste materials. My ultimate goal is to design and produce large scale, long lasting, but low carbon-emitting work. The Arts Councils support is enabling me to do the research I need, at a time when we need answers to the climate challenge. It’s a very exciting time for me.

There will be free workshops, suitable for all ages.

Please ring 07866 007454 to reserve your place

The Big Draw, Drop in Drawing Weds 28th pm only, Fri 30th, Sat 31st& Nov 1st 11 – 4.30pm

With past winner of Big Draw’s ‘Drawing Inspiration Award’ 2000, expect different ways to draw with Environmental Artist, Wren Miller.


Hands to Earth
Friday 30th October
Hands-on workshop creating sculptural forms from mud -the oldest eco building material

With Environmental Artist, Wren Miller 10.30-12.30pm & 2.00-4.00pm

Rattle your Bones, Halloween Drumming Saturday 31st October

Drum Workshop with West African Master Drummer, Jahman Sillah.

11.00-11.45am, 12.15- 1pm, & 2pm – 2.45pm

Day of the Dogon Dead Sunday 1st November 
Dogon stories around death, funerals and the walking dead, death rituals explained by a Malian Dogon Guide, Seydou.

11.00-11.45am & 2pm – 2.45pm

The Chameleon Gallery, 23-25 Sandwell Street, Walsall. WS1 3DR. Telephone 01922 646724