1 / 20

Week Two: The (Unofficial) Countryside Music: “Noon Hill Wood” from Landings by Richard Skelton

Week Two: The (Unofficial) Countryside Music: “Noon Hill Wood” from Landings by Richard Skelton. Justin Hopper. Our resources: www.jackdawshivers.com www.justin-hopper.com Contact me: juddy.hopper@gmail.com @ oldweirdalbion (twitter) Twitter hashtag : # ReadingRuins. Today.

katima
Download Presentation

Week Two: The (Unofficial) Countryside Music: “Noon Hill Wood” from Landings by Richard Skelton

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Week Two: The (Unofficial) CountrysideMusic: “Noon Hill Wood” from Landings by Richard Skelton

  2. Justin Hopper • Our resources: • www.jackdawshivers.com • www.justin-hopper.com • Contact me: • juddy.hopper@gmail.com • @oldweirdalbion (twitter) • Twitter hashtag: #ReadingRuins

  3. Today • Introductions and questions • Next week’s readings • Themes • Thoughts on the readings (and next week’s) • The Unofficial Countryside • Classroom discussion • Galleries

  4. Hadleigh Castle, 2013

  5. Next Week’s Readings

  6. Iain Sinclair on Whiteread, from Lights Out for the Territory, as excerpted in Brian Dillon’s book Ruins

  7. Rachel Lichtenstein, and excerpt of Sinclair, from Lichtenstein’s book, Rodinsky’s Room

  8. Laura Oldfield Ford, from Savage Messiah.

  9. Unofficial Countryside: Themes • Two kinds of British landscape ruins: • Antiquarian • Edgelands • Ruins mediate between ourselves and “time” • And between the human-made world and the natural world

  10. Readings

  11. Readings

  12. The (Unofficial) Countryside

  13. British Antiquarian Ruins

  14. British Antiquarian Ruins

  15. “Last summer, I walked in a field near Avebury where two rough monoliths stand up, sixteen feet high, miraculously patterned with black and orange lichen, remnants of the avenue of stones which led to the Great Circle. A mile away, a green pyramid casts a gigantic shadow. In the hedge, at hand, the white trumpet of a convolvulus turns from its spiral stem, following the sun. In my art I would solve such an equation.”

  16. Edgelands

  17. The acid smoke has soured the fields,And browned the few and windworn flowers;But there, where steel and concrete soarIn dizzy, geometric towers – There, where the tapering cranes sweep round,And great wheels turn, and trains roar byLike strong, low-headed brutes of steel –There is my world, my home; yet why So alien still? For I can neitherDwell in that world, nor turn againTo scythe and spade, but only loiterAmong the trees the smoke has slain. On a Ruined Farm near the His Master’s Voice Gramophone Factory - George Orwell, 1934. As I stand at the lichened gateWith warring worlds on either hand –To left the black and budless trees,The empty sties, the barns that stand Like tumbling skeletons – and to rightThe factory-towers, white and clearLike distant, glittering cities seenFrom a ship’s rail – as I stand here, I feel, and with a sharper pang,My mortal sickness; how I giveMy heart to weak and stuffless ghosts,And with the living cannot live.

More Related