Tuesday, 23 November 2010

23/11/2010 Recording the Buzz - Part 2 (Embercombe Bees in the Hive, November)

Sound recording bees Embercombe Sustainability Centre in the heart of Holden Forest. The contact microphone (which I expected to work well) did not pick up any bee activity, even though I could hear them myself. 
Because of cold weather I could not use Betty (Be) the head and the binaural microphone for fear of exposing the hive to the cold, so I push the mics inside and still picked up some interesting results. I intend to return each month and make a new recording up until summer when they will be much more active.

Unfortunately whilst making the recordings we found a hive with bees with very deformed wings, a very bad sign in bee world, but a very common occurrence for beekeepers.

Friday, 19 November 2010

19/11/2010 Into the Hive - Part 4 (Empty Spaces)

Willow Sphere
This is the first 3D willow structure I have experimented with making. It is very difficult to create a gentle fluidity to the weave, I had to tie and knot the willow on itself or with rush meaning any sweeping line is broken by knots. Willow does not stay ply-able for long after being removed from soaking in water, making knotting and even weaving gently in parts very difficult and often snapped.  
Without beeswax lining the inside the sphere embodies an emptiness, a negative space, however possibly contradictory the ball somehow has more life inside and surrounding it than the 2D beeswax hoop. Natural light bounces through each gap in the weave from one twist of willow to the next, would adding wax remove or add to this quality?

Sunday, 14 November 2010

14/11/2010 Recording the Buzz - Part 1

Inside a beehive made into a house ceiling

It is believed that the inside of the beehive is a reflection of our planet, the more we discover about the interior workings of the hive, the more we will learn about the self destruction of bio-diversity on Earth.
In order to take the audience into the hive I must first go there myself. Using a variety of sound recording devices from ordinary microphones to specialist binaural microphones I hope to uncover the world inside the hive though the bees own highly sophisticated communication system of sounds and vibrations. 
*The binaural microphone sits aside the sound recorders ears picking up surrounding sounds as she/he is hearing them, placing the listener in an exact sound replica of the original situation.*
I predict that the sounds inside the hive will grow more and more vibrant as the seasons change from winter though spring into summer (the height of bee activity). At this most active stage in the bee calender I hope to use a contact microphone linked to the outside of the hive which will pick up the vibrations from inside.   

Thursday, 11 November 2010

11/11/2010 Into the Hive - Part 3 (Wax Pour Test 1)

Dartmoor beeswax melted and poured into willow and rush woven ring
Melting and pouring beeswax is an unpredictable procedure. Every hole and crack has to be plugged with soften beeswax to prevent melted wax escaping. Not pouring enough melted wax creates a very uneven sheet, having enough wax means it can be quickly moved and spread but pouring flat produces best results.
I used a blowtorch to even out under surface of wax when cooled, however rush is very flammable!
When held up to the light, the rush weave can be seen silhouetted through the wax. 


Wednesday, 10 November 2010

10/11/2010 Weave the Kenyan Way

Wood and Mud Houses in Kenya


During my recent month in the East Coast of Kenya, I established a deep connection with the culture, environment and people living there. I knew I wanted to make work inspired by the architecture of rural family houses made from a simple but affective wooden frame filled in with the deep red earth that covers the Kenyan landscape as soon as I saw them. In a climate that is very hot and humid for the major part of the year, these houses need to be nothing more than easy and cheap to build, with a cool,dry interior but these houses have a simplistic beauty like no other architecture I have seen.

(weaver bird nest photo)

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

03/11/2010 Into the Weave - Laura Ellen Bacon

Laura Ellen Bacon - Swollen Forms
Laura Ellen Bacon uses woven willow to create her large scale often site specific sculptures. 'Organic forms and natural phenomena' inspire her work, 'the locking accumulation of driftwood, the bulge of fallen snow on a windowsill, or the swell of a starling swarm.' Bacon in fascinated with nests or 'dens', spaces to climb inside. 
'While the material of willow may be relatively light, I like to create a sense of weight and movement, an organic fluidity, as if gravity has intervened[...]' (Bacon 2010 14)

Fluidity - movement, sequences in nature, passage of time,
Willow pairs - weave in pairs of complimenting willow, strength, forged relationships. 
Enclosed Space - comfort, safety, warmth

Bacon, L.E (2010) Into the Weave, Sheffield: Northend and Creative Print Solutions.