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Between Land and Sea (art review)

February 15th, 2008

posted by Kroak
- Peninsula Arts, Levinsky Building, 19th Jan – 14th March

Between land and sea image, from the Plymouth Diary

Between Land and Sea is the second show in the new Peninsula Arts Programme, and is an exhibition which uses the sea as a point of departure or in fact a reference point that connects the artist to the sea. The range of responses allows the viewer to explore and discover. As a viewer you embark on a journey of your own, as you navigate the space from one piece to another.

Chris Wainwright’s Red Sea holds your attention, as the intermittent lights and split screen video projection try to tell, warn or inform the viewer. The longer you spend watching this piece the more you realise that even the most sea worthy need to take heed. The flashing red and amber lights are a life line to those out on the waves. In comparison, Wainwright’s stills, offer a kind of peaceful reflection – yet the viewer is placed firmly on land.

Catherine Elwes, telling tales aboard depicts a journey, a voyage, to locations exotic and perhaps unknown. However the personal tales told to camera brings the viewer on board the Blue Fin. The stories from the real life characters are spoken with the fondness of friendship, of comradeship, of time spent in a small space. Words of wisdom form one’s life experience told to another, the viewer is invited to part of this gang, to learn from them. Meanwhile views and sounds of the boat and the sea are present.

Connections of Visibility, by Susan Trangmer, captures the mist brought in by the sea, a blanket of cloud that is recognisable by anyone who lives close to open water. The viewer enters a small black box to watch the videos, and somehow the mist escapes the screens and envelopes the whole room. The work makes you feel cold, makes you feel present, as the sun fights to break through the cloud and start the day. There is tranquillity in the cloud and the stillness of the landscape. Unlike the Elwes piece, whose journey is told though story, this journey is told through the slow movements of nature, and what the sea brings to the land.

William Raban’s Continental Drift looks at the busy highway for commerce that separates the UK from France – the Dover Strait. The social and political undertones present are identifiable in the busy natural harbour here in Plymouth. This last piece raises the question not posed by the other works in the exhibition. Raban points out the territory of water, the depiction of it as another surface to cross or a boundary to separate.

Overall, this exhibition is understated, subtle, yet completely obvious. It serves as a reminder to viewer of our own location and proximity to the sea, and perhaps Plymouth with all its history and maritime emblems should in fact look to the sea for a new sense of identity and inspiration.

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Entry Filed under: Arts

2 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Media Districts Entertain&hellip  |  February 15th, 2008 at 7:51 am

    [...] Peoples Republic of South Devon put an intriguing blog post on Between Land and Sea (art review)Here’s a quick excerpt [...]

  • 2. Rupert White  |  February 16th, 2008 at 12:13 pm

    Thanks for reviewing this show…Have you got any more images? Would you be interested in posting it (with links etc) on http://www.artcornwall.org?

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