A walk in July
A collaborative walk on July 12th with the Garden Gate Community Project and Walking with The Waste Land in Cliftonville, Margate.
A photo diary of a series of walks which we began in April. this is our fourth walk.
July seems to be the month for fruit and vegetables at the Garden Gate.
okra or ladies fingers
A pumpkin patch
Strange creatures
For our walk we took inspiration from ‘Precario’ (precarious) #ThreadandWord a walk in Edinburgh from Dundas street gallery to Inverleith house ( you can check this out in the previous blog entry:http://elspethpenfold.blogspot.co.uk/2017/07/precario-1990-cecilia-vicuna-maximum.html
This multifaceted work addresses the pressing concerns of the modern world; ecological destruction, human rights and cultural homogenisation. Cecilia Vicuña’s works often begin as poems, before transforming into images, films, songs, sculptures or collective performances – “hearing an ancient silence waiting to be heard”
Documenting the precarious nature of existence and the strength in fragility through our hand made ropes.
At the start of our July walk I suggested we use ropes to gather found sticks, flowers and leaves while we walked. As always the inventiveness and creativity of my fellow walkers is wonderful.
For more about ropes and how these fit in with the walks please visit:
http://elspethpenfold.blogspot.co.uk/2016/10/fragments-and-thoughts-explanation-and_14.html
and so we walked;
Dahlias at North down Park House
A lovely path through the woods for a wander.
A record of this our July walk. I hope you can join us next time for our walk on August 2nd at 10am.
Walking with ‘The Waste Land’ is a community group founded by artist Elspeth Penfold in 2014. The group use walking as a research tool for locating TS Eliot’s The Waste Land and selected other poems in Margate. The group works closely with Turner Contemporary’s Waste Land Research Group who are developing Journeys with ‘The Waste Land’, Turner Contemporary’s first major exhibition of 2018, which will be on show from 3rd February – 20th May 2018, focused on connections between Eliot’s poem and the visual arts.