Showing posts with label crochet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crochet. Show all posts

Sunday, 14 July 2013

The Tide Stays In!

In tropical heat to-day, some 40 people called into the Green Man Gallery for some determined "Knitting of a new landscape"

It was great! There were needles knitting, crochets hooking and alarming needle-felt barbs avoiding people's fingers. Seaweed was knotted and jellyfish ribboned and wobbled. A lot of the new creations were placed in the window display by their makers



And the Gallery has asked for our Ancient Landscape to stay in the window for another week!

branching coral


seaweed might be knitted....


seaweed could also be knotted...


...but sooner or later, it always gets someone!

a sea slug takes shape

a half-grown sea slug

the adult slug sets off on adventures




crochetted and fossilised ammonites 
contributions from our friends at Silverdale Library

Thursday, 4 July 2013

Small creatures creeping in!

Following up on earlier entries....we've had a delicious delivery of tasty ancient seafood...or maybe just some wonderfully tentacled lovelies. Thanks you, Geraldine!


Saturday, 29 June 2013

The seas of June


Ancient Landscapes splashing about the summer!
nesting coral from Lady Manners

We've had workshops all over the place this month, so here is a quick collection of excitements...

We have visited
Lady Manners School - working with the Year 12 textile students
Lady Manners, large drawing

National Trust at Ilam Park for a Father's Day event

Buxton Soroptomists where we gave an after-dinner talk complete with fossils, model trilobites and horseshoe crabs, and crochet seaweeds creeping across the tabletops
Lady Manners Horseshoe Crab


kelp!
Peakabout Arts with High Peak Community Arts: with some beautifully deocrated felted kelps unfolding stickily across the workshop



Silverdale Knitting Group in action
Silverdale Knitting Group - with comment below from our artist, Sarah Males, who led the event and then a further message from the Silverdale library team who host the knitting group (hope they don't mind me quoting their lovely comments!) 

needle-felting ancient fish
"A lovely afternoon at Silverdale Library with the knitting group. We set off travelling back through time, as far back as 360m years ago, thinking about life in shallow seas. Images of corals, sea lilies and brachiopods living in our landscapes, long, long ago and far, far away. Today we have fossils, clear and tangible memories of life at that time. And our challenge? To help the reef grow, creating with crochet, fossilising with felt and knitting new creatures to populate this ancient landscape.
Hooks and needles, stitching and stabbing (needle felt!) and a busy room all combined to produce twisting coral shapes and felted fish, jellies and stars. Some Silverdale folks plan to visit Buxton" Sarah

"I just wanted to extend my thanks on behalf of the ladies who attended the session yesterday .We all had a brilliant time! Thank you again for arranging it for us. A couple of the ladies mentioned on the way out that they are going to drive up to Buxton for the open day! All in all I think it was very successful and I wish that Sarah could come to us every Friday!!" Silverdale

Visit the Silverdale group: www.pokerlibrarian.com





Friday, 28 June 2013

The Next High Tide


The Next High Tide

Sunday 7th - Sunday 14th July
Window display: our ancient tide will wash into The Green Man Gallery again as part of the Buxton Festival Fringe. So pop into the Gallery and among the prints, paintings, photos and thrills on display, have a peaceful moment beside our prehistoric world, soothed by the gentle corals, graceful seaweeds and occasional nautiloids…..and if the Gallery is closed, you can always swim past the window and send us the photos of yourself....

and when you want to join in…..

Knitting A New Landscape
Sunday 14th July
Times: 11.00 - 16.00 (last new activities at 3.30)
Join us for a frivolous day in Carboniferous Derbyshire being adventurous and ambitious. We want to spin our Ancient Landscape out of the window and across the gallery with seaweeds waving from ceilings, tentacles from nameless seabeasts crawling across the floor, giant corals lumping in corners and fingerfish flashing through this ancient world…

We'll bring wool, crochet hooks, felting needles, card, glue, pencils, crayons and tape. Please bring your own knitting needles.

Finding the Gallery:
55 High Street
Buxton
SK17 6HB
Tel: 01298 77401
kelp taking shape

 Parking: there is no parking at the Gallery itself but there is some free parking in the streets round about and Pay and Display parking in the Market Place just a couple of minutes walk away. Some street spaces are P&D, as well, so check before you wander away from your vehicle!

Buses: we are just a couple of minutes from the Market Place bus-stop and even closer to stops on Dale and West Roads

Train station: about 15 minutes walk away









Monday, 25 February 2013

Every stone tells a story

a box of ancient memories


Every stone tells a story

Walking through the Peak District, we step on stories that run through all the long years of human life in Britain. The stories run still further back until the landscapes of 300 million years ago are worn smooth by our feet

The limestone of the White Peak can tell us about ancient seas and fabulous animals from before the days of the dinosaurs. In this project we will explore those rocks: visiting outdoor sites, looking at fossils and formations, building on our understanding of how those prehistoric environments shape the landscapes around us now. We will look at the end of the limestone days, and the climate change that shifted a world from limestone to millstone grit

A series of public events through 2013 will invite participants to

            explore Peak District sites where they can find out more about local geology and the fossils contained within our rocks and the environments where those rocks were first formed
            use different art media to apply that new understanding to creating models of those landscapes: textiles might shape reefs (knitting, felt, crochet and foam sculpture) and model making add trilobites and other creatures
            reflect on the ancient climate change we see in the transition between limestone and millstone grit and compare that to our current circumstances
            attend indoor events in museums, libraries, and visitor centres to look at and work with relevant fossils in more detail
            help create bigger "Ancient Landscape" installations for touring displays in local museums, libraries and other venues

crocheted, knitted, modeled and made,
the beginnings of an ancient landscape

           
Groups can also book sessions and special initiatives will link groups with different experience to share ideas and skills (eg adult knitting and crochet groups with school children, local geology groups with the wider public). We can either come in and do several workshops with a group or for groups with existing skills, we can simply offer an introduction to the project, a chance to handle fossils, talk, think and scheme wildly before letting the group let themselves plunge into those ancient seas and bask on prehistoric beaches (and 300 million years ago the land that would eventually become England was hovering somewhere around the equator)

activities might include inventing our own ancient rockpools


An on-line and other media presence will keep activities accessible to everyone encourage a wider range of people to walk across their local landscapes and to try making their own ancient landscape models 
a nautiloid, trapped forever in stone
The Nautiloid image is from our main project picture by Victoria Brown

Visit an Ancient Landscape!



Ancient Landscapes exhibition
2nd March - 14th April 2013


at Castleton Visitor Centre
10.30 - 4.30


from a time before the dinosaurs,
meet the world that gave us 
the limestone of the Peaks
made in crochet, knitting, drawing, painting and models

Including work by groups from Project eARTh and Borderland Voices and public events exploring the Carboniferous world of 290 million years ago when the limestone shales and gritstones of the Peak district were first formed.

public events on Sunday 24th March and Thursday 4th April
Castleton Visitor Centre, Buxton Road, Castleton, Hope Valley, S33 8WN