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Women in Forestry, the Lumberjills story

Dawn Yoxall

19th May - 10th December 2023

Timber Corps 1943, Image courtesy Joanna Foat

The ‘Women in Forestry, The Lumberjills Story’ exhibition celebrates the contribution of the World War II Lumberjills - a group of women who played a vital role in maintaining the supply of timber during the Second World War. The exhibition will contain images of some of the Lumberjills who worked in Grizedale brought in by members of the public as well as images of Lumberjills who supported the war effort across the country. Through this exhibition we hope to celebrate the crucial contribution these women did at that time.

ARC, 2023, Interview with Hazel Stone, Colin Rose and Peter Davies

Dawn Yoxall

(HS) Peter, can you give an overview of why the art programme started at Grizedale Forest?

What was the selection process for the residency programme? Was there a brief to follow or was the process led more by the artist?

(PD) ‘GRIZEDALE FOREST SCULPTURE PROGRAMME

Grizedale Forest has a certain magic. From my first visit I realised that the Lakeland tree-covered fells provided rich content. A collaborative environment presented a Win-Win-Win opportunity for the artist, the hosting Forestry Commission, Northern Arts (ACE) and the visiting public.

Established in 1977 the Sculpture programme pioneered a unique ‘Laboratory’ residency model (c.3-12 months). This provided private working ‘studio’ in the forest. Natural materials were found in the forest (stone, earth, wood). Artist selected sites and the public interface with the sculpture is on the forest visitor trails.

From the start the innovative and influential programme was successful. Richard Harris and David Nash, the first sculptors, set a quality benchmark. Critical and media coverage followed and a dramatic increase in visitors was evident. Grizedale sculpture achieved national and international attention. Sculptors engaged with the local community, various school projects were undertaken and there was a steady flow of art school visits.

Selection of artists was time consuming and thorough. Annually the scheme attracted many applications. In the first year well over 100 artists applied. Shortlisted artists were interviewed. Further discussions were held with the awarded sculptors. There was no brief as such, but guidelines, operating procedures and monitoring were in place to support the artist and help facilitate their work.

COLIN ROSE : TING

Grizedale’s programme also adopted project-based approaches. Colin Rose ‘Ting’ and the ‘Tree Top Walkway’ were such. ‘Ting’s ‘ring of steel’ manufacture and construction costs were a major issue. Fortunately, I was invited by Yorkshire Sculpture Park to select an artist / work for an exhibition. Ting was made. Post exhibition, to Yorkshire’s disappointment, the sculpture was returned to Grizedale. ‘Ting’ was sited close to the central valley road. Initially it attracted considerable attention. Locally this elegant sculpture was known as the Ring of Confidence, named after a toothpaste advertisement.

Peter Davies

Visual Arts Officer, Northern Arts 1974-1993’

(HS)Colin, can you give us insight about what it meant for you as an artist to have work included in the forest sculpture programme?

(CR)From an early stage in my work I was drawn to a response and making work to belong in the landscape. By intervention to add to, or celebrate a quality of that space. Initially a daunting challenge, for who can compete with the grandeur of an oak tree or the scale of the landscape. With my first steps it felt comfortable to relate work within trees to belong in the broader landscape.

(HS)Did you always want to be an artist and which artists inspire you?

(CR)Like many people and without a mentor I became an artist by default. For me, at a young age not knowing 'what to be', but at the same time being the sought after boy at school who drew all the biro tattoos of daggers dripping blood, snakes and endless love hearts!

Later, working in engineering I painted industrial landscapes. It was only as a student introduced to sculpture that I found a language, at that early time I was drawn to artists like Brancusi, and David Smith.

(HS)Can you explain your idea behind Ting?

(CR) Where to start?

Many layers of ideas are encapsulated in a work that evolves over time.

From an interest in language with onomatopoeic words with sounds relating to objects and their form, such as Anglo Saxon CUP, or MOON, that both describe and define the shape. I was interested in this connection and began making 3D compositions rather like harmonies or discords, considering the forms emitting their own sound. I later turned this idea to look at the landscape, imagining every blade of grass, leaf, twig, and branch having its own sound, collectively ringing in a deafening colossal chorus. In contrast to this organic mass of sound I imagined a pure piece of geometry, to both contrast and to celebrate the sense of place.

Although Ting was a large work 40' diameter to relate to the scale of the tree, I did not want a grand statement, and in giving it a title I looked for the smallest sound I could find to describe the work, hence Ting!

I enjoy what viewers bring to a work, it is often enriching with new ideas of how they see it.

Making works in the landscape is only part of the equation. Good spaces do not need anything. I feel it is a challenge for an artist to give back to a space as much as they borrow from it to make ‘a place’!

(HS)Did you choose the tree first that you wanted to install the structure, which gave it the scale, or had you already decided the scale of the piece?

(CR) I had already decided the scale of the piece, relevant to body size and to how far I could push the structural limit of the steel section to create the circle.

As a result it became necessary to choose a mature broadleaf tree to build the work within. These were limited in Grizedale to trees that had been part of the original parkland. Unfortunately, although I found several suitable trees within the forest, for various reasons I was unable to site the work there, and so opted for the copper beech in the valley.

(HS)Up to the point of Ting being installed, the sculptures in the collection were fabricated from natural materials, Ting marks a departure from this, which could have felt quite radical at the time, how was your piece perceived?

(CR)Yes this was a result of bringing a work to the forest as opposed to making a work on site with materials from the forest. I share the approach of other artists using the natural materials in this way, in what was perceived as an open forest sketch book.

Steel was the right material for the idea.

I did not have a problem with this, we use steel daily in our lives.

The fact that the work became prominent in the valley as opposed to it being sited in the forest did raise its profile to become a topic of discussion.

As easy as it is, it was never my intention to make a contentious work. It did however raise many valid questions of our ideas of what is the natural landscape? Grizedale being man made, shaped for thousands of years, and the ultimate question of, who the landscape belongs to?

We often look back with nostalgia on controversial objects, such as red telephone boxes, introduced across the country into rural villages, that were initially seen as intrusive and alien.

(HS) For many artists who have pieces in Grizedale Forest they had conversations with a range of forest workers, was this the case for you?

(CR)Yes!

This was very much the case. I had great respect for the foresters who had worked a long hard day but came to help me assemble and install the work in what was a joyous event of collaboration and discussion.

Only later with the work being debated as a topic with the local WI, that subsequently was picked up by local newspapers with the 'is this art'? label for sales, did it become an issue of contention with the local community.

I have huge respect for the late Bill Grant who was Chief Forester and Peter Davies who established the sculpture programme in Grizedale for taking the brunt of public opposition raised through this debate on art and environment.

(HS)Ting has now had to be deinstalled due to the health of the tree it was originally installed in. You are keen to repurpose the original frame and produce another iteration of the piece deeper in the forest, can you speak a little more about the proposed piece and why you have chosen the location you have?

(CR) Initially there was an offer to re-site the work in a mature oak of which I was very pleased.

However, never built to last, the work over time went out of true form of its original pure circle due to its own weight and was not possible to repair.

Rather than scrap the sections I was attracted to re use them and re-site the pieces horizontally in the Forest as a new work.

Initially I imagined a natural clearing within the forest or a level on an incline that allowed eye level to cross the surface. But because of the scale and available sites, the idea evolved into planting an enclosure on a reclaimed site where trees had been cleared after storm damage, to create an enclosure for the work.

(HS)Can you give a paragraph about the piece which we can use to explain to the audiences the new piece, the significance of the form and how you want the piece to be responded to?

(CR)The new work 'formerly known as Ting 'had arrived from salvaging the elements to be used in a new context.

'Ting' originally was a work derived from ideas of sound relating to form in response to its location in the landscape. With the salvaged elements, I sought to create a new work with a calm floating quality that people could both view and interact with. An edge that defined an inner and outer space like a ripple in a pool of water.

(HS)Will you still call the piece Ting?

(CR) No, I see this as a new work from the sections reclaimed from Ting. Ting had a relevance to the ideas of form and sound. With the new location and position of the work I am interested to explore the quality of calm of the piece lying horizontal and sited level over the slope of the ground and contained within the band of willows surrounding it. Here I very much like the pragmatic simple title of ARC that now describes the sweep of the steel section within the newly created space.

Earth Photo 2022

Dawn Yoxall

19 December 2022 to 23 April 2023

Photographers and videographers from across the globe submitted their work in the following categories: People, Place, Nature, Changing Forests, and A Climate of Change.

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Richard Harris - Being Here

Dawn Yoxall

Richard Harris was the first sculptor to work in Grizedale Forest 1977-78. He and David Nash 1978 established the practice and the ethos of the remarkable residency programme with its rich context of rural community, nature, forestry, art and visitors.

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Earth Photo 2021

Dawn Yoxall

20th December 2021 - 24th April 2022

Visit Grizedale this winter and coming spring to see a stunning selection of the shortlisted images, from categories including People, Place, Nature, Changing Forests and A Climate of Change.

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Landmark

Dawn Yoxall

It seems quite apt that Grizedale, the UK's first forest for sculpture, should have been selected as the location to host the three sculpture produced in the first episode of Sky Arts’ bold new series Landmark. Since 1977 leading international artists have created sculptures at and for Grizedale Forest and now the forest welcomes three artists who competed against each other to create local landmarks for their home region.

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THE WINNERS OF THE 2021 GRIZEDALE RESIDENCY

Dawn Yoxall

Forestry England and the Royal Society of Sculptors announces the winner of the annual 2021 Grizedale Residency

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Susan Stockwell FRSS and early-career artist Florian Houlker will be the latest artists joining the list of leading international artists who have been invited to work in Grizedale Forest. Susan and Florian will be residing and working in the forest this summer, producing work inspired by, and of, their surroundings.

Judges, President of The Royal Society of Sculptors, Clare Burnett, artist David Nash, art project manager, Nia Roberts and the arts development manager for North England at Forestry England, Hazel Stone said they were delighted by the diversity of applications and all the artists enthusiasm for the project.

They were selecting two artists who had responded to a ‘call for artists’ earlier this year; one ‘early year’s’ sculptor and one member of the Royal Society of Sculptors, to be based at Grizedale Forest for six weeks, 30 July – 11 September. During that time, they will be free to explore how creative and new ideas and innovative thinking can evolve without interruption.

Susan Stockwell FRSS and Florian Houlker join notable sculptors Richard Harris (the forest's first resident in 1977-78), David Nash (1978), Robert Keonig (1981-83), Andy Goldsworthy (1984, 1985 & 1990) and Sally Matthews (1988) as artists who have left permanent and temporary work or have added in some way to the creative legacy of Grizedale Forest.

Forestry England are committed to supporting creative enquiry in the natural forest and are pleased to see the relaunch of the Grizedale Residency which has been made possible through Grizedale Forest’s partnership with the Royal Society of Sculptors and generous funding by the Brian Mercer Trust. Together they are supporting artists and fostering experimentation and innovation in response to the natural environment.

Susan Stockwell FRSS is an established international artist working across sculpture, installation, collage and film. Her practice is concerned with examining histories and engaging with questions of social justice, cultural mapping and feminism. Her work employs the material culture of everyday products, such as toilet paper, recycled computer components, maps and money, which she transforms into compelling artworks. In seeking to reconnect an object’s past, its related history and materiality with contemporary issues, her practice underscores these materials urgent interconnection to collective memories, and ecological shortfalls.

Florian Houlker is a multidisciplinary artist from Preston and currently artist-in-residence at Artlab Contemporary Print Studios. They explore the post-industrial landscape through explorative investigations and search for narratives within it, often reclaiming objects from these environments to repurpose or change their narratives. They are interested in recording the surfaces of reclaimed objects and surfaces in the landscape, as there is an embedded visual history which comes from human traces and natural factors.

This award is generously supported by the Brian Mercer Trust

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Grizedale Residency 2021

Dawn Yoxall

This opportunity for two artists to be based at Grizedale Forest is an annual, intensive six week long residency that aims to foster experimentation and innovation in response to the natural environment.

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The Digital Forest

Dawn Yoxall

Artist Commission

After an amazing response to the call out for the Digital Forest digital arts commission, artist Jessica El Mal was selected by the panel to deliver the commission.

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Sense of Here

Dawn Yoxall

1st October - 13th December

Sense of Here is an invitation to wander around the Lake District and experience multiple landscapes and points of view, beginning with a single tree and radiating out across the fells, lakes and valleys. Photographs, poetry, installations and creative maps produced from a year of walking, camping and research offer reflections on the National Park and consider wider issues affecting the natural world : how do we connect to the places around us, and in the light of environmental pressures, how do we go forwards from here, working together?

There will be virtual opening for the exhibition on 6th October. Please book your free place.

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Gerry Judah BENGAL The Four Elements fire, water, earth & air

Dawn Yoxall

Gerry Judah’s BENGAL : The Four Elements will open at Grizedale Forest Gallery on 21st July. This solo exhibition marks a unique collaboration between Grizedale Forest and internationally acclaimed artist Gerry Judah, bringing together a striking body of work built over nearly a decade and originally commissioned by the Arts Council of England.

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Checkpoint Grizedale

Dawn Yoxall

This Sculpture is currently unavailable due to being damaged during Storm Arwen.

Checkpoint is a sculpture with a secret inside space, the coloured portholes cut at different heights, gives the sculpture eyes, drawing visitors inside.

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Earth Photo

Dawn Yoxall

19th December 2019 - 28th April 2020

Grizedale Forest provides a perfect setting  to explore these breath-taking images from around the world, in a stunning forest.

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YOKO ONO - WISH TREE FOR PEACE

Dawn Yoxall

9th October - 8th December 2019

Forestry England’s Grizedale Forest is proud to welcome an artwork from Yoko Ono, the Wish Tree for Peace. The work will be on display at Grizedale Forest’s exhibition gallery from 9 October until 8 December.

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Grizedale Residency

Dawn Yoxall

12th September - 15th December 2019

Karolin Schwab and Ben Allan completed a six week residency at Grizedale. The exhibition showcases the work that they have done during this time.

Karolin and Ben will be giving a talk on 12th September at 2.30pm in the Exhibition space behind the Cafe.

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Andrea Gregson Seeing through the Ground

Dawn Yoxall

Spectre (detail) 2016 Andrea Gregson

5th July - 31st August 2019

Grizedale has a long history of industry, everything from iron smelting, tanneries, swill making, charcoal burning, bobbin-making and gunpowder production. For this exhibition, Andrea Gregson considers the landscape as a relic of past production, where natural materials have been transformed through industrial processes.

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