Research Topics and Speculation about Art and Public Space by Scottish artist Matt Baker
Showing posts with label stranraer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stranraer. Show all posts

Monday, 23 July 2012

Scottish Design Award

A bit late in posting this (it has all been a bit frantic of late) - but, great news that the Castle Square project has won another award. Hot on the heels of the Saltire Society Award for Art in Architecture comes the Scottish Design Award 2012 for 'Best Public Realm Project' - great news for all concerned!




More on the Scottish Design Awards - here
Particular congratulations are due to Rachel Simmonds of Smith Scott Mullan and Associates (architects) who was the project architect on Castle Square

Tuesday, 25 October 2011

Completion for Stranraer project

I was shocked and delighted last week to be awarded the Saltire Society Award for Art in Architecture for the Stranraer Castle Square project. The award was given jointly with my good friend and fellow artist David Ralston who also worked on the project - the judges noting that the whole square worked as integrated whole with my work together with David's and the architect Smith, Scott, Mullan Associates and we were joined at the ceremony by the excellent project architect Rachel Simmonds.
This award is only presented biannually and is Scotland's only award for art in public.

photo from my phone (!)
There is more info about the award on PublicArtScotland and TheCommonty

As part of the press follow up to the award I was sent these finished photos of the project by photographer Zvonko Kracun 

Aerial view from Castle of St John - artwork Wiel in the centre
Detail of one end of the artwork 'Greywacke' which comprises a low wall that rises into a boulder outcrop

Detail of the lettering of Mary Smith's poem 'Ocean' which is inscribed into the top of Greywacke
For completions sake this photo (not by Zvonko) shows two of the 29 bronze Bubble Bosses that were the final part of my overall artwork for Stranraer - these were not installed until after the judging process for the Saltire Award

Monday, 7 March 2011

Castle Square - open

Tuesday 22nd Feb saw the public opening on the new public space around the Castle of St John in Stranraer. Scottish Government Minister for Housing and Communities Alex Neil MSP did the honours.

It was a proper SW Scotland occasion, with a cheery determination to wish the project and the town well, despite the grey, damp and cold weather.
Stranraer Youth Theatre performing on my artwork Bubbles after the speeches
The Castle itself was also being formally opened after renovation and interpretation work - it is an amazing thing to have in a small town affording incredible views over the rooftops and out along Loch Ryan
View of the Castle - after renovation work, but before work started on the new public square
View from the Castle over Loch Ryan
View from the Castle on the day of the Opening - marquee for speakers and an aerial view of Bubbles
The night time illumination of the town centre is spectacular:
This is part of a panorama image taken by local photographer David Rowley
You can see the full and interactive panorama of the square here

Everyone connected with the project was really pleased with the public reaction to the work in the square and the castle - we even got a good write-up in the local paper....
 Thanks to everyone involved for a memorable project....I've not quite completed my work here though - there are still some small bronze casts that are to be set into the paving now that everything is in solidly in place.

Tuesday, 8 February 2011

Bogie, the Bucket and the Bubbles

The good people of Stranraer have been puzzling over the hole-filled metal plate in the midst of their town since mid November - this is how it has looked since then

Or from the top of the Castle:

The next stage for this work was to fill the mould with a coloured concrete - just until the holes were filled flush with the steel. There has been a lot of head scratching about just how to do this...the weather enforced hiatus since November (too cold to cure concrete properly)has merely given us all more time to scratch heads and generally get anxious about all the potential pitfalls inherent in the operation.
Last Wednesday finally heralded a window of  +3 degrees centrigade for more than 48 hours. This is the story of the three days that followed:


Concrete poured into the holes in the steel from a readymix lorry (Luce Bay)

Bogie and Colin floating off the biggest of the 'bubbles'

Bogie doing the final finishing to the surface of the concrete from the bucket of the JCB -it was important that no one stepped on the steelwork during the pour as their weight was likely to bend the steel out of shape and create dips in the final surface

Halfway there - this is the beginning of the second half of the pour. The white pigment on the completed half is a sprayed on concrete retarder. This additive soaks into the top few millimetres of the concrete and slows down the setting time of this top section. The specified surface for the work was an 'exposed aggregate finish' meaning that after approx 24 hours the surface of the concrete would be pressure washed to remove the retarded layer of cement leaving the stone chips in the mix exposed.

 Final bubble being filled

 Alistair checking that the concrete has run consistently under the steelwork

 The surface after pouring and floating - we decided to leave it 'proud' of the steel so that it might finish up 'flush' when the top surface was washed away.

 The JCB bucket came in handy again for spraying the retarder onto the floated surface

 This is how the work looked the next morning after a first powerwashing to expose the aggregate in surface of the concrete. One of the great imponderables throughout was how to prevent concrete from sticking to the surface of the steel in the end we applied copious quantities of shuttering oil to the steel before pouring the concrete....as it turned out this was not very effective...we were now faced with cleaning back the whole steel surface.

 A few experiments revealed that scrubbing the surface with kitchen scourers and a weak solution of acid was the most effective method - this is the first patch we cleaned. Colin, Bogie and I spent many hours (and countless kitchen scrubbers) carefully removing the concrete from the steel.
This is how the work looked after the first 'wash-down' after a days scrubbing

 Close up

Another detail (the marking on the steel are areas of recent shotblasting to remove welding marks - in time these will oxidise to the same tone as the surrounding steel)

It is fairly normal for artists to be pushing techniques and trying something new - this whole work was an untried experiment on a giant scale. I am really interested and pleased with the result - but once again, in this odd public art world, the thing that I am carrying away from the experience at the moment is the way that skilled people can rise to the challenge of doing something they have never tried before and we can all work together as a team to get a result. 

Big respect to Davie Topping and his team - thanks all!

Friday, 17 December 2010

an erratic arrival in Stranraer

There are many strange ways that art happens - previously in the square around the Castle of St John in Stranraer was a mock 'wishing well' that was built as a charity collection 'box' in the 1980s. At an early stage of the project to re-design the public spaces around the castle it was proposed that the wishing well be removed, The Rotary Club objected to this because the well did collect significant funds. So the idea of an 'artist designed charity collection box' was born....my good friend David Ralston was chosen for the commission. I have been working on the overall scheme with architect Rachel Simmonds and David was involved in discussions about the themes that Rachel and I were working with.

Yesterday David's version of a charity collection box arrived on site
The obligatory 'discussions and speculations' about the new arrival    
Positioning 3 tonnes of granite boulder
David Ralston - far right (in natty orange hi-vis)

The artwork was conceived as an erratic, as such it needs to sit somewhat randomly in relation to other features in the Square. David was also working with ideas of magical or significant stones and came up with the brass rings as a reference to the 'sword in the stone' etc.
The coin collector - coins drop through metal resonators and make a pleasing sound falling through the rock...hopefully children will enjoy this

I'm hopeful about the way the rock sits in relationship with the castle  
 Nice one David..

Monday, 29 November 2010

Turning Myself in Knots


My efforts at picking my way through the minefield of ‘what is public art?’ (and the continuing debates elsewhere) have been causing me major angst in reflecting on what I am doing at the moment – I guess like many other folk I do try to cultivate a public face – the way I would like the world to see me.
I’ve been really enjoying working on the project for Stranraer – but I have had my doubts about how well it fitted into my ideal for how I would like to carry out my practice. I am not sure whether this is ‘art’ at all....but it feels good to put any skills, that I may have learnt, to the service of a very worthwhile endeavour.
From the very outset it was clear that there would be little or no time for in-depth research and meaningful working with local people. The architect's design for the space was complete and costed - ready to start on site. I was shown 3 possible places within the design which I could effect (in a purely physical way).
As I state elsewhere I was drawn to the project because of my family’s intimate connection with Stranraer and I guess that I was intrigued by the challenge of working within such a limited brief….the way that artists are ‘supposed’ to work in public?
What has been has been the privilege of working on this building site – pretty much everyone involved is local to Stranraer – yet usually they work away unseen on farm buildings, bridges or sea defences etc. In Castle Square there is almost a carnival atmosphere as passersby recognise folk on the site and everyone working there is committed to showing what they can do ‘for their town’.
The excellent architects are from Edinburgh and they have been completely overwhelmed by the standard of craftsmanship that is being produced on the site from start to finish.
So heres to you Dave Mc, Johnny B, Davie T, Rod Mc, Scooby, Gus, Colin, Alistair and all the rest of the crew.
This was the scene one day in the site dinner room – for anyone unfamiliar with Scottish culture, the orange liquid in the bottles is Irn Bru (google it…)

Early excavation works – compare to ‘before’

 The model I made for one of my interventions on site – this retaining wall was always to be made of the local whinstone (or properly –Greywacke). I am fascinated by this rock as it started life as the seabed of the ocean that used to separate Scotland and England when they were originally different land masses (Paleozoic era 400 million years ago). When the two land masses were pushed together the seabed was pushed up out of the water and turned into the hard grey rock that forms the Southern uplands of Scotland – Stranraer is at one end of the Southern Uplands and Berwickshire the other.
The idea of the wall is that it changes in feel from ‘ocean’ at one end to ‘hill’ at the other and this is reflected in the form of the whinstone along its length – changing from its slate-like form to large boulders.
On a previous project (Cairnsmore landscape menu) I worked with  poet Mary Smith, Mary wrote a poem about the sea becoming the hills. She gave me permission to cut the poem into the top of the wall.

Whinstone boulders arriving on site – this was a literally gigantic exercise in ‘making it up as you go along’ – thanks to Scooby, Colin , Gus and Rod in particular for saving my bahookie with this one!

Rising ‘hill’ begins to take shape

The Slatey whinstone ‘ocean’ end – Davie Topping and his father knew a place where this form of whinstone was lying on the surface and collected a van load for me.

The end point of the watery end of the wall – large stainless steel chains will be fixed through the holes and then disappear into the ground.

The sandblasted lettering of Mary’s poem on site – I love how the bottom of the letters have the texture of sand on the shore. Thanks to Galloway Granite for their work on this.

The other place I am working with on site is the ‘Burn Feature’ and ‘Performance Space’.  The Stranaer town burn used to run through Castle Square, the architects decided to reflect this with a serpentine line of white granite running through the otherwise black paving. I was asked to make a design for the circular performance area at the centre of the square – a circle that was formed by the curving granite line.
 I fell very much in love with the rivers around Stranraer during my New Luce project, one of their characteristics was the way patches of bubbles formed around rock and other disturbances – this phenomenon inspired my idea for the performance area.

 Bubble pattern design

Current state of play on site – thanks to Burnhouse Engineering for the steelwork. The final stage is to pump the area full of coloured and textured concrete…..we wait for a break in the cold weather…

Thursday, 22 April 2010

Finding my feet in Stranraer

John Pickin at Stranraer museum gave me this wonderful visualisation of a previous 'regeneration' attempt around the Castle in Stranraer from 1967
 


This is a similar view today of the space that I am commissioned to work with:
 
To the west of the square is an empty branch of WHSmiths:
 












This building occupies the site of the former 'Meikles Hotel' - this was run by my Gt Gt Grandfather James Meikle (d.1906). James Meikle also ran three mail coaches out of Stranraer.

 
Graffiti from the top of the castle

The monkey puzzle tree growing in the garden of 
the house where my grandfather was born in 1896

 
Rusted railings in the garden



The house is boarded up, but I magaged to get my 
camera through a hole into an outbuilding 
- this is what it captured.



My favourite shop in Stranaer, so far, is this combined fishmonger and gents outfitters (fish through the left door)