Eskild Beck - Epping Forest |
Does love endure forever? Does a bad
penny always turn up? During this Valentine month the artists and
writers from CollectConnect explore this flip-sided theme with an
exhibition of 32 miniature sculptures. These objects are placed in
public places (#unsettledgallery), helping us to remember those who
we hold dear - or cast off those who we would rather forget. Every
day throughout February we will be featuring one of these
tokens/pennies on this website. A writer will also use the art as
inspiration to create something new and fresh.
Art - Eskild Beck / Words - Natalie
Low
In the morning, when you leave the room
in the dark before me, I reach over and feel inside the space you
have left behind in the sheets. It’s like the cast of a
still-warm person from Pompeii. I marvel at the series of steps that
have led you to live here with me.
In the bathroom, the toothpaste is
leaning over in the cup, clutching its stomach like it’s been
punched, and your toothbrush is minty and damp. The mirror is
misted over and you have scrubbed out a space so you can see
yourself. I like to place my reflection where yours would have been.
Your plate is by the sink, sprinkled
with crumbs that fell from your mouth. Your glass has a
millimetre of liquid left in the bottom. If I was a detective, I
could itemise exactly what you had eaten and drunk today.
There are other signs of our
skirmishes: closing the windows that you have opened; opening the
curtains that you have drawn; lid up, lid down; tidying up your mess.
I like to track your small trail around our home and through my
life. I like the physical evidence that you are here.
Eskild Beck |
Epping Forest is a Site of Special
Scientific Interest, bordering London and Essex and is an Ancient
Woodland, one of the few left in London. The sculptor Jacob Epstein
lived on the edge of the Forest. Nowadays the Forest is used by dog
walkers, mountain bikers, horse and pony riders and picnicking
friends and families as well as footballers, bird watchers and
runners. I like to imagine all the lovers who might have left their
own love tokens in the forest over the centuries. The Forest has also
had its share of Bad Pennies reaching up to the present day.
Take a walk through the Forest and see if you can find a Love Token or a Bad Penny.
Take a walk through the Forest and see if you can find a Love Token or a Bad Penny.
Eskild Beck is an internationally
respected artist, his imagined world drawings have been enjoyed by art lovers around the world. His work has an ethereal quality that
often transcends the physicality of this world. Eskild lives in
Aabenraa, Denmark and last year hosted the Small World Futures
exhibition in a gallery in the centre of the town. He has been
exhibiting with CollectConnect since Freezchester in July 2010.
http://starflight.dk/
http://starflight.dk/
Natalie Low enjoys putting words on
paper and believes that everyone has a book of some sort inside them.
She has published two chapbooks, Dementia (2015) and School Run
(2017). She also appears in this exhibition as an artist/maker.
Alban was recently interviewed about Love Tokens and Bad Pennies for the Talking Walking podcast by Andrew Stuck, the founding director of the Museum of Walking and Rethinking Cities. Listen here - https://www.talkingwalking.net/alban-low-talking-walking/
Don't forget to submit to our next exhibition. The Art of Caring is
accepting submission until the 7th April 2019. More
at http://collectconnect.blogspot.com/p/submit.html
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