UPPER TEESDALE.- A temporary artwork on a vast scale will go on show this summer and will highlight the way people have influenced the North Pennines landscape.
The North Pennines AONB Partnership has commissioned international landscape artist, Steve Messam to produce Hush, an outdoor installation inspired by the geology, mining history and landscape of the area. Supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund and Arts Council England, the piece will be on show this summer at Bales Hush, an old lead mining site on the Raby Estate in Upper Teesdale, County Durham.
Based in Upper Teesdale close to the site of this new artwork, Steve Messam is a renowned environmental artist who produces large-scale temporary works in landscapes around the world. His work will transform Bales Hush for just 17 days, between 19 July and 4 August. Hush' will give a dramatic emphasis to this feature of the landscape, created when miners worked the hillside by hand to expose a mineral vein, then flushed the area with water to further reveal the geological riches below. Now blending into its surroundings, the hush is a vast gouge in the landscape measuring over 400m long and up to 20m deep. Steves artwork will fill the space with 5 kilometres of recyclable saffron yellow fabric, forming hundreds of suspended sails. An immersive artwork, visitors will be able to view the piece from above as well as explore the hush below. This is a monumental artwork on a scale in keeping with the vast landscapes of the North Pennines. Remnants of a lead mining past, like Bales Hush, can be seen right across the uplands of the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) and UNESCO Global Geopark. Steve Messam said: Its exciting to be able to make an artwork on this scale, particularly in such a vast and wild environment. The way the piece moves with the wind and the effect of the colour on such a scale is particularly exciting it will look very different depending on the time of day and the weather."
Chris Woodley-Stewart, Director of the North Pennines AONB Partnership, said: Were delighted to announce our collaboration with Steve Messam on this new work. We know that art in the landscape helps people engage with and understand their surroundings, and this piece will help tell a story of the North Pennines lead mining past and also of the landscape as we see it now. We are looking forward to welcoming people to visit Hush over the summer.
We're grateful to Barry Iceton, who farms this land, and to Raby Estate, for how helpful they've been to us in developing this work with Steve.
Steve Messam is an environmental artist based in County Durham, UK and working internationally. His ephemeral site-specific installations re-imagine the everyday, interrupting historical places and vacant architecture to help us perceive the familiar environment in a new way.
Working on a scale that is typically bigger than a house, his works explore the colour and scale of place. His inflatable textile works include a suite of pieces that filled historic ruins in a Scottish castle gardens and wrapped a seating shelter in Blackpool.
Other works include PaperBridge (2015) - a functioning packhorse bridge made from 22,000 sheets of paper in the Lake District; and Clad (2009) - a traditional timber-framed cottage wrapped in the fleece of 300 local sheep in Newtown, Wales. He created the first off-site installation at the 2006 Shanghai Biennial and created a number of site specific installations across the Venetian Lagoon during the 2009 Venice Biennale.