Bog Bodies

30 May - 2 June 2024
Thurs to Sun, 12-5pm

Private View :
Thursday 30th May, 6-8pm

In Bog Bodies Holly Birtles and Charly Blackburn interrogate the complexities of wetland mysteries in the Thames Estuary and the Fenland Marshes exploring life, death, and metamorphosis through ceramics and photography.

Events
Please see below for details of the programme of events for Saturday 1st June 2024.

Participating artists

The Bog preserves the body in death enabling us to travel back in time as far as the Mesolithic period. Conditions inside the bog are acidic. They are perpetually wet, entangled with plants and peat, muddy and monstrous. A dense soup inhabited by complex ecologies that thrive in the anaerobic surroundings, creating a unique biochemical and physical occurrence that facilitates the mummification of prehistoric humans.

These turgid, dark, fleshy wetlands present treacherous environmental conditions that reveal life and death. For artists Birtles and Blackburn, the bog body is symbolic – representing metamorphosis and degradation, the vital mud and turbid waters evoke an underworld hell that exposes seemingly paranormal curiosities.

Bog Bodies is an exhibition that interrogates and exposes the complexities of these mysterious spaces, figures, images and ideas through ceramics and photography. The exhibition presents the work of Holly Birtles and Charly Blackburn who reflect upon the disturbing enigmatic myths and scientific findings, that informs their visceral responses realised through clay, found debris, performance and photographs. The work focuses on two specific locations of significance to the artists. Through the landscapes of the Thames Estuary and The Fens they unfold their personal associations while exploring the slow dark ecological violence, weaving these into the wider narratives of estuaries and wetlands.

Holly Birtles examines selected locations along the Essex side of the Thames Estuary as she envisions a musical production that articulates the sacred and tragic tales of the estuary juxtaposed with associated ecological trauma. In her project Mud and Monster Soup Birtles works with performers and musicians to explore backstage and rehearsal processes whereby members of the cast contemplate and practice their role as specific creatures or monsters. Birtles’ multi-disciplinary practice involves prop production, performance, analogue and digital photographic processes. She draws on performance documentation, re-appropriation, AI generated imagery, and self-portraiture to represent a collaborative response to selected estuary locations.

Charly Blackburn responds to the Fenland Marshes. She reflects upon the boggy depths and subsequent excavations that reveal sinister tales and biochemical phenomenon. In Bog Bodies Blackburn presents clay vessels that embrace the debris and degradation of materials submerged and compressed in these wetlands. She produces sculptural vessels that appear to embody thousands of years of acidic stewing, compressed tightly – a textured muck and metamorphosis of earth materials. These forms appear as though they have been dredged up – teleported from deep mud to the studio, re-contacting ancient forms.

Together Birtles and Blackburn each articulate the need to preserve these locations by engaging with folklore and supernatural tales as a means of reconnecting with ancient landscapes.

Bog Bodies

Thursday 30th 12.00 – 8.00 PM

6.00 – 8.00 PM Private View

7.00 PM Performance by Hannah Grasskamp
Singer and performer Hannah Grasskamp defies genres, blending operatic singing with field recorded intimacy shared in a recorded diary. The performance articulates the sacred and tragic tales of the estuary juxtaposed with associated ecological trauma and mummers of mud.

Saturday 1st June 12.00 – 8.00 PM

4.00 – 4.45 PM Artist Q & A
Q & A with artists Holly Birtles and Charly Blackburn regarding exhibition themes plus personal projects and thematic collaborations lead by Fergus Heron. Fergus Heron is a photographic artist and is Course Leader for MA Photography and a research supervisor in the School of Art and Media at the University of Brighton.

5.00 – 5.30 – Bog specialist talk with Melanie Giles.

Melanie Giles is the author of the book ‘Bog Bodies: Face to Face with the Past’
This book argues, the bodies must be resituated within a turbulent world of endemic violence and change. Reinterpreting the latest continental research and new discoveries, and featuring a ground-breaking ‘cold case’ forensic study of Worsley Man, Manchester Museum’s ‘bog head’’, it brings the bogs to life through both natural history and folklore, revealing them as places that were rich and fertile yet dangerous.

6.00 – 6.20 PM Sound Performance with
Kelly Jayne Jones
Kelly Jane Jones interweaves spoken word, archaeological records and associated bog sounds informing a sonic experience for the audience. Jones creates a multi-sensory encounter that creates conditions for communication and exchange.

6.30 – 6.50 PM Stephen Micalef Poetry Performance
Poet Stephen Micalef was a significant contributor to the fanzine 'Sniffing Glue'. Micalef will perform poems which reflect on the muddy and treacherous themes of the show. Growing up in Deptford and coming from a long line of Stevedores prompts personal connections with the mud of the quaggy.

7.00 - 7.20 PM Sound Performance with
Kate Carr
Kate Carr explores the encounters, textures and technologies entangled with field recording using movement, objects and experimental recording techniques. Carr will respond to the bog via the examination of field recordings and alternative instruments to create hybrid sound worlds.

Events