Ancient Britain: flint

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Odd title, I know. One of the very interesting tidbits of knowledge passed on by our tour guide was that the Wiltshire region of England, home of the ancient sites we visited on our tour, is well-known for its use of local stone as building material, including flint because it was readily available here. Apparently brick was more common in other areas like London.

I’ve heard of flint tools and its use with gunpowder but not as a building material. I have to admit to not even recognizing it when I kept seeing this strange and intriguing almost seashell-like material embedded with mortar and other stones on some garden walls in London, then again quite a lot of it in the town of Salisbury (top two photos) and the cathedral itself. The walls of Old Sarum are mostly flint, though looking more chalky (detail in bottom photo); you may want to look again at some of the photos at the link.

Funny how once made aware of it, I began to notice even more how flintstones were used in decorative ways on the walls of many old houses and small churches as we drove around Wiltshire’s villages. I wish we’d been able to photograph some of them, not easy from a moving van.

Here’s more interesting information about flint, including this: Brighton’s shingle beach is full of flints with fossils within them, much prized by the Victorians. I wish I’d known this when we were there for I might have tried some fossil hunting on the beach.

Posts about our Ancient Britain Tour:
Salisbury
Old Sarum
Stonehenge
White Horses
Silbury & West Kennet
Avebury

dinosaur rock

   
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This cool find on the beach this morning is making me wonder about the geological journeys it has gone through before arriving on our shores.
   

lines of age

   
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The lines on the rock are like the lines on the face of an elder.
What events have created them?
Where have these rocks come from?
What tumultuous journeys have they suffered?
How old are they?
   

nature’s sculpture

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found sitting in a tidal pool
on a beach in Pacific Rim National Park, BC
how I wanted to take it home
make a meditation pool for it in the garden
but ’twas way too big and heavy to move!

earthworks #2

   
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on Long Beach, Pacific Rim National Park, British Columbia, February 3, 2008

rocks bearing fossils

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Eight years ago, when I had an exhibition of my works in a gallery in Edmonton, Alberta, my husband and I decided to deliver my framed works by car and make this journey into a bit of a holiday. One of the highlights of this memorable trip was seeing the Hoodoos near North Battleford, which I’ve mentioned here a few times before. The other was a visit to the fantastic Royal Tyrrell Museum. It’s famous for it’s paleontological collection, which I certainly enjoyed, but I was very excited by the fossil collection and snapped a lot of photos of these.

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Being in glass cases with low light, not all the photographs turned out well. Here are a few of my favourites. Like the hoodoos, some of these images became incorporated in several of my prints.

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This one was used in Paths XII and Paths XIII/Nexus and others.

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This one appeared in several pieces including Nexus V, Nexus VII and Nexus/Blue II and III

See what happens when I go through old photographs!

Writing-on-Stone Park

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This morning, I was very excited by an article in our newspaper about Writing-on-Stone Park in Alberta, a very important place for me, spiritually and artistically.

Unfortunately, the online version does not include the photos of some of the rocks and of Bonnie Moffet, the supervisor of interpretative services, who is quoted in the article (and whom we met last year). It was interesting to read about the recent opening of “the park’s first permanent interpretive centre” and about the petroglyphs and the first nations people who created them. I liked her words: “Our wish here is not just to talk about rock art and rock art preservation,” she says. “It’s to share with people the fragility of this place . . . and to change attitudes forever toward first nations people.”

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Naturally, reading all this has transported me back to our amazing visit to Writing-on-Stone last year. I’ve been revisting this mystical and powerful place again by going through our photos and thought I’d post a few more here. And of course, I want to go back some day for I was keenly disappointed that the guided tour was unavailable the day we were there.

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Interested new readers may like to know that I first wrote about my ‘obsession’ for badlands, hoodoos & petroglyphs over two years ago, followed up with an answer to a query from another blogger ‘what are hoodoos?’

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As many of you know, some of the images I gathered on this trip became part of my art works since then. Which reminds me… I still have not shown those last works that I completed in the spring! I’ve been waiting a long time for Erika to design a web site for me, but she was too busy with her final year at art school and then got herself a great job a month after graduation (naturally I’m happy about that)! I had planned to make this grand announcement with the presentation of these pieces based on Writing-on-Stone. Hmm, maybe I should just post them here anyway.

Hornby Island rocks

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From time to time over the life of this blog, I’ve been posting some of my favourite photos of the uniquely weathered rocks on Hornby Island. They’ve inspired and become essential portions of many of my works, first in the Meta-morphosis series, then the Paths and Nexus series.

Obsession, passion or a call from my ancient past? Whatever the reason, I respond and revisit these with new eyes each time. It’s been several years since we’ve visited this lovely little island and our dear friends’ cottage there. I think it’s time for another visit soon.

a muddle

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I seem to be putting up a lot of photos that I have used in my prints (such as above from Hornby Island), or think about using in future work. For awhile I’ve been thinking that I should have been putting them into their own special category, instead of having them scattered in various places. One reason is to make them more accessible for me in terms of reference, ie. have I put this one up before and what did I title it? I want them to be separate from garden, travel, visited exhibitions and other photos that I put up here. Sometimes there’s the tricky question of the fine line between what’s an “arty” photo and “just” something pretty – really about it’s future purpose, if any.

After over three years of blogging, I think of better ways I could have organized everything instead of being stingy with my list of categories. But how does one know in advance what category one will be needing? This blog has evolved and grown from a child into an ungraceful teenager. Or, like an overstuffed chaotic closet or granny’s attic that needs to be re-organized. However the digital version feels more overwhelming a task than than that closet or attic. Is there an easy, simple way to add a new category to past posts after the fact without going through each and every post and going mad with the confusion?

Ah, that’s the moaning and groaning of an insomniac. Two hours of sleep does colour one’s world a bit grey. I like things to be organized and when they are not, they come and bite me when I’m too tired. Time for a nap.

beach art

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still too busy for words
so, an offering
another photo from my collection