Activities per year
Abstract
Entry for the film Windlins in catalogue to the exhibition Nurture: Living in the Landscape Summer School and exhibition.
The definition of what constitutes a forest is complicated. This film attempts to imagine the idea of forest for Shetland, a place where the landscape is treeless. It considers forest as an idea, an experience of loss and renewal, a metaphor, and an image, as in a large number of vertical or tangled objects, such as a forest of sails and masts carried by fishing boats once visible around Shetland’s natural harbours, or the dense mass of the newly constructed forest of 103 wind turbines looming over Shetland’s north central Mainland today. It is an invitation to look, to see, to listen and to hear; to discover the world around us, to retrieve knowledge and culture lost with the disappearance of forests in Scotland, and Shetland, to better understand the forest and to learn how to overcome fear of the forest and be able to be within it. The duality of loss and renewal is embedded in the word ‘windling’, or ‘windlin’ in the Shetlaen language. It is a bundle of grasses, a sign of both end and beginning, of hope and renewal as the hay has been harvested and then secured in a bundle for positive, productive use. In dialect, however, it can also mean something which is torn off by the wind.
Artwork details: Digital film, looped. 00:02:30 mins (2023)
The definition of what constitutes a forest is complicated. This film attempts to imagine the idea of forest for Shetland, a place where the landscape is treeless. It considers forest as an idea, an experience of loss and renewal, a metaphor, and an image, as in a large number of vertical or tangled objects, such as a forest of sails and masts carried by fishing boats once visible around Shetland’s natural harbours, or the dense mass of the newly constructed forest of 103 wind turbines looming over Shetland’s north central Mainland today. It is an invitation to look, to see, to listen and to hear; to discover the world around us, to retrieve knowledge and culture lost with the disappearance of forests in Scotland, and Shetland, to better understand the forest and to learn how to overcome fear of the forest and be able to be within it. The duality of loss and renewal is embedded in the word ‘windling’, or ‘windlin’ in the Shetlaen language. It is a bundle of grasses, a sign of both end and beginning, of hope and renewal as the hay has been harvested and then secured in a bundle for positive, productive use. In dialect, however, it can also mean something which is torn off by the wind.
Artwork details: Digital film, looped. 00:02:30 mins (2023)
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | Nurture |
Subtitle of host publication | Living in the landscape summer school and exhibition |
Editors | Elina Härkönen, Lotta Lundstedt, Kathryn Burnett, Mette Gårdvik, Roxane Permar |
Place of Publication | Rovaniemi |
Publisher | University of Lapland Press |
Pages | 38-39 |
Number of pages | 2 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 978-952-337-400-3 |
ISBN (Print) | 978-952-337-401-0 |
Publication status | Published - 13 Nov 2023 |
Keywords
- living in the landscape
- forests
- renewable energy
- wind farms
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Landscape in Pain / Living in the Landscape
Permar, R. (Speaker)
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Permar, R. (Speaker)
15 Nov 2023Activity: Talk / Presentation / Podcast / Webinar › Oral presentation