#sweetheart pincushion

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I’m now at a point in my Museums Galleries Scotland funded Artist Residency at the Highlanders’ Museum (Queen’s Own Highlanders Collection) where I’m moving from research into making. It’s a stage which requires me to spend less time ‘on location’ & more time in the studio.

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After collating 1408 separate files comprised of photographs from the archive, notes sent both to-and-from the front line, official documents from Buckingham Palace, official portraits, and domestic snaps etc it is a time to focus upon narratives that will saturate and direct my final exhibition.

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During the last 6 months I’ve been most touched by:

- ‘traces’ left by the human hand, a note scribbled in the corner of a printed army document or the inside of a cigarette wrapper.
- hand-sewn greetings cards and notes
- salvaged materials used within sweetheart pin-cushions (old uniforms, sack-cloth etc)
- harrowing personal accounts of life in the trenches: ‘Our wounded were streaming back, some ghastly sights; holding on arms, legs, broken and smashed’&All that will be left is a nation of legless, and armless, blind and helpless except those that are making money’(1917)

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Alongside extracts from newspapers such as the Shipley Express and Times from 1st June 1917 describing Arras:

‘…over wires, over shell holes, past mined patches and death traps…faced a torrent of fire aimed at us’

And then there are the thoughts of historians such as E.J. Hobsbawn raising pertinent questions such as: how did ‘the era of peace, of confident bourgeois civilisation, growing wealth and western empires within itself the embryo of the era of war, revolution and crisis put an end to it?’

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In parallel I’m now diving deep into materials and techniques. Exploring hand-sewn and domestic processes alongside industrial fabrication techniques. I’m locating harvested cloth (from Highland charity shops and the collection itself) and found objects.

Exhibition begins:  7th October 2017

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Artist in Residence Exhibition ‘Summer Has Been Turned To Winter By The Guns’ (2017)at The HighlandeArtist in Residence Exhibition ‘Summer Has Been Turned To Winter By The Guns’ (2017)at The HighlandeArtist in Residence Exhibition ‘Summer Has Been Turned To Winter By The Guns’ (2017)at The HighlandeArtist in Residence Exhibition ‘Summer Has Been Turned To Winter By The Guns’ (2017)at The HighlandeArtist in Residence Exhibition ‘Summer Has Been Turned To Winter By The Guns’ (2017)at The HighlandeArtist in Residence Exhibition ‘Summer Has Been Turned To Winter By The Guns’ (2017)at The HighlandeArtist in Residence Exhibition ‘Summer Has Been Turned To Winter By The Guns’ (2017)at The HighlandeArtist in Residence Exhibition ‘Summer Has Been Turned To Winter By The Guns’ (2017)at The HighlandeArtist in Residence Exhibition ‘Summer Has Been Turned To Winter By The Guns’ (2017)at The Highlande

Artist in Residence Exhibition

‘Summer Has Been Turned To Winter By The Guns’ (2017)

at 

The Highlanders’ Museum (Queen’s Own Highlanders Collection) 

8th October 2017 – 18th March 2018

“It has been a real experience for staff, volunteers, visitors and local schoolchildren to work with our Artist in Residence on this project – seeing our World War One archive through fresh and creative eyes. Robyn Woolston’s exhibition is stunning, thought-provoking and presents a personal response to ‘The Great War’ from the artist and the children and adults who contributed to the project.”

Education Officer, Gill Bird

Project Blog: https://highlandersmuseumww1.tumblr.com

Location: 

Fort George is a ‘registered Ancient Monument’ and for over 235 years has been a military garrison and training depot for a Regular Infantry Battalion of the British Army. It is currently home to the 3rd Battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland.

Set in what was formerly the Lieutenant Governor’s house, the Highlanders’ Museum was founded over 60 years ago. The museum houses more than 5,000 gallantry awards and campaign medals won by the fighting men of the regiment as well as silver and personal artefacts. It also contains a set of Colours carried at the Battle of Waterloo and King Edward VIII’s regimental uniform.

Opening Times: 10.00am - 3.15pm  / closed at weekends Dec & Jan

Admission to the Highlanders’ Museum (Queen’s Own Highlanders Collection) is FREE but you must pay an admission charge to visit Fort George. Adult - £9.00 Concession - £7.20 Child aged 5–15 - £5.40 Under 5 - FREE

Exhibition Fabrication: G & T Project Management

http://gtprojects.wixsite.com/home


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