All the different Time and Tide Bell communities from around Britain will be meeting together at Trinity Buoy Wharf in London on the 3rd of October. Here are some details:
Time and Tide Bell get-together,
celebration and planning day
October 3rd 2017 at Trinity Buoy Wharf
Objectives of the day are to:
1. Find ways in which people responsible for different bells might be able to help
each other (bearing in mind that no-one is getting paid….)
2. Provide inspiration as to exciting ways the bells can be used as the heart of new
activity – artistic, educational……
3. Achieve a better sense both of the strong individuality of each installation and the
fact that they are part of a network.
4. Come up with many ideas about what needs doing next, including a website
upgrade.
Download Programme details here.
A sculpture on the Mablethorpe beach, and a community arts project that spreads far and wide, the Time and Tide Bell is a focus for conversation about our relationship with the coastal environment, past, present and future. Geology, archaeology, history and the biodiversity of the site on land and underwater are addressed. Global warming, climate change and sea level rise are considered and the human consequences, locally and world-wide, are issues to which the Bell rings out its warning.
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Monday, 21 August 2017
Thursday, 18 May 2017
Bell and Refugees
Impression of the Time and Tide Bell at Mablethorpe
Detail
"There's no refugee crisis, but only human crisis. In dealing with refugees we've lost our very basic values. In this time of uncertainty, we need more tolerance, compassion and trust for each other since we all are one. Otherwise, humanity will face an even bigger crisis."Ai Weiwei.
From the National Gallery in Prague.
From the National Gallery in Prague.
Tuesday, 25 April 2017
Art, Science and the Sea
People interested in the meeting of arts, science and the sea may like to explore the work of Scarborough-based Invisible Dust.
Invisible Dust works with leading artists and scientists to produce unique and exciting works of contemporary art and new scientific ideas exploring our environment and climate change.
Invisible Dust are behind the current show, Offshore: artists explore the sea, at Ferens Art Gallery and Hull Maritime Museum, as part of Hull's Year as City of Culture.
1 April – 28 August 2017
Linked to this is the Sounding The Sea: Symposium 2017 in June.
Organised by Invisible Dust and Steven Bode – Sounding the Sea is taking place at Ferens Gallery and The University of Hull, 15 – 16 June 2017.
Nekton Mission and VRTÜL: the submersible that took author China Miéville on a 300m descent into the deep ocean, Bermuda expedition, 2016
Wednesday, 22 March 2017
Introducing the Time and Tide Bell Project.
A permanent installation around the U.K. of bells rung by
the sea at high tide.
Marcus Vergette has designed a bell with a new harmonic
relationship, which can sound different notes from the same strike, and is
played by the movement of the waves creating a varying musical pattern. This
bell has been installed at the high tide mark at a number of diverse sites around
the country, from urban centres to open stretches of coastline. To create,
celebrate, and reinforce connections, between different parts of the country,
between the land and the sea; between ourselves, our history, and our
environment. Additionally as sea levels rise as an effect of climate change,
the periods of bell strikes will become more and more frequent, and as the
bells become submerged in the rising waters the pitch will vary.
The first bell was installed in July 2009 at Appledore,
Devon: the second on Bosta beach Gt. Bernera, Outer Hebrides in June 2010: the
third at Trinity Buoy Wharf, London in September 2010. The fourth installed in Aberdyfi, Wales August
2011, and the fifth Anglesey, Spring 2014.
Lincolnshire will host the sixth.
The integrity of the Time and Tide Bell project nationally
is in the choice of the sites and how they connect. Each site brings something particular and
unique to the whole group.
Appledore, Devon (installed May, 2009), in North Devon, on
the Taw and Torridge estuary, an ancient shipbuilding town with connections
east and west, through export of domestic ceramics to the West Indies as part
of the slave trade, to ball clay still being shipped to Russia. Here are some of
the highest tides in Europe, the base of the bell marks the moment the water is
over the bar and ships may leave or enter the estuary.
Isle of Bernera, ( installed June 19, 2010) on the northwest
fringe Lewis, in the Outer Hebrides; is some of the oldest rock/land on earth,
and has been resisting the ravages of sea for 3 - 400,000,000 years, from
before the fossil record. This island
has a complex history of courage, and independence in the face of resource
depletion and oppression, with barely a tree now left on the island. Bosta
beach has been the point of arrival and departure for many different groups and
cultures from the Vikings to the clearances.
Trinity Buoy Wharf, (installed Sept 19, 2010) London, on the
embankment wall of the Thames, 28 seconds east of the Meridian Line. One of this bell’s potential meanings is as a
time-piece or time-marker, both in the way the bell is rung by the movement of
the sea at high tide daily, and as a long time marker of sea levels and present
shoreline. Here Michael Faraday built a
lighthouse to experiment with electric lighting for lighthouses, lighthouse
keepers were trained, and navigation buoys were made. This site is the confluence of the Lee and the
Thames rivers which twist and turns between walls and embankments, through
factories and houses as it winds its way from the central heart of England to
the sea.
Trinity
Buoy Wharf, London
Aberdyfi, Wales ( installed August 2011) clinging to the
rocky edge of Snowdonia, on the estuary of the historic river Dovey, flowing
down the mountain Arran Mawddy to Cardigan Bay, the dividing line between north
and south Wales. Aberdyfi is referred to
in ancient Gaelic legend and song as the former kingdom of Cantre’r Gwaelod now
submerged beneath Cardigan Bay, and its bells which, it is said, can be heard
ringing beneath the water. Here the tree
stumps from the post ice age forests are revealed at low tide. The ancient
Gaelic legend perhaps referring to ice melt at the end of the last ice age and
the formation of the bay.
Aberdyfi, under the pier.
Cemaes, Anglesey ( to be installed Spring 2013) Cemaes Bay
is on the north coast of Angelsey and is an area of outstanding natural beauty,
with a unique history and some of the most geologically important shoreline in
Britain, whose signifigance has been recognized internationally. Local legend insists that St Patrick was
shipwrecked on Ynys Badrig, where he founded a church in 440 AD. However this project is not only to connect
with the past but also to engage with the present and future. Around Cemaes there is a long history of
varied land use, with farming, industry, and mining, and more recently wind
farms, and a nuclear power station. The
Time and Tide Bell has become a way for residents and visitors to connect with
their own history and environment, as an instrument of measurement, as a
musical instrument, as a sculpture, and a focus for music, events, exchanges,
etc, both locally and between the different bell sites.
The Bell at Mablethorpe North End will be the sixth in the
series and two more are planned for Morecombe Bay in Lancashire and
Happisburgh, Norfolk.
Sunday, 19 March 2017
Foreword by the sculptor, Marcus Vergette
The Time and Tide Bell
Project background and history and why Mablethorpe North End
I first became interested in bells at the end of the Foot
and Mouth epidemic in my Parish in 2001, when the movement restrictions were
lifted and we could leave our farms for the first time in six months. My neighbour, the captain of the tower, went
up to the church and rang the church bells all day. I hadn't noticed that this sound had been
missing all that time. I was drawn up
the hill to the church where he showed me the bells in the bell tower. I was amazed to discover these enormous
bronze sculptures secreted away in my small rural parish.
I was asked by, and made with, the residents of my village
of Highampton, a commemoration of the hardship endured by the people in the
parish, and the terrible slaughter of the animals during the Foot and Mouth
epidemic. We made what is thought to be
the first public access bell in the UK. In
order to create a democratic bell that could be rung by anyone, there were many
legal and social obstacles that were successfully overcome. The bell now celebrates the community's survival
and strength, and is rung by many people, for their own reasons.
This bell was cast at Whitechapel Bell Foundry, where bells
have been cast in essentially the same way on the same site for 600 years. While I was watching the tuning process of
this bell the seed was sown for this present work. I used new computer modelling techniques for
understanding wave-form and vibration in materials to invent a new bell form
with new notes and harmonies within the bell. In exploring a new bell sound I explore a shape,
and in a shape a sound.
The new bell and choice of installation sites draw a
different map of our island. Each site
brings something particular and unique to the whole group. Bells tell stories of the past very easily,
but it is not the intention of this project to only mark and connect historic
events, but also to look forward. Narrow
horizons and short time frames are always misleading and make it difficult to understand
the dramatic changes we have seen over the last few years and whether they will
lead to chaos or a better future. These
bells are designed to work for a long time. For me the character of each site, both in the
people and their stories and the movement of the water, are directly related
to, and are results of, the shape of the land. Although we are shaped by our land, we also shape it.
The first bell installation was Appledore, in North Devon,
on the Taw and Torridge estuary. Appledore has some of the world’s highest
tides; this ancient shipbuilding port has connections to the west, through
export of domestic ceramic wares to the West Indies during the slave trade, and
to the east with ball clays which are still regularly being shipped through the
Baltic to Russia. The estuary is
surrounded by fertile green fields with hedges and livestock. Each day up to 9 metres of water flood
into and out of the estuary. This rhythm
is echoed by the dairy cows in the fields as they are milked twice daily. The bell sounds when the water is over the
sand bar at the mouth of the estuary and the cargo ships and fishing boats may
leave or enter the estuary.
The next site was Great Bernera in the Outer Hebrides. The island largely consists of Lewisian gneiss,
it is some of the oldest rock and land on earth, which has been resisting the
ravages of the sea for approximately 3000 million years, before the fossil
record began. There is no sand on the
beach, only crushed sea shells. There is
barely a tree now left on the island. Even
without knowing the age of the rock you feel the primitive power of this
landscape. This seems reflected somehow
in the people on the island; a place that has a long and complex history of
courage and independence in the face of hardship and resource depletion. Where the bell is on Bosta Beach has been the
point of arrival and departure for many different groups and cultures from the
Vikings to the Clearances. Paradoxically, islands seem to be made larger by the sea that surrounds
them. The element that might reduce
them, which might be thought to besiege them, has the opposite effect. The sea elevates a few acres into something
they would never be if hidden in the mass of the mainland. They become gardens in the world of water.
One possible function of this bell is as a time-piece or
time-marker, both in the way the bell is rung daily by the movement of the sea
at high tide, and as a long time marker of sea levels and present shoreline. The bell at Trinity Buoy Wharf, London, was installed
on the embankment wall of the Thames, 28 seconds east of the prime
meridian. Trinity Buoy Wharf now is an
interesting development in urban planning, combining living accommodation, arts
and creative industries, and business. Historically,
at this wharf Michael Faraday built a lighthouse to conduct experiments with
electric lights for lighthouses, lighthouse keepers were trained, and
navigation buoys were made. Here is the
junction of the Lea and the Thames, both of which twist and turn through grassy
banks and fields, between walls and embankments, through factories and houses,
as they wind their way to the sea from the central heart of England through the
capital, out past the further control of the Thames Barrier.
Aberdyfi, Wales, where the fourth bell was installed,
contrasts with the constantly reshaped and controlled landscape of the
Thames. Here is one of the oldest
legends of bells under the sea. Aberdyfi
is referred to in ancient Gaelic legend and song about the kingdom of Cantre’r
Gwaelod, a kingdom now submerged beneath Cardigan Bay. The origins of the legend are lost in the
mists of time, but perhaps the ancient Gaelic legend refers to ice melt at the
end of the last ice age, the inundation of the land, and the formation of the Bay. It is said that its bells can be heard
ringing beneath the water. At low tide
sometimes the tree stumps of ancient forests are revealed, radio-carbon dating
suggests that these trees died around 3500 BC. On one side of the estuary are dunes, on the other, Snowdonia. The historic river Dovey, carves down Aran
Mawddwy and flows into Cardigan Bay. Locals
call The Dovey the dividing line between north and south Wales, but it also connects
them.
The fifth bell in Cemaes Bay, is on the north coast of Anglesey. This is an area of outstanding natural
beauty, and some of the most geologically complex shoreline in Britain, whose
significance has recently been recognized internationally by UNESCO as a Geopark. Here in Cemaes Bay there is a long history and
varied history of land use evident, with signs of farming, industry, and mining
and, more recently, wind farms and a nuclear power station visible. Standing beside the bell one can see and
consider our relationship to our environment and also the connections across
the water; Dublin is closer than Cardiff, and local legend insists that St
Patrick was shipwrecked on Ynys Badrig, where he founded a church in 440 AD.
Mablethorpe North End Beach, Lincolnshire, is critical in
the constellation of the Bells, and brings something unique and particular to
the whole project. Most of the west
coast of Britain is unchanging stone cliffs and estuaries, whereas this stretch
of Eastern coastline is some of the fastest changing coastline in Britain. Here people have been dealing with changes in
sea level for hundreds, even thousands
of years, and have much to offer as the rest of us begin to confront these
problems. Now in some places near
Theddlethorpe and Mablethorpe the land behind the sea defences is 3 m below sea
level at high tide, and in others the old sea defences have already been
allowed to be breached and the sea reclaimed some of the land in front of new
defences built further back. The tide
peaking at different places at different times of day, means that when the other
bells are silent the one at Mablethorpe North End will be ringing.
In the places where the Time and Tide Bell has been
installed it has become a way for residents and visitors to connect with their
own history and environment, as an instrument of measurement, as a musical
instrument, as a sculpture. It has also
become a focus for music, events, exchanges, etc., both locally and between the
different Bell sites. Every Bell has its
own inscription on the wave catcher, written by the community around the Bell;
in this way the bell says what those who experience it regularly want it to
say. Bells speak in celebration and in
loss; they are a mouth piece for our culture. I would like to thank all those people in the communities where the Time
and Tide Bell has been, or is going to be installed. Without their support,
vision, and enthusiasm no Time and Tide bells would have been installed.
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