Faye Claridge continues to blog about her artist's residency for Shifting Worlds at Ironbridge Gorge Museum with Meadow Arts
"Through
research and residencies I’m very lucky to visit a wide range of places, but
I’m willing to admit the Aga works were a bit of a shock.
Ponderous
artists seldom work in places with potentially dangerous air quality, noise
levels and lack of natural light.
The
Coalbrookdale foundry is a place where hard, heavy, noisy, dirty work takes
place. It’s an environment that’s uncommonly stressful on the senses, where
workers have to be protected in some areas with breathing apparatus, fireproof
suits, visors, ear defenders… you get the picture.
Yet there’s
a really strong affection for the place. This is partly due its history as so
many generations have worked foundries here from even before Abraham Darby’s
arrival in 1709. But it’s also due to the nature of the work itself, described
slightly reluctantly by the current manager as “a bit macho”. “It doesn’t suit
everyone,” he tells me, possibly as a friendly jibe to the ridiculousness of me
turning up for a tour in flip-flops and dress (soon rectified with borrowed
overalls and boots).
Debbie (the
only female employee at the foundry) describes the sound of the works as “a
heartbeat” and says it doesn’t feel right when it’s quieter.
“Everybody
hates it when machines are broken or away for repair,” someone else tells me.
“The men want to be busy and they like to work hard.” It’s interesting that at
the moment there are more job vacancies next-door at the museum than there are
in the foundry."
Faye Claridge: Shifting Worlds artist residency, Ironbridge Gorge Museums, June-December 2015
Shifting Worlds: contemporary art and the Birthplace of Industry is a contemporary art programme produced in a partnership between Meadow Arts and the Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust, funded by Arts Council England.
All exhibited work and events take place at Coalbrookdale, the site of three of the ten exciting and varied museums that make up the Ironbridge Gorge Museums. The museums give a fascinating insight into the people, processes and landscape of the Industrial Revolution and its impact on the present day.
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