THIS FRACTURED LAND (STORIES FROM THE PAST AND FUTURE)

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In this fascinating new exhibition five visual artists explore the changing landscape of England from different perspectives

30 March – 7 July 2024

Inspired by its history and imaginative power, the artists, Lian Chan, Ellie Laycock, Jane Peacock, Ellie Reid and Caroline Thomson, look at the land from a geological, historical, social and mythological point of view. With access to the Museum’s collections, the work that they have created specifically for this exhibition encompasses themes of storytelling, the ancient past, social conflict over land, the uncertain future of climate change and the emotional power of the land itself.

On display alongside their work which includes paintings, prints, photography, sculpture and film will be objects from the collections that inspired them, including paintings by the war artist John Nash, items of crime and punishment, long-buried gold coins and rocks and fossils from the deep past.

Sam Mason, CEO of Discover Bucks Museum, says:

‘We have been delighted to work with the artists on This Fractured Land exhibition and the wonderful work they’ve created has interpreted the museum collections in exciting new ways. With themes of history and storytelling and references to the woodlands of the Chilterns this promises to be an intriguing, vibrant and thought-provoking show.’

This Fractured Land Events

Saturday 20 April, 10am – 12pm: Artist Lian Chan will lead a guided walk around Whiteleaf exploring the sites painted by John and Paul Nash and sharing how their paintings and story have influenced her work in the exhibition.

Saturday 11 May, 12pm – 1.30pm: The artists will give a panel talk followed by a guided tour of the exhibition which will be an opportunity to hear about their inspiration and themes in the exhibition.

Family art activities will take place during the Easter holidays.

Please book all events at discoverbucksmuseum.org

This Fractured Land opens on Saturday 30 March and runs until Sunday 7 July 2024. An illustrated book will accompany the exhibition and be available to buy.

For opening times, ticket prices and booking information visit discoverbucksmuseum.org

Discover Bucks Museum, Church Street, Aylesbury HP20 2QP

 

 

ABOUT THE ARTISTS

 

Lian Chan creates digitally ruptured landscapes from her photographs of the Chilterns and its geological specimens. Her works unfold the past to respond to climatic and global concerns of the present and future. Reinterpreting the paintings of Whiteleaf by John and Paul Nash from the Museum collections, she references the trauma the brothers had witnessed on the front lines of WWI and considers the capacity of the land to heal and act as salve. www.lianchan.co.uk  www.instagram.com/lianchanartist

 

Ellie Laycock revisits bucolic sites where hundreds of years ago in the ‘Commotion Time’, ownership and public rights of land caused tension and social unrest, creating an uneasy visual record with clear parallels to political and economic stresses today. www.ellielaycock.co.uk  www.instagram.com/ellie_laycock

 

Jane Peacock makes paintings and prints that imagine a future of the land in millennia to come, long after humans have ceased to exist. Inspired by walks in ancient pathways and earthworks in the Chilterns, she uses repeating motifs such as caves and hillsides to create an abstracted rendering of future landscapes, whilst referencing fossils from human activity in the past, from cave paintings to early tools, and plastic bottles adrift in the waterways. www.janepeacock.art  www.instagram.com/jane_peacock_art

Ellie Reid is interested in our human connection to our environment. For this exhibition she has created an installation that responds specifically to the Harding room at Discover Bucks Museum. Considering the Chiltern hills in deep time, once under water, she has imagined a landscape that through shifting sea levels, is being revealed to us. A landscape that could be of the past or of the future. www.elliereid.art  www.instagram.com/elliereid.art

 

Caroline Thomson creates dreamlike paintings of landscapes often peopled by children. She is inspired by the rich history of woodlands which act as a metaphor for retreat, transformation or the unknown. Ideas around childhood, the nature of imagination and memory are entangled in these enchanted spaces. Works included draw inspiration from specific landscapes, drawing parallels between sites as far reaching as Whiteleaf Woods, Bucks, Chanctonbury Ring, Sussex and Lydford Gorge, Devon. www.carolinethomson.com  www.instagram.com/carolinethomsonart

 

Together the artists work as Fractured Land Collective

www.instagram.com/fracturedlandcollective

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