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Wall There Is To See
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I had a bit of a revelation on my return home from Britain
some
years ago, after having
visited several dry stone wallers in Scotland and England. As the
airplane was flying over
the green countryside, it occurred to me that the beautiful patterns
of walled and hedged
fields below took on the same kind of shapes as the stones which
fit together so well in
the walls I had been looking at during my travels.
It had been a bit of a working holiday that year. I had helped build
two walls in Yorkshire
and then went and spent some time in Scotland helping repair an old
granite fieldstone
dry stone wall near an historic castle. What I was seeing reproduced
everywhere in the
landscape below, was the same quilt-like pattern I had been
appreciating in those historic
walls of dry stacked stones . It has been said that dry stone walls
create unique
microcosms but what about the macrocosm of the larger surface of
country they embrace?
The network of stone shapes within any well-built wall, and the
patterns these walls
create, as they outline field and pasture throughout the British
countryside, hold the same
fascination for me . Why is it ,when looking down from above, there
is such similar beauty
in the patchwork of colours and lines? Is it just the tidiness? Or
is there an association of a
deeper essence? The dense geological material which is the 'stuff'
of the thousands of
miles of Britain’s 'borders without mortar', reminds me of the empty
crevices throughout
the walls themselves. In essence the thin lines are nothing and
everything, in the same way
a 'joint' can be defined as either a 'joining' or a 'separation'.
The beauty of any terrain that has been gradually outlined by roads
and rivers and walls, is
the beauty of definition. This grasping of ‘definition’ is essential
to our seeing anything at
all. More importantly, when any area of interest is carefully
outlined, it often produces a
pleasing aesthetic quality.
Many paintings by the Group of Seven employ this same wonderful
effect. The shapes of
trees and branches are often traced with thin ribbons of bright
colour showing off the
vibrancy of their design, as if to suggest nature is perceived more
perfectly when it is seen
as being ‘held together’ by outlines. The shapes jump out of the
canvas, while at the same
time nestle into each other perfectly, in the same way different
shapes fit together so well
in a box of assorted chocolates. Maybe that’s why I have a tendency
to describe these
kinds of pleasing arrangements as “yummy” of “fruity”.
A good painter can trace the beauty of any landscape. A waller is
just a different kind of
landscape artist. Though they work with nothing but rocks and have
bigger canvases, they
are creating more than just a random patchwork of fields. The large
flowing contours they
define are really the outlines of expediency; the lines made by
clearing and hauling the
stones to the closest and often straightest perimeter, before
committing to making
something ‘continuous’ of them. Instead of the pasture shapes all
merging into each
other, there is an ordered gathering or ‘crystallization’ of stones
along the outside
perimeters.
Everything fits, because the walls, by definition, have dual
functionality. They act as
continuous borders on both sides of each field. The thin ribbons
between each field
amount to nothing and yet they are everything. They are the
decoration and the structure.
All the interesting planes and surfaces of the land butt up to one
another to become an
organized and purposeful network. The fields ‘materialize’ out of
necessity, almost like
crowded bubbles forming in foam. Perhaps millions of years ago all
the multi-faceted
stones began forming in the same way.
Submitted by John Shaw-Rimmington
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