Artist Moira Maclean began her search for old wallpaper more than a decade ago now, and utilizes the fragments she collects from old buildings in her work. Gathering her materials often involves finding direct routes into the interiors of derelict houses, but wallpapers, paint and flooring are the very stuff of our real lives:
“To me its all linked to early childhood memories,” says Moira, “it’s linked to precious things and a way of life that is disappearing. Houses aren’t painted or decorated like that anymore – everyone’s into brown now, and I hate brown, it’s dull. For me the wallpapers are slightly melancholy but also a celebration. Houses are precious receptacles of lifestyles and community. I also always had a thing about maps and edges, islands. People are islands, self contained.”
“The Sail Loft, the old sea dog. There should be one in every port and all is now in the melting pot.”
When it came to gathering the wallpaper from the Sail Loft, Moira and Ian’s entry to the building may have been through a more conventional route, but the discoveries they made inside were far from conventional. Layer upon layer of bright coloured, often fancy coverings coated the walls. Each layer applied with purpose, maybe a different purpose each time signifying the many uses this space has had in its lifetime. And each layer had to be taken down, peeled back, preserved on site as best as could be achieved before being taken to Moira’s studio.
While Moira often manages to get only small fragments from old interiors, the generous Sail Loft gave up room sized remnants of his history, and whilst shedding its skin also showed off its tattoes, finding as much grace and garishness in a harbour building as would have brought a smile to Jean Genet’s face.
There among the layers on the walls Ian and Moira found pencil drawings of boats and sailors, bawdy verse, old advert posters and pin-up photos of the likes of Marilyn Monroe and Diana Dors in basque and fishnets, replete with black pencil moustache. The Sail Loft, the old sea dog. There should be one in every port and all is now in the melting pot.
Along with Moira’s work on the interior, Ian is busy gathering reminiscences, old stories and snippets from those who new and worked in the place, stories that bind land and sea together, stories that bind Stornoway to the world via the old sea passages. These will be utilized on a CD but the rhythms of the voices will also form the basis of a newly commissioned piece of music for a performance in the harbour and Moira’s work will be the basis of an exhibition at An Lanntair.
Tying it all together is a new take on a poignant story from the Morrison Collection. The Morrison in question was a Stornoway fish curer from early in the 20th century. But Morrison’s tales were not published until the 1960s, and the book included the sorry tale of a Swedish captain who met his death in the waters around Cape Wrath.
In retelling the story Ian has brought in Swedish artist Carina Fihn who has reworked the tale from the viewpoint of the sailor’s mother and this connection will be the bridge across all the strands of this project.
To this Ian has added Finish artist Mikko Paakkola, and this project seems to be blessed with good fortune from the start for Ian has been gifted a considerable quantity of old sail cloth, some of which Mikka will utilize in his work during a residency in Stornoway.
Watch this space for updates on how the Sail Loft project is progressing.
© Peter Urpeth, 2004
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