Sibylle Guipaud describes the work of one Belfast-based
artist.
English
artist Michael Brennand-Wood draws with fabrics. At the age
of fifty he makes handcraft in an expressive way, learning
from the work of Rauschenberg, Tapiès and Cristo. Originally
from Manchester, Brennand-Wood gained his Fine Art degree
there in 1975. Two years later, he completed his M.A. in Birmingham.
"When I went to Art school, I thought 'I'm going to be
a painter or a sculptor' and I got interested in using cloth
as well, but in an expressive way," explains Brennand-Wood.1
He finally hit what was, for him, the right track: "I
didn't want to make dresses or to make furnishings...I would
hopefully make art out of cloth."
It was an
old family story. "My grand-mother on my mother's side
was a weaver in a cotton mill...North of England used to be
a big weaving-cotton area...when I was a little boy I used
to play a lot with fabric."
Using fabric in Fine Art is an area
that has not been widely developed. Brennand-Wood has at times
experienced a sort of isolation in the art world. "It
kind of pushes you into an area very much in your own. You
are between painting, sculpture, textiles...you are in this
other world." But far from being afraid of uncharted
territory, Brennand-Wood is happy with breaking new ground:
"What is exciting about this is that it is really new,
you can do different things...I like that."
Twenty years ago Brennand-Wood came
to Belfast for the first time as a lecturer at the University
of Ulster. Since then, he has kept on coming back. He is currently
researcher in historical textiles there.
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Michael Brennand-Wood: Fragrance
and flavour of truth (detail), 2002, wood, thread,
mosaic; courtesy the artist
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Last year, he was the selector of
the first handcraft exhibition at the Ormeau Baths Gallery,
in Belfast. Brennand-Wood exhibited several of his own works
as well. His research into historical textiles obviously provides
the thread of his inspiration. Maid of sugar, made of spice
is an example of an original technique, using the process
of inlaying fabric on a painted-wood ground. "I cut greys
or holes into the wood and then I insert the fabric into that
surface." The pattern is inspired by pieces of Italian
sixteenth-century lace, but Brennand-Wood diverts this from
its original and expected use. Traditionally women made lace
on a small and delicate scale. "It is an obvious symbol
of femininity...As a man who works in textiles what I was
really trying to do was to reclaim lace fabric for men...change
people's appreciation of something they normally see as very
small fragments." In order to change the connotation
of the lace pattern, Brennand-Wood blows it up. It is a big
work, 3.5m wide by 1.2m high. An interior and essentially
domesticated construct thus becomes an architectural piece
whose shape is reminiscent of stained glass.
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Michael Brennand-Wood: Destroy
the heart, 1999-2000; courtesy the artist
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The series of work called The fragrance
and the flavour of the truth shows
the variety of the artist's research. The process is innovative.
"Lines are cut from wood then it's covered in white mosaics
and then it's banded around with the thread. It won't be the
same twice." It is like a Japanese calligraphy. Pieces
of writing fascinate the artist: "letter forms, script
forms, how a language is formed really."
The composition does not follow a
particular scheme. It is almost the opposite of Maid of
sugar, made of spice because of the lack of background, as if it has been
dissolved. As a consequence, "every time you move it
you change the composition."
Brennand-Wood's creativity travels.
He has been participating in exhibitions in many locations,
from Australia to Norway, though his work is particularly
appreciated in Japan. He first went there in 1998. "Japanese
contemporary textiles are very good and I think they basically
like my work."
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Michael Brennand-Wood: from Stars
underfoot, 2002, 120 x 120 cm; courtesy the artist;
click on the image to see it enlarged
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But Brennand-Wood is also very keen
on working in the UK. In 2002 he created a series of thirty-five
works entitled Stars underfoot within the framework of the Year of the Artist organised
in the UK. A partnership was set up between Brennand-Wood,
a florist and a photographer. The aim of the project was to
question the relationship between flowers and textiles. "All
through the history of textiles, they have had flowers...I
didn't like it very much...I use flowers not as an image but
as a material, in a way making the pattern in real flowers
rather than in an allusion to flowers." That is why Brennand-Wood
adds other materials like glass or pieces of marble. The result
is a "floral installation using thousand of flowers on
my studio floor." It's an ambitious production with a
standard scale of 1.20m by 1.20m. For the artist, making a
photographic record is crucial because, of course, the flowers
die.
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Michael Brennand-Wood: from Stars
underfoot, 2002, 120 x 120 cm; courtesy the artist;
click on the image to see it enlarged
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Brennand-Wood is currently involved
in a new work for the A&E service of the Royal Aberdeen
Children's Hospital in Scotland. He is working on the idea
of a sand-moving circle similar to an hourglass. "I try
to be positive about the idea of waiting in a hospital."
Flowers or sand, Brennand-Wood surely knows how to play with
the elements.
Sibylle Guipaud, a native of
Toulouse with a Masters in Cultural History, is pursuing a
career in journalism.
1All
quotes are from an interview by the author with the artist,
which took place in Belfast in March 2003.
Do
you have an opinion on this article? If so, please click
| Responses so far |
| Comment 1 |
thanks for writing about something "spicy"
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| Comment 2 |
You havent got any layered images of his!
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