by Ruby Taylor | Aug 9, 2014 | All Journal Entries, Foraging, Wakehurst: artist in residence
Hay Wisperer. I’ve discovered another, interesting use for hay rope. Hay wisps. The Working Horse Trust are at Wakehurst and the horses are turning the hay down in Bloomers Valley, my favourite of Wakehurst’s meadows. It’s a steep sided valley...
by Ruby Taylor | Aug 6, 2014 | All Journal Entries, Foraging, Wakehurst: artist in residence
The piece: space, ropes, connection. From the start it was a delight to be invited to be artist in residence here at Wakehurst, working with their meadow plants. I’m in my element with the challenge of working outdoors using foraged materials (as you’ll...
by Ruby Taylor | Aug 1, 2014 | All Journal Entries, Foraging, Wakehurst: artist in residence
Wild & Hairy Hay Rope. The making is nearing completion out here in the barn at Wakehurst, in my Meadow Weave residency. The looping technique I’m using with the hay rope I’ve been making is usually done under tension. Doing it on the flat as I am is...
by Ruby Taylor | Jul 25, 2014 | All Journal Entries, Foraging, Wakehurst: artist in residence
Take Two. I knew with a kind of resigned certainty, even before I reached home as I was driving back from Wakehurst the day it all fell apart, that there was nothing for it but to start all over again. So here I am, out at the barn (my studio for the duration), with...
by Ruby Taylor | Jul 18, 2014 | All Journal Entries, Foraging, Wakehurst: artist in residence
Falling Apart. It was inevitable. I’ve come to recognise this stage and am learning to tolerate it. To even welcome it as an integral and probably necessary part of the creative process. Perhaps it would be more worrying if the falling apart didn’t happen-...
by Ruby Taylor | Jul 13, 2014 | All Journal Entries, Foraging, Wakehurst: artist in residence
Making it While the Sun Shines. I genuinely feel like the Miller’s daughter in the story Rumpelstitskin. I’ve a massive pile of cut hay on one side, and a long snaking hay rope on the other, which I’m looping together to form a structure. I reckon I’ve made 70 metres...