Cut Flowers

exhibit wide3Cut Flowers at the Beaumont Gallery, Mere currently features work from the Forced Walks: Honouring Esther collection. Cut Flowers runs until Sunday April 23.

B Gal remnants

image courtesy Beaumont Gallery

BGal portraitsJPG

image courtesy Beaumont Gallery

B Gal soilIn addition to work from Lorna’s practice exploring inherited trauma, the exhibition includes the Honouring Esther soil installation with sounds from the walk assembled by Richard White. On the opening night of Cut Flowers Richard created a ‘pop up installation’ of the films he had made from the walks projected over a tea service in a shed in the foyer of the Beaumont Gallery.

shedprojection2

shedprojection tea

BGal proj

Image courtesy Beaumont Gallery

This is a joint show with Andrew Walworth who also curated the exhibition: “This exhibition comes from a need to articulate what a refugee from a foreign state means to a person living well away from the actuality of war, how refugees are perceived in the modern world – their almost universal no-status – and the way in which they are treated. I invited Lorna to exhibit as she has personal knowledge of the worst aspects of war and the subsequent fallout. Her works also act as a prompt, a historical reminder for us to think about when reading opinions about current wars and refugees.”

Click to view youtube clip of installation

Monmouth Rebellion

The local resonances surface. The  walk crosses another trail in the long struggle for human rights.

The Monmouth Rebellion of 1685 began in Lyme Regis and was crushed in the same year on Sedgemoor. Following a set back at Keynsham the ‘Pitchfork’ army headed east, they were refused entry to Bath and headed for Norton St Phillip. We walk towards their ghosts.

The George at Norton St Philip

picture credit Geoff Williams.
The George Inn: in 1685, for a few days, the headquarters of Duke of Monmouth

On the throne in 1685, following the death of Charles II, was James II, Charles’ brother, a Roman Catholic. Charles had regained royal power following the collapse of the Commonwealth and quickly dismantled the political and religious freedoms established following the Civil War. Republican ideas were still strong in the country and the accession to the throne of James, was feared by many to be a further drift towards a return to absolute Roman Catholic rule.  This was especially true in the West Country, The Duke of Monmouth, Charles II’s bastard son, hoped to lead a Protestant uprising and overthrow James.

Monmouth was supported by republicans as well as those supporting a constituional monarchy. People from Somerset, Dorset and Wiltshire joined the rebellion some of them were nonconformist Christians who had suffered persecution under Charles II. Others were disaffected because of the economic recession which had recently hit the south west, most were labourers and artisans.  Amongst their number were workers from the mills and workshops of Frome.

At Norton St Philip a further skirmish had this ‘Pitchfork’ army falling back to Frome, possibly along the roads we walk. Ultimately they headed off to Wells and across the Somerset levels towards their last stand at Sedgemoor.

A vicious and terrible repression followed, famously known as the Bloody Assizes, in Wells alone on a single day 500 men were tried and most sentenced to death. 12 executions took place at Norton St Phillip. Frome rebels are reported to have also been hung, drawn and quartered at Gore Hedge, just past the top of what is now Bath Street. Others were transported to the West Indies. The families of the Taunton schoolgirls who had presented a banner to welcome Monmouth had to pay a ransom for their release.

More info here: Monmouth Rebellion and Bloody Assizes