Iron : made in the stars, gifted to the universe upon their
deaths. More plentiful than any other metal. It is in our blood. It is in the
land. The acid waters from the high, peated moorland carried the iron down to deposit it as pans of bog-iron in the extensive marshlands that once surrounded the village of Maentwrog. This iron was discovered and worked by the ancient smiths of the Bronze Age, ushering in a new Age of : Iron.
Nebulae of rust stain the starscapes of tiny pits and scratches left by the footsteps of quarriers. Slate,
once above their head, now at their feet reflecting the infinite night above.
Of the land, of the stars.
The Stars, At Our Feet (i) photograph by Remy Dean, 2016 |
In December 2015, the Snowdonia National Park was officially designated the world's tenth International Dark Sky Reserve. This news, and the poetic image of slate miners returning to their barracks
on a rare, clear night, their heavy work-boots splashing in the puddles and mixing
the reflection of the stars with their own, were the seeds for an on-going series of images I have titled, The Stars, At Our Feet...
The Stars, At Our Feet (ii) photograph by Remy Dean, 2016 |
I took the title for this series of photographs from a poem by an anonymous
Cwmorthin miner, found written on the back of a shipping slip, dated 1889.
You can read the News Release about Snowdonia becoming a Dark Skies Reserve HERE.
Find more about the Cwmorthin Quarries HERE.
Read about Peter Crew's archaeological excavations at Bryn y Castell hillfort and subsequent findings related to bog iron and the Iron Age significance of the Maentwrog area HERE.
Work produced during this Residency will be on show in the Stable Block,
Plas Tan y Bwlch, over this Yuletide, and through Spring 2017...
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