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15 August 2024
Starts: 12:15
Ends: 14:00
Discover the Magic of the Caledonian Canal
Guided walk led by Fiona of the High Life Highland Countryside Rangers, exploring history, nature sights along the route. Meet at Kilmallie Community Centre, Station Road, Corpach PH33 7JH. Cost £7. Booking via Eventbrite
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15 August 2024
Starts: 19:30
Women as Pattern-Makers in Insular Art
Online talk by Dr Cynthia Thickpenny
Organised by Groam House Museum. For details and to book tickets, click here
The Insular artists of early medieval Ireland and Britain (c. AD 600-1100) developed a virtuosic form of ornament referred to in this lecture as 'transmutation', in which they physically manipulated different abstract patterns, so that one pattern transformed seamlessly into another pattern that possessed a radically different underlying geometric structure than the first. Furthermore, they also nurtured a unique tradition of key pattern, a design comprised of angular spiral shapes that is found across the globe, but which Insular artists raised to an extreme level of complexity and which they sometimes included in transmutation. Transmutation and key pattern are particularly common in Pictish sculpture, but also occur in a collection of late 8th- to early 9th-century English embroidered and woven textiles now held in Maaseik, Belgium (Musea Maaseik/Maaseik Museums). Across Britain and Ireland in this period, women were the creators of textiles and respected as artists in their own right. In this lecture, Cynthia will present ongoing research from her Leverhulme fellowship project. In particular, she will compare Pictish and early English carved stone, metalwork, and Insular manuscript illuminations, with a set of narrow bands woven in silk and gold from the Maaseik textile collection. These bands were tablet-woven, or created by stringing threads through holes in bone or wooden cards and repeatedly turning the latter to create a patterned textile. Through her combined academic analysis of the key patterns and transmutation on the bands, and her practical, reconstructive research as a tablet-weaver herself, Cynthia will explore how women tablet-weavers impacted the development of Insular transmutation and key pattern in other media like metalwork, manuscripts, and carved stone. These textile survivals therefore shed new light on Insular women's roles as masterful geometers and influential creators of complex ornament alongside male artisans.
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