Edisteve

By edisteve

Where to go on a wet Sunday afternoon?

We went to the Gallery of Modern Art in Belford Road and here is our take on the Boyle families' Barra Project installation.

Here is some information from their website detailing the Barra project:

Boyle Family - Barra project, World Series, 1992 ? 2010
On show at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh
Barra exhibition now open until 13 February 2011

The Boyle Family consider themselves contemporary archaeologists, examining and presenting evidence of the world as it is. At the core of their work is the World Series which began in 1968 with the random selection of 1000 sites from a large map of the World. For the past forty years they have worked on twenty five World Series projects, locating the exact sites and studying each in a variety of ways. Their earth studies combine real material from the site with resins and paints to record it as accurately as they can. They also examine plant and animal life at the site, nearby human habitation, the weather and themselves as active agents engaged in the project.

There are three British sites: one on the island of Bute; one in Norfolk and one at the coast of the Hebridean island of Barra. Boyle Family?s attempts to make the Barra World Series work began in the 1970s and it became one of their major projects, eventually taking eighteen years, and many trips to complete. Some of the problems they encountered were well documented in a memorable film made by Georgia Boyle and Fran Robertson for BBC Scotland in 2001. Following the death of Mark Boyle in 2005 the Barra project has been completed by Joan, Georgia and Sebastian and is now being exhibited for the first time. The finished work includes an extraordinary video installation of the surface of the sea at the exact site, two earth studies made on the island and electron microphotographs of animal and plant life found at the site.

Comments
Sign in or get an account to comment.