SCULPTURE should be seen in situ, and Kildrummy Castle in Strathdon, a
ruined Jacobite stronghold, provides a dynamic backdrop for these 14
exhibits by selected artists from Great Britain and beyond, four of whom
are displaying invited works which are to remain in North-east sites.
Attracting young experimental artists, their visible enthusiasm and
creativity encourage you to get involved with their work, using the vast
hilly space to enjoy both individual pieces and the entire show. Peter
Bevan's Gazebo, a hollow-built representation of a human figure, is the
most interactive, as you can step into its cocoon and peer out through
its many haphazardly pieced holes.
Here are comments on humanity, society and the organic world -- Laura
White's Breathe is a hatched limestone pod whose slug has travelled down
the grass bank, while Charles Polson's Soft Machine is disturbing -- its
green and pink concrete piled like damp, mouldy rolls of blankets.
There is past and present history -- Diane Maclean's Shoe echoes the
tower of an ancient castle, and Agneta Stening's Throne of the Horn is a
granite echo of Cretan history.
The most memorable piece for me is by Iain McColl (official assistant
war artist with Peter Howson in Bosnia), who models his piece on the
notorious Bosnian gang who attack travellers -- the Fishhead Gang, three
looming black-hooded figures whose thin-shaped heads, blown by the wind,
follow you around.
Joseph Ingleby is the humourist of the group -- Reservoir Tap with its
steel vat and flower-like lid is an almost abstract, organic form. This
exhibition transfers next month to the MacRobert Art Centre at Stirling
University where it will be on show until December.
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