Œuvre d'art public

Stillness

J. Lynn Campbell, Stillness, 2007
Location:
Oeno Gallery, 316 route Old Orchard , Carrying Place, ON, K0K 1L0, Canada
Artwork creator(s): 
Campbell, J. Lynn
Text author(s): 
Campbell, J. Lynn
Installation year: 
2007
Remarks on location: 

Sur le domaine, Carrying Place est situé dans le comté du Prince Édouard (Prince Edward County)

Description: 

Planche de granit reposant sur une structure en bois. On peut lire un mot sur le granit.

Text of the artwork: 

STI

LLN

ESS

Artwork theme: 
Repos, harmonie, nature
History: 

Création de l’oeuvre en 1996. Exposition This Is Not a Renaissance Garden, Oeno Gallery, Prince Edward County, 2 juin-15 octobre 2007. Entreposée dans un espace privé, collection de l’artiste (automne 2008).

Event date(s): 
2007
Note(s): 

«I chose black granite as the material for this work because of its colour and reflective quality. Using a portrait format measuring 2 feet by 4 feet, its placement is 1 inch above the gallery floor so as to give the illusion of the stone floating. Cut into the polished surface, the word ‘stillness’, divided below the level of syllables, is done so to suggests layers. It requires one to slow down when attempting to sound the word. The gold and silver circles above and below the letters symbolize the dualism found in nature. The use of word ‘stillness’ here does not mean motionless, rather it includes motion. Where stillness includes motion, there exists a repose that is an inner concentration of motion. The colouration of black granite gives a sense of depth and suggests concealment. The gravity of the stone comes to bear and rest, and pulls one towards earth’s solidity. When I speak of earth, I am referring to what is natural to earth, not the world as defined by culture and human action. All things of earth, and earth itself as a whole, flow together into a reciprocal accord. Earth is present as the sheltering agent that nourishes and protects in this unanimity. It unfolds itself in an inexhaustible multiplicity of modes and shapes. Each of its elements holds a deep level of intimacy known in the earth’s timelessness. This intimacy is the result of opposing elements letting go into a simple belonging to one another. The earth reveals a capacity and endurance reflected in its ongoing reconciliation of the heterogeneous forces within. Stillness is where differences rest in unity.»

© J. Lynn Campbell, 1996

 

Exhibition essay, In Absentia by Catherine Elliot Shaw, curator. "Situating the Body", McIntosh Gallery, University of Western Ontario, London, 2008

Propriétaire(s): 
J. Lynn Cambpell