Page 12 - Art First: Will Maclean: Gleaned and Gathered
P. 12

James Caird /South Georgia(2012). Ωese objects in their original forms saved
                           lives, found pathways, made homes, held stories—as tools for thought and
                           for com munication. Hunting weapons (arrows, knives, spears) sit alongside

                           navi ga tion instruments (sextants, compasses)—repurposed into images,
                           new family groups enfolded against each other within his sculptures,
                           removed from their past and their uses. Maclean’s mari time heritage and
                           early experi ences mean he is likely far more attuned than many art ists, and

                           their predom inantly urbanised audiences, to the spe cific qual i ties of tools,
                           resting as they do on efficiency, sharp ness, strength and construction,
                           certainly not on aesthetics. Whilst Scottish and Highland artefacts are
                           many in Maclean’s work, the fact is that  his work has deep resonances

                           with maritime cultures distributed  in time and place all across the globe,
                           from coastal America to the Philippines and Australasia. Craft skills upon
                           which lives depended are not geograph ically specific, after all.


                           ²e ²ird Time: Mineral

                           I believe the third sense of time I have named, that of mineral  time,
                           is the most exciting new reading of Maclean. I use the word ‘mineral’
                           with its suit able echoes of the maritime, although ‘material’ or ‘matter’

                           would do just as well. Appreciating this mineral time is certainly encour -
                           aged by the joy of a studio visit  to the artist where there are numerous
                           kinds of boxes, tins, pow ders, frag ments, fab rics, liquids, bottles and tubes,
                           all of which are intrin sic to creating the sensuous and encrusted surfaces

                           of his work. Certainly many of these materials have power ful ecological
                           and ethical dimensions to them—one cannot look at whale bone  or wood



                           Voyage of the James Caird/South Georgia, 2012, mixed media construction, 67 x 52 x 9 cm
   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17