You visit this place You do not stay long There’s nothing here that speaks of settlement Everything you do has an edge of intensity wet by the weather sharpened by the clock
If you try to be still in what passes for shelter the wind will find you seek you out
So with the camera your primary tool begin to collect - image after image after image Point and click : view and share
Eventually the mark-making begins though fraught with difficulty it seems just hopeless this testing out of the body’s response to what passes before the scanning eye Blink and the image shifts
There is this fierce and on-going campaign between the near : between the far What lies at your feet : what decorates the horizon.
After a few hours wrapped round in nature’s vortex the eye and brain are exhausted by the profusion of it all wearied by the press of wind, the touch of rain, the glare of sun
Always the problem of what you do with what you’ve seen and touched with cold hands pulling out metal objects from the sand whose rusted and distressed forms will lie exposed on the studio table
The place marks you Rain and wind on the face raise new freckles there’s a salty veneer to the skin the rub of sand : a wash of seawater the grasp of pebbles : wood’s chiromatic grain The lexicon of texture expands under your fingers changes of temperature : degrees of saturation and further uncompromising perspectives unimaginable yet in two dimensions Beyond beachcombing this is seacoast surgery
Away from it all (and out of the wind) your memory stretches to the corners of recall Wandering through a home-centred day as in a waking dream knowing you’ve already gathered all manner of sensory matter held and stored in the pineal gland flowing free in Meissner’s corpuscles
Even absorbed in conversation’s company as you turn away to fill the kettle you are on the beach back in the wind scanning the memory tin : priming the future.
Spurn Head is a narrow sand spit on the tip of the coast of the East Riding of Yorkshire, England that reaches into the North Sea and forms the north bank of the mouth of the Humber estuary. It is over 3 miles (4.8 km) long, almost half the width of the estuary at that point, and as little as 50 yards (46 m) wide in places. The southernmost tip is known as Spurn Head or Spurn Point and is the home to an RNLI lifeboat station and disused lighthouse. To find out more about this place and the poem go to http://spurnpointartistinresidence.blogspot.co.uk