Rebecca Chesney
With far-heard whisper, o'er the sea Newlyn Art Gallery, Cornwall 2019
Pencil drawing 8.75m
Sea levels are rising.
The Newlyn Tidal Observatory was established to determine mean sea level as a starting point for measuring height and levelling throughout the UK and provides the longest sea level records ever kept. After gaining permission to access to the Observatory in January 2019, I produced an 8.75m long drawing showing over 100 years of mean sea level data recorded at Newlyn since 1916.
Each of the specially made record cards represents a year and the pencil line across it shows the mean sea level recorded at Newlyn for that year. Viewed all together the line undulates and slowly rises across the gallery wall. Minimal in its execution, the drawing holds a vast truth: sea level is rising.
With far-heard whisper, o'er the sea
(Detail) pencil on paper. Mean sea level data 1980 - 1989
Installation view of With far-heard whisper, o'er the sea - on the left-hand wall. (Photograph Steve Tanner)
Pencil on paper 8.75m long
One hundred and two years of mean sea level data 1916 - 2017
Newlyn Art Gallery 2019
Installation view of With far-heard whisper, o'er the sea (Photograph Steve Tanner)
Pencil on paper 8.75m long
One hundred and two years of mean sea level data 1916 - 2017
Newlyn Art Gallery 2019
The Newlyn Tidal Observatory (the red and white building next to the lighthouse) was used by Ordnance Survey from 1915 - 1983 and houses the Datum (right image) from which all heights above mean sea level in UK are based. I was given permission to access the Observatory in January 2019 and created the drawing as a result of my visit.
Below: With far-heard whisper, o'er the sea was included in the exhibition Storm Warning held at Focal Point Gallery in 2023.
Photos © Anna Lukala
Newlyn Art Gallery website
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