“Lockdown made us look anew at our local areas. We could exercise but only as far as ‘around the block’; we saw our own localities with fresh eyes…”
Kurt Jackson.
Kurt Jackson.
St Just is the most westerly town in Britain, it is on the edge, faraway, ‘isolated’; archetypically Cornish and distinct in its identity, geography and heritage. It has two valleys, one on either side: Cot and Kenidjack; Cot is the tamer of the two, Kenidjack is the wilder and less accessible.
Lockdown made us look anew at our local areas. We could exercise but only as far as ‘around the block’; we saw our own localities with fresh eyes, special in their own right and given the chance they revealed their natural wonders to us. For Kurt Jackson in far West Cornwall, around the block meant a walk into and along Kenidjack Valley, tracing the stream down to the sea and then up and along the cliffs and home.
Kenidjack is one of those special places that needs no real detailed analysis for it to be seen as a powerful location-spilling over with its natural treasures and dramatic topography. It wears its past on its sleeve, blatantly displaying her heritage and signs of past enterprises and providing a home to a plethora of wildlife. It can be brooding, dark or floodlit and basking, extremes that come with the geographical and topographical setting.
August 28 2021 – February 26 2022.
Jackson Foundation Gallery, North Row, St Just, Cornwall, TR19 7LB.
Please check here for seasonal opening times.
Exhibition catalogue can be purchased here