The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Coastal collection will add to artist’s archive

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People living near the Firth of Forth and other coastal areas are being invited to contribute items from the shoreline to a new exhibition addressing environmen­tal concerns.

Curators hope people living in vulnerable areas such as the Forth and Firth of Clyde, along with the Hebrides and Northern Isles will donate “eye-catching” items to A People’s Archive Of Sinking And Melting.

The archive, begun by American artist Amy Balkin in 2011, will form part of an exhibition called The Normal – opening at the University of Edinburgh’s Talbot Rice Gallery on May 18.

Among the items already sent in is a section of fired clay brick retrieved by Moray Heggie-Milne from the beach at Whitehills, Banffshire.

It was made at nearby Blackpots Tileworks, which was demolished in 1978 and is now the site of a caravan park.

Christina Riley, from Troon, sent a beige pebble with a layer of white quartz running through it, which was found close to her home where she is concerned about coastal flooding.

Mike and Bernie Bell, who live in Rendall on Orkney, have donated tags from fish and lobster traps that made their way from Newfoundla­nd in Canada to their nearby Bay of Hinderayre.

People can send the gallery any object found at a “threatened” location by April 30, as long as it weighs less than 225g.

Once the exhibition closes on August 29, the items will be forwarded to Ms Balkin who will add them to the archive which now contains items from six continents. The gallery will continue to collect objects in the run-up to the Cop26 UN climate conference in Glasgow in November.

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