The Scotsman

Message from the Skies: Shorelines

- JOYCE MCMILLAN Until 25 January

Various locations, Edinburgh

YOU’VE heard about the negative aspects of Edinburgh’s Hogmanay: the gates and barriers blocking off streets for the Hogmanay Party, the wristbands for residents trying to reach their own homes, the hugely overblown Christmas Market in Princes Street Gardens, and the £12 Loony Dook at South Queensferr­y, that even tries to monetise the chilly waters of the Forth. Yet here – spreading beautifull­y across five locations from Fountainbr­idge to Leith – is one of the festival’s undoubted upsides; one that is absolutely free to experience, and will still be with us when the rest of the festive glitz and flummery has gone, since it continues until Burns Night, 25 January.

Now in its third year, Message From The Skies is a multi-media project – produced by Charlie Wood of Underbelly, and curated by Nick Barley of the Edinburgh Internatio­nal Book Festival – which links some of Scotland’s finest writers, musicians and movingimag­e artists with the very fabric of Edinburgh, its buildings and monuments.

Two years ago, it was Val Mcdermid’s colossal effort, across eight city-centre locations, to reclaim Edinburgh’s literary history for the city’s forgotten female writers; last year, there were a series of vivid letters to Europe, as this most pro-european of British cities confronted the reality of Brexit.

This time, though, the theme is Shorelines, reflecting the Scottish Government’s Year of Coasts And Waters, 2020; and it’s one that seems to have had an inspiratio­nal impact not only on the five writers involved, but also on the visual and sound artists whose work helps amplify and embody their words.

At Fountainbr­idge, in a Union Canal basin surrounded by gleaming 21st century flats and restaurant­s, the poet Kathleen Jamie – with images by Thomas Moulson – speaks from the perspectiv­e of a wave power turbine bringing new energy to Scotland from just beyond its shoreline; a tentative but inspiring symbol of hope, and of new times brought within our grasp by benign science.

In George Street, writer Charlotte Runcie, video designer Kate Charter, composer Pippa Murphy and wonderful singer-narrator Karine Polwart come together to create a truly superb short meditation on the meaning of Scotland’s lighthouse­s, at the building that has been the headquarte­rs of the Northern Lighthouse Board since 1832.

In the courtyard of the City

Chambers in the High Street, with tourist cameras clicking wildly, Kayus Bankole of the band Young Fathers uses his own words, subtle reflective sound, and spectacula­r filmic images by Rianne White, to demand that we reflect on Scotland’s profound links with the Atlantic slave trade, and on how the wealth and power it brought to our shores still shapes our cities today.

Then it’s to the top of Calton Hill, with a fragile, cloudhazed crescent moon rising behind the Nelson Monument, around whose famous telescope shape poet Robin Robertson, designers Cristina Spiteri and Susanna Murphy, and composer Alasdair Roberts create an extraordin­arily moving journey around Scotland’s 10,000 miles of coast, from the Solway Firth in the south-west to Berwick in the south-east. And finally, it’s down to Leith, for a few dozen long, entertaini­ng paragraphs projected on the front of the old seaman’s mission that is now the Malmaison Hotel, as Irvine Welsh – with video design by Norman Harman – reflects on how the old sea dogs who drank in the pubs of Leith helped him imagine a path into adulthood that didn’t just involve marrying the girl next door and settling down in the same scheme where he grew up.

It’s a thrilling and lifeenhanc­ing journey, in other words, full of love, pride, anger, challenge, repentance and imaginatio­n, and a growing assurance in using this complex art-form to explore how Scotland has always felt itself bound to the world, not least through the city of Edinburgh and the port of Leith.

See it, over the next three weeks or miss a beautiful and rich reflective celebratio­n on the history of our capital city, on its complex present and on its many possible futures.

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 ??  ?? 2 The Nelson Monument, around whose telescope shape poet Robin Robertson, designers Cristina Spiteri and Susanna Murphy and composer Alasdair Roberts create a moving journey around Scotland’s 10,000 miles of coast
3 In George Street, writer Charlotte Runcie, video designer Kate Charter, composer Pippa Murphy and singer-narrator Karine Polwart create a superb short meditation on the meaning of Scotland’s lighthouse­s at the building that has been the headquarte­rs of the Northern Lighthouse Board since 1832
2 The Nelson Monument, around whose telescope shape poet Robin Robertson, designers Cristina Spiteri and Susanna Murphy and composer Alasdair Roberts create a moving journey around Scotland’s 10,000 miles of coast 3 In George Street, writer Charlotte Runcie, video designer Kate Charter, composer Pippa Murphy and singer-narrator Karine Polwart create a superb short meditation on the meaning of Scotland’s lighthouse­s at the building that has been the headquarte­rs of the Northern Lighthouse Board since 1832
 ??  ?? 0 At the City Chambers, Kayus Bankole of Young Fathers uses his own words, subtle sound and images by Rianne White to demand that we reflect on Scotland’s profound links with the Atlantic slave trade
0 At the City Chambers, Kayus Bankole of Young Fathers uses his own words, subtle sound and images by Rianne White to demand that we reflect on Scotland’s profound links with the Atlantic slave trade

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