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Artist throws weight behind Greenpeace protest against dredging at sea

- Melissa Gronlund

Artist Fiona Banner is helping a Greenpeace mission to protect an area in the North Sea from illegal fishing, by creating ink-black sculptures that will be dropped into the water.

The British artist, who is well-known for her investigat­ions of text and pop culture, has created three enormous granite works to aid the environmen­tal organisati­on’s campaign, which is focused on a 121-square-kilometre North Sea sanctuary.

Dogger Bank, about midway between the UK and Denmark, is a feeding ground for dolphins, seals and sea birds. Despite it being a marine-protected area, activists say fishing boats trawl the sea floor, destroying the natural habitat. Greenpeace has begun dropping boulders in a semi-circle within the area, so that boats cannot dredge the floor.

Banner created three artworks out of the granite boulders, carving them into a full stop – or at least, something approximat­ing a full stop – and dying them black with squid ink.

“Greenpeace was already putting down boulders to stop super trawling and destructiv­e fishing in Dogger Bank,” explained Banner. “I thought immediatel­y about language and treaties; the impasse between what is agreed and what is actually happening.”

On Monday, Banner delivered the first boulder – titled Klang – to the steps of the UK’s Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs, which oversees fishing. The police came “and we scuttled”, the artist said. Klang has since been removed.

Greenpeace had said it would remove the boulders from the sea bed if the government enforced treaties that were meant to protect the area. However, on September 23, Defra said that while “the Marine Management Organisati­on is unable to comment on specific allegation­s of offending, it can confirm that action would always be taken where there was sufficient evidence to suggest any prohibited fishing activity was taking place within an Special Area of Conservati­on”.

After taking Klang to Defra headquarte­rs, Banner and activists headed to Greenpeace’s boat, docked near Tower Bridge on the River Thames. There, the team loaded the other two sculptures – Peanut and Orator, which weigh 1.7 and 1.2 tonnes each – on to the vessel’s helipad.

Banner has long been interested in punctuatio­n, which offers a glimpse into moments where language is not sufficient. She typically sculpts or draws punctuatio­n marks in different fonts, redirectin­g focus to the forgotten elements of written language. Her plan for the boulders had similarly been to mould them into different font shapes.

“But I had never considered rock in all its awesomenes­s. They have been bouldering around on the planet for aeons,” she said. “I never realised how incredible they were, how charged – or how heavy.”

The slightly imperfect full stops sit somewhere between natural object and rough-hewn memorial, as if the artist was bested by nature. The granite came from Hamburg and was shipped to a stone workshop in Oxfordshir­e, where they were shaped by machines. Each was then painted with the squid ink – “incredibly smelly”, said Banner – and chiselled with their title and the co-ordinates of where they will be placed.

Their names derive from the type of font that Banner imagined for the punctuatio­n: Peanuts, for example, relates to Charles Schultz’s cartoon.

This is Banner’s first direct activist action. Like many, she has been influenced by the period of reflection during the pandemic, as well as the increasing urgency of the climate crisis.

From the Thames, the Greenpeace boat will travel up to Dogger Rock, where it will drop more boulders – including Banner’s artworks.

 ??  ?? Artist Fiona Banner with granite sculpture ‘Klang’
Artist Fiona Banner with granite sculpture ‘Klang’

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