The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

AN ARTIST’S LANDSCAPE

Gayle Ritchie meets the Moraybased artists behind the artistic venture which explores the desolate beauty of the Cabrach

- With Gayle Ritchie

Ragged curtains swish and flap in the breeze. A door swings back and forth on rusty hinges. Inside the derelict farmhouse, two armchairs splashed with bird droppings, face each other in front of a fireplace. It’s a strangely serene and evocative scene, as if two people are about to pop in for a seat and a blether. The house is among dozens of deserted buildings dotted around the Cabrach, a vast, scarcely populated and desolately beautiful stretch of land on the northernmo­st fringes of the Cairngorms.

At one time, the community had a thriving population of around 1,000, but today only around 70 people call the Cabrach home.

The Cabrach was deemed an area where only the tough belonged and in the mid-19th Century an account described it as “so wildly desolate and inhospitab­ly barren that nothing

but the firmest nerve, urged by dire necessity, could ever induce a human being to traverse it”.

A huge proportion of young men from the Cabrach’s farming community died when they

went to fight in the First World War. Others, who for years had supplement­ed their meagre incomes with the production of illicit whisky,

hiding stills in the folds of hills and carrying out a brisk trade with passing drovers, moved away with the legalisati­on of distilling.

Today, the past lives on in this depopulate­d community in the form of empty farmhouses

and rusting farm implements.

The Cabrach was a deeply religious area, and anyone who has ventured into its enveloping wilderness will have spotted the farmhouse of Auchmair – now boarded up – and its iconic wrought-iron gates fashioned with the words “Pilgrims Progress: The Slough of Despond” in reference to John Bunyan’s allegory in which protagonis­t Christian sinks into a bog, weighted by guilt for his sins.

During the summer, Moray artists Mary Bourne and Lynne Strachan got together to explore the Cabrach, having long been fascinated by it.

They walked on foot alone, together and guided by people with local knowledge.

They learned a lot about the history of the Cabrach and its people, about why they left, and what they left behind.

Their findings formed part of an ongoing project, Cabrach Reconnecti­ons, which develops ways for people to reconnect with

each other through art and encourages them to enjoy and discover the area’s stunning scenery and histories.

With support from Creative Scotland, the duo organised jewellery and metal casting workshops, photograph­y and sketching walks. They then developed a body of artwork in response to what they had learned, and exhibited it across Moray.

I met with Lynne and Mary on a walk to Torniechel­t, the abandoned farmhouse with a scattering of ramshackle outbuildin­gs. The remains of a corrugated iron roof rattled in the breeze while wind whistled down a chimney. It’s a haunting spot.

“We spoke to a lady who grew up here and she remembers her experience­s with great excitement,” says Mary.

“There’s a strong feeling among people that they want their memories and ways of life to be recorded.”

The arts project was influenced by materials that were left behind by people who used to live in the area – materials which are slowly being reclaimed by nature – as well as by personal items which were carried away when they left.

“We’ve been experiment­ing with fabrics, glass, cast iron, copper and silver to develop works that will hopefully bring renewed

attention to areas that have been lost or forgotten,” says Elgin-based visual artist Lynne.

“We created models of cast iron houses at the Scottish Sculpture Workshop in Lumsden, and at North Lands Creative Studio near Wick we made glass ‘ghost houses’ which we light up underneath.”

The artists also built “sound sculptures” which release sounds of nature when touched, and worked with a silversmit­h in Banff to create Cabrach-inspired jewellery.

“Windows became really important to us,” reveals Mary, who lives at Milltown of Auchindoun, studied sculpture at Edinburgh College of Art and was elected an Academicia­n of The Royal Scottish Academy in 2012. “People told us they used to look out their windows and feel reassured when they saw the lights of their neighbours’ houses. That inspired us to create these ‘ghost houses’. There’s the feeling you’re seeing the same view out the window as people from the past; you identify with them in seeing what they saw.”

Some of the abandoned buildings still house remnants of the past – curtains hang in windows, floating backwards and forwards in the wind.

Mary and Lynne took photos of such windows – some of which still have glass – and printed the images on to cotton banners.

“When we exhibited at Inverharro­ch Steading, it was quite draughty and they moved nicely, like the remnants of curtains in old buildings,” says Mary.

Another thing that fascinates the artists is that the Cabrach wasn’t ever “tidied up”.

“Everything they’ve left behind is just left; nobody’s come along and sorted it out,” muses Mary.

“You can almost see indentatio­ns where someone has slept on a bed for 50 years. It’s like seeing history firsthand; it’s not been filtered or interprete­d or presented. It’s a feeling of immediate contact with the past.”

Lynne and Mary hope their project will promote the Cabrach and its stories further afield.

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 ?? ?? NATURE: Gayle explores the Cabrach with interdisci­plinary artists Mary Bourne, right, and Lynne Strachan, middle.
NATURE: Gayle explores the Cabrach with interdisci­plinary artists Mary Bourne, right, and Lynne Strachan, middle.
 ?? ?? The art has been influenced by materials left behind.
The art has been influenced by materials left behind.
 ?? ?? Sculpture House featured in the exhibition.
Sculpture House featured in the exhibition.
 ?? ?? Mary and Lynne with some of their work.
Mary and Lynne with some of their work.

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