The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Peak creativity as film-maker follows artist up inspiratio­nal glacier

Unveiled: tribute to acclaimed painter’s landmark climb

- By Tracey Bryce trbryce@sundaypost.com

In 1949 a Scottish woman climbed a mountain that changed her life. When he put herself in her boots, Mark Cousins immediatel­y understood, because it changed his life, too.

It’s almost a year to the day since the film-maker, movie historian and artist climbed the Grindelwal­d Glacier in Switzerlan­d, following in the footsteps of artist Wilhelmina Barns-graham.

The painter, known as Willie, who died in 2004 at 91, was so moved by her ascent seven decades ago that it inspired an acclaimed series of paintings. As he followed her footsteps into the icy terrain, Cousins, who embarked on the climb despite a paralysing case of vertigo, also enjoyed an epiphany.

“Strangely, unexpected­ly, I kind of had a life-changing event for a different reason,” said Cousins. “Willie’s was mostly artistic, mine was pure fear.

“Glaciers are amazing. They are transparen­t, it’s like standing on blue glass and it feels aquatic, it feels like you are looking at a sleeping whale because they are giant, but they’re also mobile. The light is different. It isn’t coming from the sky, it feels as if it’s bouncing up from your feet. It’s a fascinatin­g experience.

“But it was also utterly terrifying. I was shaking, almost crying, because I have terrible vertigo. We were walking on a ledge not much wider than your feet and I was carrying tripods and things, so it was really scary for me. Walking in her footsteps, I felt something I will never forget.”

Cousins has been a fan of Barnsgraha­m’s work since the 1980s and has created an immersive installati­on in tribute to her, which opens at Edinburgh’s Fruitmarke­t in November.

Like A Huge Scotland will see Cousins cast a forensic eye on her glacier paintings, enlarging details to 10,000 times their original size to reveal their almost molecular structure, alongside footage of the glacier filmed on Cousins’ recent trip and a film he’s compiled about Barns-graham and her ascent. It is something new for the polymathic Cousins.

“The film-maker in me knew that if we really wanted to understand why that climb to the glacier was so important to her, I had to do it myself,” he said. “I’ve climbed most of the Munros in Scotland, but I did not know there would be such a sheer drop and that’s what was so scary.”

But it taught him so much about the work of the artist.

“She responded to these vistas, these locations, with her whole body, with her whole nervous system almost. You just feel your heart beating fast.

“She had major breathing problems all her life so we can imagine her wheezing, and it was appropriat­e that I had a very physical reaction as well. It was almost a tribute to her.

“She was quite religious and she went on pilgrimage­s and this felt like a pilgrimage, because myself and my producers, we all adore her work and none of us knew her, but we feel really close to her, so it was like doing a pilgrimage for Willie.”

Cousins admits he’s been a fan of St Andrews-born Barns-graham since his teens. “I don’t think I ever met her but I’ve been in Scotland since 1983 and moved in similar

circles, so we were probably at some gallery opening, drinking warm Pinot Grigio together at some point,” he said with a laugh.

“I’ve been a fan for a long, long time, so to have the opportunit­y to do something serious about her imaginatio­n, her experience­s and what made her a great artist is a real treat for me.

“I knew there was something special about her, the way she looked at the world. She would go to really beautiful places like Venice and say, ‘Nothing to paint here,’ or she would go to the Alps and not paint the Alps at all. Or she would go to Orkney with all those fantastic landscapes and what would she paint? Just the rocks at her feet.

“She looked at the world in a unique way and I wanted to capture that and get inside her head.

“Instead of doing a straight film, I thought if I did a gallery piece with four screens and eight channels of sound, then I could really put the audience inside her imaginatio­n and try and give a sense of how uniquely this woman thought and felt and encountere­d nature.”

Cousins not only climbed the same glacier, but spent months sifting through Barns-graham’s old notebooks and analysing her paintings.

From their strong work ethic to a background in maths, he says they share some common traits, perhaps one of the reasons he finds her works so electrifyi­ng – and leapt at the opportunit­y to shine the spotlight on one of his favourite artists.

“It’s hard to believe but it started with a tweet,” he said. “I was up in St Andrews, looking at where she lived and I tweeted about it. The Wilhelmina Barns-graham Trust noticed my tweet and invited me to see more of her work and I was just totally besotted, almost infected by her stuff.

“Then the trust and I talked and I said I’d like to make a film about Willie, her imaginatio­n, her experience­s, this particular day on the glacier, and so it started.

“That’s the power of social media. Because I don’t live in London, or New York or Los Angeles, it has been a very good way for me making creative connection­s with many other people.”

The journey from then to now, Cousins said, has been a real eye-opener in many ways.

“The big difference was she climbed in 1949 and we climbed in 2021, so the glacier was huge when she climbed and it’s almost gone now because of global warming,” Cousins said. “So we had to walk about a mile further up the Alps than she did.

“It made me feel sad and alarmed. It was certainly a very melancholi­c experience. The woman who was leading us is only in her 30s and she remembers it being much bigger and much closer to the town. Even within her lifetime it has shrunk a lot.

“Edinburgh University has a lot of real experts in glaciology and we’ve been talking to them and they are shocked at the retreat of the glaciers, so there’s a real sense of despair when you see that these things are gone.

“You know occasional­ly you will see a dead whale or a dead dolphin on a beach in Scotland, it feels like that, there’s a sort of elegy for the loss of it. The climate deniers? Go and see the glaciers and you will no longer deny it.”

Like A Huge Scotland, Edinburgh’s Fruitmarke­t, from November 5

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 ?? ?? Barnsgraha­m’s Glacier (Blue Cave), 1950, main, and, right, tourists admire the Swiss glacier from a viewing deck
Barnsgraha­m’s Glacier (Blue Cave), 1950, main, and, right, tourists admire the Swiss glacier from a viewing deck
 ?? ?? Film-maker Mark Cousins
Film-maker Mark Cousins
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