The List Frome - January 2022

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» the list recommends « Walter Trout Cheese & Grain, January 21st, 7.20pm, £31.50 Walter Trout’s back story is a page turner you won’t want to put down. Five decades in the making, it is equal parts thriller, romance, suspense and horror. There are musical fireworks, critical acclaim and fists-aloft triumph, offset by wilderness years and brushes with the jaws of narcotic oblivion. There are fêted early stints as gunslinger in bands from John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers to Canned Heat, and the solo career that’s still blazing a quarter century later. 14+ (under 16s must be accompanied by an adult)

Slow Time: Somerset Re-acquainted Tour Black Swan Arts, preview: January 14th, 6-8pm As part of the final chapter of the Somerset Reacquainted tour, a new exhibition of solargraphs at Black Swan Arts explores the passing of time. ‘Slow Time’ is the result of a project recording the passage of time initiated during the first lockdown. Led by Somerset Solagraphic Society, set up by artists Janette Kerr and John Gammans, and supported by Somerset Art Works, this extraordinary exhibition features long-exposure photographs of the Somerset landscape, using nothing more than recycled drinks cans made into pinhole cameras. Over 100 participants placed 150 pinhole cameras containing light-sensitive material in locations around Somerset and left them in situ for five or six months. The resulting images have been slowly shaped by landscape and the movement of the sun, slowly creeping higher with the passing of the seasons. The actions of the environment, like rain and other elemental detritus, have also found their way into the images, yet there is an absence of any moving objects, such as people, animals or cars. The sun’s progress is recorded as an accumulation of lines arcing and streaking across the image, leaving a ghostly exposure of the landscape seen in slow time and out of phase with human inhabitants.

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THE LIST FROME

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As the pandemic unfolds, our perception of time is challenged as daily routines, plans and schedules are laid to waste. Suddenly, not having to be anywhere means that we have no option but to be present present in the eerie stillness of life, we start to reflect and take stock, find new ways to spend our time, and begin to notice those elements that ordinarily pass us by unnoticed. Part of the Somerset Re-acquainted Tour, the solargraphs are being shown alongside a collaborative book, initial ‘sharings’ and objects from the project contributed by 63 artist members from Somerset Art Works. For further information, please visit www.blackswanarts.org.uk www.somersetartworks.org.uk.


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