Ruth Maclennan screens A Forest Tale at Picturehouse Cambridge, followed by a Q&A, on Tuesday 26th November at 3pm.
In the deep midwinter of December 2021, artist Ruth Maclennan set out on a journey to and through the icy expanses of Arctic Russia. With temperatures plummeting, and storm clouds gathering as a result of an ominous geopolitical chill in the air, Maclennan’s intended destination was a tiny settlement in the taiga forests around Arkhangelsk. There, she had arranged to convene a meeting of a small group of artists, scientists and craftspeople from the locality and elsewhere, whose purpose was to consider a much wider threat to the stability of the region – the impending disaster of climate change. The far North is a frontline of planetary warming, an incontrovertible real-time barometer of its manifold effects. But it is also a repository of age-old knowledge and experience of living sustainably close to nature and with the renewable resources of the land. In this, the rich gift of wood, as building material and basis for countless domestic and artistic items, stands in stark contrast to the goldrush fantasies of mineral and fossil fuel extraction peddled by Putin and his crony oligarchs. The forest, in its unique way, is also a treasure trove of myths and fables – whose glints of hard-won wisdom, tellingly, often run counter to the rapacious reflexes of control and conquest of the contemporary Russian state. As she travels through a wintry landscape that starts to take on its own beguiling, fairy-tale aspect, Maclennan encounters a cast of disparate characters (musicians, artisans and other locals), whose rooted connection to the land, and its traditional rituals, customs and practices, strikes a resonant chord with the wider circle of artists she has invited.
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A Forest Tale (2022) was co-commissioned by Film and Video Umbrella and Arctic Art Institute.