Saprophytes are organisms, normally fungi or bacteria, that obtain nutrients from decaying plants and animals and transform them into other forms.
Here the woodworking artists take on this role. We slice off the back of sticks and trans-morph them into 'fruiting bodies' that emerge from the front. Nothing is added or taken away, we work with what is there and use the method... observe, interact, adapt & repeat to find what each stick 'wants' to do. Instead of hard-won genetic learning and bio-chemical apparatus we use our hands, tools, culture and imagination to coax each stick to a new destiny, locking that carbon into art forever.
This project started in a Cumbrian storm when a damson tree opposite my house shed a large branch. This is from a small Ash tree that self-seeded outside a townhouse. The tree was removed partly because it was too close to the house and it also had Ash-dieback with may dead branches, even though many birds oved to roost in its small canopy.
Please note this can be hung on a wall without the base - OR - on the stone and metal base as you see in the photos and at the show. If you intend to hang it on a wall PLEASE leave the base with us so we can re-use it.
Time to grow: c. 9 years
Time in workshop: 1 month
Material: Hawthorn. Base: Limestone, reclaimed recycled stainless steel, reclaimed felt.
Size: 54cm x 15cm x 56cm