Representing the Ring-Net in Word and Image

This article sets out to reveal the way that word and image are combined in wholly inventive ways in the work of artist, Will Maclean and poet/historian, Angus Martin. The initial exhibition by Maclean The Ring-Net in 1978, and the publication of Martin’s book The Ring-Net Fishermen in 1981, were th...

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Main Author: Lindsay Blair
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAES 2024-05-01
Series:Angles
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/angles/7695
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author Lindsay Blair
author_facet Lindsay Blair
author_sort Lindsay Blair
collection DOAJ
description This article sets out to reveal the way that word and image are combined in wholly inventive ways in the work of artist, Will Maclean and poet/historian, Angus Martin. The initial exhibition by Maclean The Ring-Net in 1978, and the publication of Martin’s book The Ring-Net Fishermen in 1981, were their early representations of the world of herring fishing. Their word-image collaborations brought a sensory experience to a new audience: an experience akin, in fact, to the multi-dimensional reality of the ring-net fishermen themselves. The correspondence between the two men during their research period revealed their determination to give absolute priority to the oral testimony of the fishermen above that of any commentators (professional or otherwise) on the industry. The correspondence also signalled the need for the use of both word and image to communicate and transfer information with real accuracy. This article focuses not only on the original Ring-Net research but also on a more recent collaboration where Martin’s poems are set alongside Maclean’s ink drawings in the publication One Time in a Tale of Herring (2010). There are a number of areas of overlap between Maclean’s drawings and the hand-written selection of Martin’s fishing poems. First there is the ‘thingly’ element: the attention above all to nouns and verbs in the poems and the unadorned nature of the drawings; second the phenomenological: the priority given to the sensuous aspects of the fisherman’s experience in the poems and the link to the gestural expressionism of the drawings. Most arresting of all, though, is the way that the image seeks the word and the word seeks the image.
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spelling doaj-art-0963f1d4558d46258a1f6a09d1ce89922025-08-20T03:47:44ZengSAESAngles2274-20422024-05-011710.4000/11qj7Representing the Ring-Net in Word and ImageLindsay BlairThis article sets out to reveal the way that word and image are combined in wholly inventive ways in the work of artist, Will Maclean and poet/historian, Angus Martin. The initial exhibition by Maclean The Ring-Net in 1978, and the publication of Martin’s book The Ring-Net Fishermen in 1981, were their early representations of the world of herring fishing. Their word-image collaborations brought a sensory experience to a new audience: an experience akin, in fact, to the multi-dimensional reality of the ring-net fishermen themselves. The correspondence between the two men during their research period revealed their determination to give absolute priority to the oral testimony of the fishermen above that of any commentators (professional or otherwise) on the industry. The correspondence also signalled the need for the use of both word and image to communicate and transfer information with real accuracy. This article focuses not only on the original Ring-Net research but also on a more recent collaboration where Martin’s poems are set alongside Maclean’s ink drawings in the publication One Time in a Tale of Herring (2010). There are a number of areas of overlap between Maclean’s drawings and the hand-written selection of Martin’s fishing poems. First there is the ‘thingly’ element: the attention above all to nouns and verbs in the poems and the unadorned nature of the drawings; second the phenomenological: the priority given to the sensuous aspects of the fisherman’s experience in the poems and the link to the gestural expressionism of the drawings. Most arresting of all, though, is the way that the image seeks the word and the word seeks the image.https://journals.openedition.org/angles/7695documentaryRing-Net Fishermenoral historyFredric Jamesonthe folk voiceherring
spellingShingle Lindsay Blair
Representing the Ring-Net in Word and Image
Angles
documentary
Ring-Net Fishermen
oral history
Fredric Jameson
the folk voice
herring
title Representing the Ring-Net in Word and Image
title_full Representing the Ring-Net in Word and Image
title_fullStr Representing the Ring-Net in Word and Image
title_full_unstemmed Representing the Ring-Net in Word and Image
title_short Representing the Ring-Net in Word and Image
title_sort representing the ring net in word and image
topic documentary
Ring-Net Fishermen
oral history
Fredric Jameson
the folk voice
herring
url https://journals.openedition.org/angles/7695
work_keys_str_mv AT lindsayblair representingtheringnetinwordandimage