'Our
Father Which Art'
Our
Father Which Art consists of seven turned beech 'fragments', which
together constitute the entire text of the Lord's Prayer, and was
originally made for an exhibition at St. Michaels Church in Honiton,
Devon in the UK. The idea grew from a chance reading of an account
of Guglielmo Marconi's experiments with sound. In his later years
Marconi, who is credited with the invention of radio (and conducted
some of his early experiment into that medium from Haldon Hill in
Devon) came to believe that all sounds did not attenuate and die (as
they actually do) but, on the contrary, perpetually reverberated in
the Earth's outer atmosphere, or 'ether'. Consequently he tried to
capture and record these sounds, most notably Christ's Sermon on the
Mount, of which the Lord's Prayer forms a part.
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This
futile endeavour seemed to me a work of art in its own right, and
as the most ubiquitous and often uttered Christian prayer, the Lord's
Prayer seemed an appropriate text on which to base a piece of work
situated in a church, where countless worshippers over the hundreds
of years of its existence would have lent their voices to the collective
call to God. It
was fitting that the objects were made on a traditional carpenter's
tool, and not inappropriate that they resembled the more elaborate
forms of Buddhist prayer wheel, which believers spin in order to cast
their prayers onto the wind to be carried away. |
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