Tintagel Wall of Words - Trevena Square - Tintagel, Cornwall
Posted by: SMacB
N 50° 39.772 W 004° 45.069
30U E 376238 N 5613797
A 'Wall of Words' in Trevena Square, Tintagel, which contains phrases taken from The Tintagel Giant by Amanda White.
Waymark Code: WMTE0P
Location: South West England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 11/09/2016
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A 'Wall of Words' in Trevena Square, Tintagel, which contains phrases taken from The Tintagel Giant (ISBN 9780955050503) by Amanda White. Various other touchstones can be found along a circular route to Tintagel Castle that contain phrases or words from this work
"Michael Fairfax, a public artist who mainly works with wood and stone was lead artist of a regeneration project in the village of Tintagel in Cornwall. The project created a new public space in what had been a car park, and aimed to create links between the village and the area's main tourist attraction, Tintagel Castle. Michael appointed poet Amanda White to work alongside him on part of the project. Her work encompassed creating a picture book about a newly created local legend with primary school children, and writing a piece of work to form a wall of words in the new public space. The poem was written through walks, conversations and workshops with local residents. Amanda's mission was not to articulate her own response to Tintagel, but to somehow encapsulate the voices of the village's residents. This was not writing by committee, but it was about the writer using her skills and experience to find a way of speaking for the place and its people.
It is indicative of Amanda's skill at articulating the voices of the local people and giving that voice an artistic form, that the forum of local residents involved in the wider regeneration of the village said that when Amanda presented the poem and touchstones to them: "It was the first time we have all been in agreement over anything at a Forum meeting."
Individual stanzas of the poem Amanda White wrote in collaboration with the residents of Tintagel were engraved onto ’touchstones‘ made from local slate which formed a circular walk linking the village to its main tourist attraction, Tintagel Castle. The touchstones are placed within the landscape of Tintagel in the places which directly inspired the words. Many of these contain information about the area's ecology and history:
courting down't Gilla
adders meet
amidst the tab mawn
lover's end
This stanza is placed at the corner of a field which is historically a place where lovers have come to court, and a place where adders are likely to be spotted. The poem also uses the Cornish name for Sea Daisy: tab mawn, and in doing so celebrates and preserves the local dialect."
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