Hush is a project by artist Steve Messam. Situated in an old lead mining works (known as a hush) stretching 450m in length, this two-week long installation in July and August 2019 featured hundreds of saffron-yellow flags in one of the largest artworks yet created in the UK. The Teesdale valley is part of the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (NP AONB) and the artwork was created in partnership with the local authority. Plant and animal conservation is a vital aspect of this AONB and the area is a designated UNESCO Global Geopark. All of the Hush materials were recycled and its impact assessed against the needs of protected fauna and flora in the Teesdale valley. Although the hush mine workings are in a place that doesn't attract many visitors, due to the location, the publicity created by Steve's art attracted more than 5,000 visitors over two weeks. Pictures and video from the project featured in international media around the world. Steve Messam: http://www.stevemessam.co.uk North Pennines AONB: http://www.northpennines.org.uk/ Music: Meydn - Story Monplaisir - Brother Monplaisir - Brotherhood Meydn - Glimpse of Eternity Jahzzar - Keep Calm
a slow film documenting 'Hush' - a monumental art installation in the North Pennines. 'Hush' was huge - the size of four football pitches made of 650 large s...

Hush

 

‘Hush’ was a temporary art installation in the remote landscape of the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, County Durham, UK. Over 600 large saffron-yellow flags fill a man-made scar in the landscape bringing colour, sound and movement to transform this former industrial feature.

At 370m long, 50m wide and 45m at its highest point, ‘Hush’ would dwarf the vast Turbine Hall at Tate Modern and is the length of almost four football pitches. Over 5km of fabric was used to make the artwork.

Over the 16 days in the summer of 2019 5,000 people trekked to this remote corner of the North Pennines in all weather to experience this unique artwork.

The dynamic artwork draws attention to the form of the hush, one of the North Pennines most distinctive but overlooked features. Hushing is an ancient method of mining used in this area during the eighteen century to extract minerals from the landscape. Reservoirs would be created behind a dam high in the landscape before a torrent of water was released down the hillside moving the soil and exposing the minerals underneath.

At Bales Hush above the village of Newbiggin-in-Teesdale they were searching for lead ore in common with much of the North Pennines area and activity probably ceased towards the early nineteenth century. The signs that show this was formerly a mining area are often overlooked today so ‘Hush' seeks to draw attention to this dramatic feature and show how much of the landscape is formed from human interaction with nature.

As Bales Hush is a SSSI (Site of Special Scientific Interest) environmental sensitivity was one of the prime objectives of the piece at this scale. The exhibition period sat between the end of the nesting season for the endangered ground nesting birds common on these fells, and the beginning of the grouse shooting season that sustains the management of so much of the North Pennine uplands. All the materials used were recycled back into raw materials afterwards. All the fixings used were designed to leave no lasting impression on the landscape and are reusable for future projects.

‘Hush’ was commissioned by the North Pennines AONB Partnership with support from the National Lottery Heritage Fund and Arts Council England.

See Also:

Sentinel

Waterfall

Title:

Hush

Date - month / year:

July 2019

Location:

Newbiggin-in-Teesdalr, County Durham, UK.

Dimensions: length, width, height (metres)

450 x 25 x 15

Materials:

polypropylene 

Client:

North Pennines AONB Partnership

Fabrication:

Steve Messam Studio

Prints / Publications:

https://www.foldpress.co.uk/product/hush