It was the usual private view shindig with wine, whiskey, canapes and a herd of people who would have looked at home at an event in Dalston, complete with slightly too short trousers and big boots, though with an added splash of wool ( in particular a splendid gentleman with a gorgeous orange guernsey style jersey that I am still thinking about the next morning.) You got the feeling that everyone knew everyone and they probably did, and I sort of wished I had been in their gang ( by chance I was wearing orange woolly socks but nobody noticed).
I wonder how far everyone had travelled to get there, as one of the things I have been very aware of is how much driving I am doing to get to places. It’s similar to my time on Vancouver Island where it was a good twenty minute drive to the nearest store (or thirty to a monstrous shopping mall) and here even going into Stornaway is a good forty five minute drive each way (albeit a glorious one on the off chance I have picked the tiny window when it isn’t raining). Driving home in the dark was a little challenging the first time I did it, mostly because there was a gale force wind and Wolf’s windscreen wipers aren’t quite up to the job of coping with torrential rain. One of the ( many) interesting facts about the Isle of Lewis is that the sheep prefer to sleep in the middle of the road. A fact that was quite startling the first time as I assumed somebody had run them over. But now I simply slow down, toot the horn and one by one they stagger up onto their feet and waddle out of the way. Having been here for a week I have learnt where they will be as they always sleep just beyond the blind summit just as you get to the bridge so I adjust my speed accordingly beforehand. As the chances of me speaking to a human being once I get home are slim I always wish the sheep a good night. Just as I always say good morning to the seal and to Wolf. No answer from either obviously, but you work with what you are given.
The exhibition was a mixture of paintings, sculpture, photographs, video, the usual, but there was a definite theme that ran through them all, even the ones I didn’t like ( the garish oil of a space sip amongst the Callanish standing stones for example) but there was so much of the sea and an earthiness in pretty much all of them that I really liked. And I must admit I am really loving the gaelic which is so beautiful to listen to and to read even though I don’t understand a word, but if you wanted a language that sounds like the wind and the sea and the soil it would be a strong contender, in my humble opinion.
The second part of the evening was a showing of the 1985 Scottish film “ Restless Natives” , the best bit being that the admission fee was at the 1985 price, a stunning £1.79. And even better, the footage at the start was from the same era with trailers for two really awful films, ‘Teen Wolf’, starring a very young Michael J Fox and the truly appalling ‘King Solomon’s Mine’ with Richard Chamberlain and a whole load of savages, cooking pots and cannibals, a film that simply would
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