Keith Harrison, Joyride

30 Sep 2017

5.30-8pm

Cannock Chase Forest , Tackeroo Site

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Artist Keith Harrison was awarded a major £30,000 commission through the 2016 edition of Jerwood Open Forest, an initiative established by Forestry Commission England and Jerwood Charitable Foundation, with support from Arts Council England. The commission has seen Keith Harrison develop Joyride, a community-focused live event, which brings together personal and social narratives around the automotive industry in the West Midlands. Inspired by his upbringing in the heavily post-industrialised Black Country, the event will bring together industrial and recreational forces within the forest.

On 30 September at Cannock Chase Forest’s Tackeroo site, the artist will release a life-size clay replica of the final Rover 75 to leave the Longbridge car plant in Birmingham down a temporary 8-metre ramp. The event will commence at 5.30pm with a viewing period, prior to the car being elevated to the highest point of the ramp. Speaking of the car’s release, Keith Harrison says: ‘I want to use this energy, this velocity to re-launch the vehicle into the unknown. Metaphorically alluding to how this industrial area may be regenerated and the car industry reimagined.’ Accompanied by a specially commissioned soundtrack, the model will be released at dusk, referencing how the role of the car can transition from practical to recreational, between daytime and night. Plywood profile of Rover 75 replica model, produced by Keith Harrison in collaboration with Capture Point.

Audiences driving to the event will be parked along both sides of the ramp, illuminating it with their headlights alongside members of the Rover Club. Visitors will also be able to view the event on foot.

The artist has worked with world-renowned car-modeller Anthony Tovey to reconstruct the classic Rover 75 in plywood, polystyrene and clay. Tovey plans to manipulate the car’s clay façade ‘to communicate a sense of construction’ through visible joins and fingerprints, whilst retaining detail in the statement Rover badge: ‘traditionally, I would have used a brown wax to model prototypes, softened in an oven and then sculpted with hand-tools.

This time, as Keith’s a ceramicist, we’ll be using clay from the nearby River Rea’. The river runs through the former Rover works at Longbridge and the Black Country estate where Keith Harrison’s parents still live.

A series of plywood profiles will form the supporting framework for the clay; a structure informed by Capture Point UK’s detailed 3D scan of an original Rover 75. Once the clay has been applied, the body will be placed on a steel chassis complete with original Rover wheels. The artist will finish the model on site at Bournville College, where the former Longbridge car plant once operated. The monumental ramp, from which the car will be released, will be constructed with the help of volunteers, using felled wood from Cannock Chase Forest.

The construction of the car and ramp is central to the commission, involving members of the community, volunteers from schools and colleges, and specialists from the automotive design field; and using materials sourced from the local area.

For the artist, the relationship between the site of production and that of the event is integral to the project: ‘The opportunity to realise a project which links the former Rover factory at Longbridge, Birmingham where my mother and grandfather worked and Cannock Chase Forest, a wilderness we visited regularly as a family whilst growing up in the Black Country is immense. The work will see the social and environmental impact of the car in forests and the demise of automotive manufacture collide.’ The Rover 75 will be transported from Bourneville College to Cannock Chase Forest on the afternoon of 30 September. Audiences are invited to join Keith Harrison at Cannock Chase Forest, Tackeroo Site from 5.30pm.

Joyride is a one-off event so spaces are limited and booking essential; tickets are £5 (including refreshments) and booking is open from Wednesday 12 July 2017. Please visit jerwoodopenforest.org for more information.

3D scan of the Rover 75 model made by Keith Harrison with Capture Point UK