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Farewell Rock: The Last Coal Miners of South Wales (Keith 'Gilbert' Edwards) - Limited Edition 3 of 15 Print

Hilary Powell

Printmaking, Lithograph on Paper

Size: 21 W x 29 H x 1 D in

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About The Artwork

The last coal miners of South Wales emerge from a drift mine in the Upper Swansea Valley. Hilary Powell documents these working men and the landscape and culture that surrounds them. Farewell Rock is the band of sandstone that lies below the coal measures. Once reached it signals ‘a farewell to riches’ and the end of coal – fitting as the last open cast mines in the region are mothballed and the colliery faces an uncertain future. The work was produced through the Josef Herman Foundation Cymru Print Residency at The Curwen Studio. Josef Herman was a Polish emigrant who settled in and portrayed the mining town of Ystradgynlais in the 1950s. His ‘Notes from a Welsh Diary’ became a starting point to examine the very different contemporary landscape of industrial decline and recovery. When a miner is injured the presence of coal dust in the wound creates blue scars. They call it ‘being mapped.’ These portraits are also maps – layered coal faces produced through the processes of stone and offset lithography and printed using coal dust - an apt method for a project built on how a carboniferous collision of geology continues to form and scar a land and people.

Details & Dimensions

Printmaking:Lithograph on Paper

Artist Produced Limited Edition of:1

Size:21 W x 29 H x 1 D in

Shipping & Returns

Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

My practice is imaginative salvage - recovering hidden histories, reclaiming forgotten techniques, placing value on the overlooked and highlighting and creating the extraordinary in the everyday. This takes many forms - from a BFI collected film staging DIY Olympics on the sites of the 2012 Games to a roller skating animation beneath Archway Tower. Surreal performance combines with participation and a commitment to sharing and thinking through making seen in my recent pop-up book ‘Legend: An A-Z of the Lea Valley’ assembled by apprentices on a theatrical production line in an industrial site. Current work focuses on urban demolition with a radical approach to materials and traditional printmaking advanced through residencies in UCL Chemistry (Leverhulme) and East London Printmakers. I work with demolition site materials and workers putting discarded materials of urban transformation to creative use in epic portraits of the often overlooked processes and people of an ever-changing cityscape.

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