
As an artist living in a society in transition, I was becoming concerned about the place of art in these shifting times. Relationships and visual experiences seem to be moving from real life to the virtual world, and I wondered whether art, galleries and the living artists of today were in danger of becoming disconnected from their own communities.
Then I discovered a traveling art project that renewed my faith in the power of art as a means of expression.
I learned about Porch Pieces online, and decided to experience the project for myself.
We were two kids, playing on Bryony’s porch.
Settling into a chair by an old screen door, I looked around and noticed all the mismatched windows and banisters and clapboards. “We started with a basic porch structure,” says Bryony. “Then local people began donating pieces to the project. I’m sitting on a Sue Clary sofa. And that door behind you was donated by Liz and Bob Skinner.” Now I understood why there was so much great energy on this porch. Each piece has its own story, and then people visit and create more stories.
So here are the musings and ramblings that became part of the conversation Bryony and I shared on her American porch that day:
Porch Pieces has finished touring New York, but will become part of an international exhibition on rural culture.