Anna McNay

Essay: Judith Burrows: Narratives of Location

17/10/16

Judith Burrows:
Narratives of Location

Cecil Sharp House

19 October 2016 – 22 January 2017

Tongue-tied I am
bound

To weave my words
with thistledown

Sickle moon on the
moor

Turns thistledown
silver and fingers raw
[1]

                                   

When Judith Burrows is scouting for locations in which to
shoot the album artwork for folk musicians, she looks for places that relate to
the concept and where she feels there is a narrative she can develop, be they
urban, rural, coastal or in a studio. This work is her bread and butter, but it
also feeds into her life and soul: making mixed media paintings and collages,
which develop these stories.

Taking these scenes as her starting points, she builds them
up like storyboards, painting in further detail, overlaying negatives,
collaging in text, music score, lyrics or contour lines from a map. Some
details may be temporary – a piece of graffiti, a painted hoarding, or an
eroded coastline. It is these chance presences, however, which combine to
create the contingencies of Burrows’ imagination, shared on paper or canvas,
offering a multitude of dramatic narratives within a single image.


The characters in these improvised scenarios are random
passers-by; anonymous, genderless strangers who resonate with Burrows’ own
search for, and sense of herself. They become entangled in the yarn and are
repeated, often myriad times, suggesting all possible permutations and outcomes
– the “what ifs” of paths that may or may not be trodden.

Titles are taken from song lyrics, literature, found text
or sometimes from the locations themselves, such as On Great Eastern Street, where she shot a magazine
cover of Billy
Bragg. The words encapsulate what Burrows is feeling as she paints: the new
narrative that comes out of both the original shots, and the repetition and
layering of possibility.  And again … memories with no words … again
and again
or It was written, I should
be loyal to the nightmares of my choice
, which came from Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness and, at a time when Burrows
was having intense and vivid nightmares herself, “just seemed relevant”.

Farewell, Finisterre

Sleep away the
afternoon

Just rocking with the
tide

Drinking with the moon[2]

Exploring the unique resonance of each particular
place and the narratives we weave into and around them, Burrows’ works unravel
layers of emotion, both known and unknown. “
I think I’m quite intense
and the paintings are quite intense,” she admits. That
intensity is part of who I am. It’s a search for meaning.” And this search,
she continues, intensifies as you grow older and question more deeply: “What is
this all about?” Along the way, Burrows accumulates strings of words and
images, like a magpie, she tears things out of papers and stores them until
they find their place in a work. Even after something is theoretically
finished, she has been known to go back and add further detail, further twists
and turns to the plot.

Burrows’ works are not framed, because they are never truly finished.
The story continues even after the narrator ceases to narrate. She stretches
her works after she has painted them, so often the painting will continue
beyond the frame, turning round the corners of the wood, disappearing beyond
the line of vision; other times she will need to fill in an unexpected blank
space. One individual image can say an awful lot, but there’s always more to it
than meets the eye.

Burrows studied film and photography and her early career
was in filmmaking, writing and directing dramas and producing documentaries,
including for the National Portrait Gallery. One film, Pulse, was screened against the exterior wall of the National
Theatre, with sound emanating from speakers along the Southbank. But Burrows
always described her film work as “very painterly”, just as now she describes
her paintings as “somehow photographic”. It was looking through her library of
photographs that made her realise that she had a vast archive of possible material
for paintings ready to hand. Now, when she goes on music location recces, she
takes extra shots with her old, wide-format, analogue camera. Working from
these scenic inspirations, Burrows – along with her anonymous figures – becomes
a part of the image: “And that’s something you can’t do on a screen,” she says.
“You’re removed from the image when you’re working on a computer.” Hers is a
process of perpetual distillation. As she scouts for her filmic and
photographic locations, she zooms in, freeze-frames that transient moment, and
then zooms in further, taking a still smaller frame, from which to build up a
new narrative, under close scrutiny. She describes a feeling of seeing beyond:
through the lens, along the alleyway, and through the arches…

The sepia colour scheme of her paintings was not something Burrows
was consciously selecting. She describes her palette as “earthy” and
“intuitive”, adding: “I like colours that aren’t quite true, that are slightly
dirty, slightly worn – they’ve had a life of their own”. Typically, in her
photography, she will desaturate the tones, yet, in her paintings, there are
swathes of bright, white light, strong bursts of colour, against an otherwise
muted setting: the browns and ochres, oranges and turquoises feel somehow
inverse, recalling negatives, suggesting potential and mystery: an image not
yet developed, an ending not yet written.

Santander, the sky
is falling

The tale we told
each other has an end[3]

In the case of Judith Burrows’ paintings, however, one
might never reach this conclusion. For the tale she tells, it has no end… 



[1] Lyrics from Tongue-Tied
by Emily Portman

[2] Lyrics from Finisterre by Ian Telfer, © Complete Music 1990, from the album Ashore by
June Tabor (Topic Records 2011
),
for which Judith Burrows shot the artwork

[3] Ibid





Images:


On Great Eastern Street


It was written i should be loyal to the nightmare of my choice

© the artist