Kurt Jackson painting

THE CORNISH HEDGE - AN KE KERNEWEK

Next time, I cycle in. I whirl through a labyrinth of narrow lanes lined with Cornish hedges. They are, I’m thinking, the most beautiful things in England at this moment in May. I freewheel past brocades of red campion and white garlic and blue-bell, past sprays of lime-green fiddleheads, and notice from the corner of my eye the way the little round leaves and butterscotch spires of navelwort come and go as I move in and out of the shade. It’s a real enough prospect, but a dream, too. This is the romantic vision of old England, a rural paradise where humans and nature lived in harmony, where plants were in their right place, at the right time.

Yet these aren’t hedges in the sense that’s understood in the rest of England. They’re not topped by rows of blowsy hawthorn or studded with timber oaks. You’d have no luck trying to count the shrubs in a thirty-yard stretch to measure how old it is in centuries. (There aren’t any.) The Cornish hedge is an artificial bank, a vertical rock garden, knitted together from slates and granite chunks and slabs of turf. Inside farmland the hedges are field boundaries, but along these lanes they exist to stop the fields from falling into the road. They’re artefacts, yet somehow seem to have conjured together all the brimming wildness of woodland clearing and stream edge and cliff-top in one place.

Cycling past them is too broad a take. You catch the blocks of colour, the alternations of shade, little spikes of vivid, odd detail. But not the minute particulars of why such pieces of functional engineering should have a convincing patina of naturalness. The next day I walk in, and peer closer.

Bluebells, shield-ferns, lady-ferns, wood sorrel – plants I know from the deep shade of ancient woods in the south-east, plants which suggest they need deep leaf-litter too. But here they’re out in the sun, with their roots wedged between stones. I draw my finger through one of the clefts, thinking of the niches on that little weevil, symbiophilus. I pull out a crumbling wad of dead moss, a curled-up millipede, flecks of stone and a smidgeon of mould. What on earth are the plants living on?

Extracted from ‘Fencing Paradise’ by Richard Mabey, with permission of the author ©2005.

Kewar yw rag an dhysquethva noweth gans Kurt Jackson dhe grespoyntya orth an ke Kernow. Keow Kernow a’n Os Brons yw an cotha starnedhow gwres gans mabden bos usyes pubdedh whath yn oll an bys. Ma geseth, me a dyb, dre formya an keow oryon mes, dhe voy wren ny godhvos anedha, dhe voy ny a wra convedhes y vos an fordhow bras may travalya bestas ha losow an gwyls adro an tyreth.

Neb fordh, kow a wra predhya nampyth yn downder an enef, tewl traweythyow ha prederus, pryveth, po kevrynek ynjy, tregva dhe’n losow pystry a’n lyen gweryn ha’n tardh a lowena romansek yth yw an keweth yn gwaynten. Martesen, styryow an re ma a wra tregas yn keow dre wul an castygow a’n haf dewedhes gans fustow a’n jyn enna dhe apperya avel dhystrucsyon moy uthek heb rach.

Gwyryoneth munys y skyans adro dhe gweth yw kens an 19es cansvledhen, moyha a’n poblens a Vreten Vuer o helghyoryon ha cuntelloryon whath ow cruny bos hag ylyow dheworth aga heow. Ytho … dhe’n gweyth brentyn gans Kurt.

Ow cowsel ragof ow honen, me a wra y gara yn fuer drefen an den ma a wra convedhes an bewnans, ha suel voy why a wra meras orth y benturys, dhe voy ynjy yw dyogely a vewnans. Pentyers an lyha a yl y gontrefaytya rag may y gyllaf war’n canfas. Gans Kurt, why a yl y weles had y dastya. Rag henna, me a wra y gomendya dheugh an gweyth marthys ma, drefen yth yw adro dhe geow y’n menyans a’n efanna, yth yw adro dhe’n dermyn ow passya ha’n gwaryvaow pleth yw bewnans y honen yw actys, yn gwyr hag avel metafor.

Tim Smit, 19es mys Est 2005

How appropriate it is that Kurt Jackson’s new exhibition focuses on the Cornish hedge. Cornwall’s Bronze Age field boundaries and hedges are the oldest man-built structures still in every day use anywhere in the world. There is an irony, I suppose, that hedges form boundaries, yet the more we know of them, we realise they are the great highways by which wildlife moves around the country.

Hedges somehow capture something deep in the soul, sometimes dark and brooding, secret, mysterious even, home to the witching plants of folklore and the romantic joy burst that is the hedgerow in spring. Perhaps it is these meanings that reside in hedges that make the late summer thrashings of the tractor flails seem like the most terrible wanton abuse.

A little known fact about hedgerows is that up until the early nineteenth century, the majority of the population of the British Isles were still, in part, hunter gatherers collecting food and remedies from their banks. So … on to Kurt’s magnificent work.

On a personal note, why I like it so much is that the man understands life, and the more you look at his paintings, the more life-affirming they become. Lesser painters can fake it so that you can see it on the canvas. With Kurt, you not only see it, but you feel it. So I commend this wonderful show to you, because not only is it about hedges in the widest sense of the word, it is also about the passing of time and the stages on which life itself is played out, both for real and as a metaphor.

Tim Smit, 19 August 2005

 
KURT JACKSON
An Ke Kernewek, 2005 183x183 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Hedge Out Onto The Cliffs, Gorse, Blackthorn And Bramble, February 2005 25x23 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Campion And Foxglove Madness, June 2005 30x29 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Campion, Foxglove, Sorrel, Nettle, Bracken, Bramble, Gorse, Navelwort, Stonecrop, Hogweed, Buttercup, Stitchwort, Bluebell. May 2005 57x63 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Sunshine And South-Easterlies, Iron Age Courtyard Houses And Hedges, Carn Euny. June 2005 57x62
 
KURT JACKSON
Croak Of A Raven Above Me, Chatter Of A Wren Below. From Above Eagles Nest. November 2004 57x62 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Hedges On The Clifftop InThe Autumn Sunshine 2004 29x32 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Golden Field, Late pm, Kenython. September 1998 23x23 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Fog Hedge, 2005 13x30 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Sit With The Bugs And Flowers 25x19.5 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
The Submerged Hedges Are Exposed Again At Low Water, Scilly 2005 170x170 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Scilly, Submerged Hedges, Heavy Rain And Gales, October 2004 28x31 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Submerged Hedges And Pouring Rain, Green Bay, Bryher, October 2004 56x63 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Sheltering From The 70mph Winds And Horizontal Rain Behind Hedges Of Granite And Bracken, October 2004, Scilly 56x61 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
The Hedge That Gave Me Shelter From The Storm, Bramble, Bracken, Granite. Bryher, October 2004 56x63 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Bryher Dusk, Hedges Of Granite And Pittisporum, October 2004 28x30 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Calm Before The Storm, Bryher Evening, October 2004 26x28 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Scilly Hedge, October 2004 28x32 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Over A Hedge To Samson, 80mph Winds, October 2004 24x27 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Gorse On The Hedge, Northerly Gales, sunshine And April Showers. 2004 38x62 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
The Gorse, The Cottage, The Hedge, April Showers. 2005 38x41 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Whitethroat Singing, Gorse On The Hedge, April 2005 56x62 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Bramble, Bracken, Granite. April 2005 45x33 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Gorse, Dock Leaves And Campion At Dusk, Sun On The Sea, June 2005 26x22 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
WhenThe Gorse Is In Blossom...April 2005 29x30 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Gorse And Whatnot, Warm April Sunshine 2004 56x63 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Towards Lands End From Carn Bosavern, Warm Sunshine. January 2001 29x31 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Penwith Hedges, Cattle, Wind, Sun. September 2004 20x21 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Cornish Gorse In The Sun, April 2004 57x63 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Hedge In The Sun, 10/3/99. Rooks Calling, Robins Singing 28x31 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Gorse, Bramble, Bracken, Bluebell, Violet, Herb Robert, Stonecrop, Campion. May 2005 19x16 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Fuzzy Bush 2005 122x122 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Cuckoo Call, Bee Buzz, June Evening 2005 49x51 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
A Whitethroats Scratchy Call, A Wallbrown Basks In The Sun, May 2005 57x62 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Happy Harrys House, The Crow, Kenython, July 2000 56x62 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Orchard Blossom, Hedge In The Sunshine, May 2005 56x61
 
KURT JACKSON
Hedge In The Woods, Overgrown And Hidden By Bluebells, Wild Leek And Wood Sorrel, June 2005 56x60 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Cow Parsley, Mizzle, Mist, Fog, May 2005 57x62 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Bramble Flowers And Blackberries, September 1992 28x30 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Mild Still Winters Evening In Harveys Field. A Weasel Rushes Past Me. 29x28
 
KURT JACKSON
This World Of Ours 152x152 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
From Witches And Weasels And Creeping Things At Hedge Bottoms, Please Deliver Us, 2004 91.5x91.5 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Every Hedge Has An Eye, Every Ditch Has An Ear 2004 122x122 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Winter Sunshine In Harveys Field, Cold Westerly Winds, A Flock Of Golden Plover Flies Over With A Rush, A Magpie Calls, The Hawthorn Moves In The Wind, January 2005 56x61
 
KURT JACKSON
Autumn Afternoon, Hawthorn In The Hedge. November 2004 56x64 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Two Snipe Fly Over Followed By Two Fieldfares. Penwith Thorn, The Wind Blows And The Canvas Moves. 2004 152x152
 
KURT JACKSON
On The Brambly Hedgetop, Listening To The Years First Cuckoo. April 2005 28x23
 
KURT JACKSON
Sunshine, Bramble, Campion, Whitethroat, Dunnock. April 2005 38x41 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Gorse Hedge At Dusk. March 2004 40x41 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Prehistoric Clifftop Hedge, June 2005 29x29 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Gweal Hill, Field Of 3 Hedges, Bryher, October 2004 20x21 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Morning Behind A Hedge Of Granite And Lichen On Bryher, October 2004 56x62 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Prehistoric Hedges Above Sennen Beach, June 2005 57x62
 
KURT JACKSON
Above Tregardock, Herringbone Hedge, February 2005 57x61 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Treligga Slate And Blackthorn, February 2005 21x18
 
KURT JACKSON
Jack & Jills, February 2005 19x21
 
KURT JACKSON
The Shade From The Hedge Leaves Some Of The Frost Unmelted. A February Morning, Treligga Cliffs, North Cornwall, 2005 57x63 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
I Have Known This Hedge Since I Was A Small Boy, Tregardock, January 2005 57x64
 
KURT JACKSON
Jack & Jills 2005 91.5x91.5 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
A Light Rain Is Blowing In From The Atlantic Over The Cliffs And Hedges Of Levant. Flocks Of Starlings Blow Past. The Fields Are Empty. September 2004 20x20
 
KURT JACKSON
Stonecrop, Navelwort, Sorrel, Granite, Moss. April 2005 20x21
 
KURT JACKSON
Hedge Of Blackthorn And Slate, Treligga, February 2005 27x26 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Treligga Herringbone, 2005 47x84
 
KURT JACKSON
An Ke Kernewek 2005 28x44 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
A Barn Owl Flies By Silently, A Heron Flies High Overhead Honking Noisily - A North Cornish Sunset Through The Blackthorn. February 2005 16x18 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Meadow Brown, Ringlet, Bramble. July 2005 17x20 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Bracken and bramble October 2004 19cm x 19cm
 
KURT JACKSON
An Ke Kernewek 2005 13cm x 11cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Cornish hedge of gorse, May 2004 15cm x 22cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Hedge top, dusk. September 2004 18cm x 18cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Corner of sea campion June 2005 18.5cm x 13cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Wet May hedge. Cow parsley, nettle, campion, goose grass, bluebell, wild leek, hogweed. 2005 30cm x 29cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Campion bluebell hogweed bumble bee. June 2003 26.5cm x 22.5 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Hedged In 2005 34x31cm diameter
 
KURT JACKSON
Jack & Jill 2005 33x25 cm diameter
 
KURT JACKSON
The Cornish Hedge, Bramble And Hogweed 2005 30x25x9
 
KURT JACKSON
The Cornish Hedge, Gorse, Navelwort, Plantain, Sow Thistle, Teasel 2005 37x25x9 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Jill 2005 26.5x10x7 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Submerged Hedge, Scilly, 2005 91.5x91.5 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Submerged Hedge Three Metres Below Me Under The Sea Off Samson Flats, Scilly. Bladder Wrack, Shore Crabs, Granite Boulders 75x57 cm
 
KURT JACKSON
Sunlight Through The Water And Seaweed, Submerged Hedge, Scilly, May 2005 75x57 cm