The Black Mountains Project

Spring - Winter 2015

Press your fingers close on this lichened sandstone. With this stone and this grass, with this red earth, this place was received and made and remade. Its generations are distinct, but all suddenly present.
— Raymond Williams, People of the Black Mountains

Artist Diana Heeks, based in Llanrhystud, West Wales, developed a project in the Black Mountains inspired by Raymond Williams’ unfinished novel People of the Black Mountains. The project comprised four week-long visits to the Black Mountains region and was funded by a Research and Development grant from Arts Council Wales. The research culminated in an exhibition Landscape and Story at Llwyn Celyn (Landmark Trust) in September 2019 and a second exhibition is planned at Y Gaer, Brecon during 2023-4.

Artwork by Diana Heeks

Literature has influenced and engaged me since childhood, and this book evokes feelings which I have an almost visceral need to explore in paint. The Black Mountains is a cluster of steep-sided parallel ridges east of the Brecon Beacons, mainly in Wales but partly across the English border. In two volumes this book tells a series of linked stories about the history of the area, from Neolithic times until the Norman invasion, encompassing a grand sweep across thousands of years and tens of generations, offering both a bird’s-eye view and ground-level intimacy. For many years I have read and reread this novel. Its qualities of imagination and humanity, and its sense of the influence of place, attracted me as a painter from the outset, especially as the location has long been a favourite. The stories and evoked imagery have accompanied me whilst working plein air and on walks and explorations in the actual locations and landscapes of the book. I want to attempt an equivalent in oils on canvas.
— Diana Heeks

Diana Heeks studio visit, photographs by Nathan Morgan

 
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