Glorious Mud!


Superficially the two constructions appear to come from the same architectural mould. Their style is at once retro and avant-garde and they share organic, bulbous lines which mark them out from the angular buildings around them. However, this is where their similarity ends.
One embodies a view of a future in which humans are are mere ants milling about within vast labyrinthine systems on which they can have no influence. The other expresses exactly the opposite idea, that humans can shape their own future with their own hands.
The seat was made using a technique developed in Poland by Messrs Brzeski. Straw and liquid clay are mixed by trampling on them in a pit and then put into wooden moulds to form them into light, but sturdy environmentally friendly building blocks which can be used to build all sorts of human-scale structures: houses, bird-hides, mazes ... It's a messy process, but available to anyone prepared to get up to their elbows in clay. In this case it was school children and volunteers who had signed up to workshops organised by The Natural House.
The urge to create shelter is a very basic one and there is something extraordinarily satisfying about being able to do it oneself. I had a great time passing on in Birmingham what I had learned on the Arts Council-funded course in Poland and those who joined in seemed excited by the possibilities it opened up.
I'm planning to do another workshop here on the Island, so if you'd like to find out more about the techniques, get in touch.