Page 105 - Art First: Helen MacAlister: At the Foot o’ Yon Excellin’ Brae
P. 105

Ben Dorain                                ‘Ben Dorain’ ascribes to given analysis  of Donnchadh
                                                                                                1
                               oil on linen, 2010, 148 x 210cm           Bàn MacIntyre’s poem, Praise to Ben Dorain as being a
                               At the Foot o’ Yon Excellin’ Brae         panegyric to a mountain, a visual documentary.
                               oil on linen, 2010, A2                           However, the pieces are also conceived of
                                                                         looser conceits: the bàn is Gaelic for fair-haired, (off)white
                               Panegyric                                 but can also signify blank, empty and pale ie, talamh bàn
                               pencil on paper, 2008, A2                 = fallow ground (an uncultivated field is pale in contrast
                                                                         to the dark ground of ploughed) and of course fallow as in
                                                                         fallow deer. By extension there is the pertinent dèan bàn =
                                                                         depopulate.
                                                                                Thomas Clark in A Book of Deer is apposite:
                                                                            ‘In a glade of smoky light, that which is
                                                                            lost, or is constantly displaced, steps
                                                                            beyond its image.’

                                                                                The title of the show is Hamish Hendersons.
                                                                         At the Foot o’ Yon Excellin’ Brae , a text in which he says
                                                                                           2
                                                                         ‘the purpose of this present essay is to demonstrate that a
                                                                         curious “bilingualism in one language” has always been a
                                                                         characteristic of Scots folksong at least since the beginning
                                                                         of the seventeenth century.’ He further points out that the
                                                                                         3
                                                                         language is never purely colloquial but is formal and even
                                                                         stylized. ‘It is in the great songs, licked into shape like
                                                                         pebbles by the waves of countless tongues, that this sense
                                                                         of formality is most marked.’
                                                                                ‘At the Foot o’ Yon Excellin’ Brae’, as
                                                                         declarative, ‘steps beyond its image’.

                                                                         1  Dùthchas Nan Gàidheal: Selected Essays of John MacInnes, p266
                                                                         2  A line from Courtin’ Amang the Kye, sung by Willie Mathieson
                                                                         3  Alias MacAlias - Hamish Henderson; edited byAlec Finlay, p52 &
                                                                         p54
                                                                         Drawing = © St Andrews University Library, Photographic Collection
                                                                         Painting = © St Andrews University Library, Photographic Collection
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