Apple
Heart
An Installation by Trudi Entwistle for the ‘Life On A Leaf’ project
May
2006
My installation for
the ‘Life on a Leaf’ project
is inspired by the apple trees in the old orchard and also by the love
story of the ‘king and the castle’, a fable related to me
by Jan-Erik Andersson as one of his own major inspirations.
The installation is a simple translation, taking the form of a repetition
of two minimal red rings, gently curved to lean against each other. Designed
to sit on, and portable, they provide either an individuals solitary
retreat or the place for a group gathering. From their vantage point
in the orchard,
the Leaf House can well be viewed, especially in the evening when the
sun creates strong silhouettes and enhances the warmth of the red wooden
rings.
Seen from the Leaf House the title of the installation reveals itself.
From above, the minimal forms suggest the outline of apple cores. Walking
down into the meadow from the house, heart-shapes appear from the void
of the rings.


Earth
mounding for Life on a Leaf
September 2006
The Leaf House stands prominently on a foundation plinth rising above
the orchard meadow against a steep backdrop of woodland. The remains
of cut and fill from the house construction had left disjointed
levels and pockets of fragmented areas in the surrounding land.
The height
of the building complimented the scale of neighbouring trees,
but the space
in between needed to integrate these two elements through its scale,
form and line. I felt my role of sculpting the earth for 'Life
on a Leaf' was to both connect the building with nature as well
as creating
a landscape
with its owns unique form.
Heavy rainfall during spring and summer produced streams of surface
water from steep slopes and collected in one big ditch which ran
through the
site. Topographically this cut the site in half, creating a scale
that didn't work with the presence of the building. I redirected
the ditch
to the edge of the site, allowing more dramatic sweeping lines
to descend the slope. This inspired bold crescent terraces to open
up at the back
of the leaf house providing ease of access. These crescents echoe
the bold perspective of the house. This sweeping topography continues
until
its descent into an elliptical mound enclosing the flat area of
the meadow and apple trees.
The sweeping bands of earth will vary in tone and texture, from short
bright green turf, wild meadow, to the ferns from the understorey of
the surrounding woodland. Bands of fruit bushes and plants from Jan
Eriks childhood memories will also structure the landform.    The
Apple Heart Installation has developed from Entwistle's earlier
proposal for an environmental work around the Life on a Leaf
house:
June 2005
Half heart
shaped earth mounds (one side grass
and the other red timber), sweep down the slope increasing in size,
ending in the orchard where one can look back at the house. They
become sheltered
areas to
sit
in, to lie on the
grass.The heart shape is developed from the fable of the king in
the castle.
|