Chalk
Poet Alyson Hallett reflects on why she is drawn to chalk landscapes and in particular the large horse at Westbury in Wiltshire.
Poet Alyson Hallett reflects on why she's drawn to chalk landscapes and in particular the large horse at Westbury in Wiltshire. It's a soft material, she realises, that is given to drawing and mark-making, found in the caves of Lascaux as well etched into her memories of her school classrooms.
This is the fifth of this week's essays in which writers reflect on how landscapes that matter to them are shaped by the geology that underpins them.
'And stones moved silently across the world' is the name of a project Alyson has been undertaking since 2001: she's engraved those words upon four particular stones which are now placed in different continents. It's a project that began, she explains, when her grandmother came to her in a dream and told her to visit Cader Idris in Snowdonia.
Producer: Mark Smalley.
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Next
You are at the last episode
Broadcast
- Fri 13 Jan 2017 22:45麻豆社 Radio 3
Death in Trieste
Watch: My Deaf World
The Book that Changed Me
Five figures from the arts and science introduce books that changed their lives and work.
Podcast
-
The Essay
Essays from leading writers on arts, history, philosophy, science, religion and beyond.