
Angle of Vision + PapØYcene
Angle of Vision
In the summer of 2019, Saoirse undertook a placement as Embedded Artist with Scottish Government, joining a consultation team that visited 40 of Scotland’s 93 inhabited islands - from Shetland to the Outer Hebrides, gathering the views of islanders in order to develop Scotland’s first National Islands Plan.
This exhibition showcased newly commissioned work by Higgins resulting from this placement, responding to the consultation process from a different angle, as an artist.
The exhibition includes Angle of Vision – Map of the Geographical Centre Point of 93 inhabited Scottish Islands, a special map developed in collaboration with cartographic design consultant Paul Naylor and technical consultant Chris Mee at Ordnance Survey, alongside a specially designed Island Centre Marker Buoy with the mathematical formula that was used to calculate the island geographical centre points printed on its body, as well as a map developed by 18th century hydrographer Murdoch Mackenzie (1712–1797), on loan from the Orkney Archive in Kirkwall.
Taking its title from a poem by Orcadian poet Robert Rendall (1898–1967), the exhibition focuses on the interactions between islanders and those arriving from the mainland.
PapØYcene
PapØYcene is an audio-visual exhibition presenting research developed over three-years, on the island of Papa Westray.
Survival Tools of the Anthropocene reflects the artist’s engagement with the environment and explores the ways and means of survival along with humanity’s ability to respond to change.
Saoirse’s process is based on participation, and investigates three interconnected island views: the local - from the island looking out to sea; the relational - looking at the action of islanders in caring for their environment, while looking to the future; and long - the view from the island to the external world and how they interact.
* Local, Relational, Long view inspired by historian Fernand Braudel (1902-1985 ) Braudel’s ‘long durée’- the long now.