Ysgol Gynradd Aberteifi Workshop 3 — Birds of the Oak
The mighty Oaks on the school grounds

Guest post by project artist Pip Lewis

Adar y Dderw – birds of the Oak

Pip continued working with Group A, creating layered artworks made with acetate . The process involves overlaying drawing and collage, and adding text, and will be exhibited in the Stori Wyllt Gathering in Stiwdio 3 in Aberteifi on Monday 29th June.

Prior to the workshop Pip selected and printed A3 photos of different birds who live and forage in oak trees. The students drew lots last week to find out which bird they would be focusing on in their final artwork. 

Pictures of birds and stencilled names
A3 birds and stencilled names

In the first part of the morning the students used a letter stencil to write their own name and the name of their bird in english and welsh. The aim was to practice using a letter stencil, and design of the image – making decisions on spacing and layout of the words. The Welsh name of the bird will be added to the acetate in the final artwork.

The students used the graphite transfer technique to make a drawing from the photo of their bird last week. Today they placed the acetate over the drawing and used a black permanent marker to copy it directly on to the acetate to make a second layer.

Close-up of student tracing bird on acetate
Black marker outline of the bird drawing

The students were introduced to collage art, and spent the last hour choosing coloured sugar paper to collage their bird. This was done directly onto their original drawing, and the students chose to work with scissors or ripping the paper to the size they wanted to infill the bird drawing.

Collage of owl, with brown sugar paper
Collage in progress of Little Owl

Mrs Roberts will focus on completing the collages, and adding the Welsh names into the design prior to the images being framed.

Photo collage of 11 pencil tracings of birds Collage of collages, of birds of the Oak

Species list

Species English name Welsh name
Phoenicurus phoenicurus Redstart Tingoch
Ficedula hypoleuca Pied Flycatcher Gwybedog Brith
Corvus frugilegus Rook Ydfan
Parus major Great Tit Titw Mawr
Cyanistes caeruleus Blue Tit Titw Tomos Las
Anthus trivialis Tree Pipit Corhedydd Y Coed
Phylloscopus sibilatrix Wood Warbler Telor Y Coed
Columba palumbus Wood Pigeon Colomen Y Goedwig
Sturnus vulgaris Starling Drudwy
Athene noctua Little Owl Tylluan Fach
Garrulus glandarius Jay Sgrech Y Coed
Erithacus rubecula Robin Robin Goch
Dendrocopos major Great Spotted Woodpecker Cnocell Fraith Fwyaf
Coccothraustes coccothraustes Hawfinch Gylfrinbraff
Sitta europaea Nuthatch Delor Y Cnau

The Oak / Y Dderwen

Drone photo of line of students and staff along fence by the Oaks Group B students by the Oak

Ecologist Yusef Samari came to the school, and we focussed our attention on the Oak trees. Straight away, Yusef found different types of Oak gall. From the Wikipedia article on Oak galls:

The adult female wasp lays single eggs in developing leaf buds. The wasp larvae feed on the gall tissue resulting from their secretions, which modify the oak bud into the gall, a structure that protects the developing larvae until they undergo metamorphosis into adults.

We also found a lot of leaf miners, which are the larval stage of a variety of different insects, very commonly found in Bramble.

Bramble leaf with white tracks of leaf miner Leaf miner in a Bramble leaf

And, of course, an abundance of dead wood, with ubiquitous woodlice!

Reflections

  • It‘s a lot of work to write up the notes and sort out the photos and galleries, be good to have a faster, more streamlined process on the website side of things.
  • Very useful to have the artist write their process and progress, but it is a lot of extra work. Will have a think about how best to document process, possibly share the work?