Edinburgh's reputation as a major centre of culture is well known. It is UNESCO's first City of Literature, home to the world's largest book festival and performing arts festival, with more listed buildings than anywhere in Britain.
Left, statue of the poet Robert
Fergusson – said to have been an important influence on Rabbie Burns - outside
Canongate Kirk. (If he looks awfully young, it's because the poor thing died at just 24). Right, The People's Story Museum on Canongate.
The library of New College, Edinburgh University's school of Divinity, where John Knox pontificates in the quadrangle
Here at the Scottish
Poetry Library is an exhibition illustrating the story of an amazing tribute by one artist to all those who keep these
cultural institutions alive …
In the course of 2011, a
series of intricate and beautiful paper sculptures were discovered in various
Edinburgh museums and libraries, left there as gifts by an anonymous artist ….
The first, found one day in March on the
desk of the Scottish Poetry Library, is the poetree (above). Like the others it is made
out of the pages of a book and dedicated
to the "support of libraries, books, words, ideas".
The poetree was mounted on a book and accompanied by a gilded paper egg with a poem lining, and a tag addressed to @byleaveswelive, the library's Twitter account.
Three months later the National Library of Scotland found themselves gifted with a similar sculpture, a gramaphone and a coffin (not shown below), sculpted from a copy of Ian Rankin's Exit Music ...
More sculptures gradually appeared ... this teacup (below) was found on a signing table at the Edinburgh Book Festival. It includes a teabag filled with cut out letters, The cup on the top has a swirl of words which read ” Nothing beats a nice cup of tea (or coffee) and a really good BOOK”, and on a ‘tray’ next to an intricate cupcake “except maybe a cake as well”.
And so they continued ... this delicate dragon nesting on paper leaves was found on a window-sill in the Scottish Storytelling Centre ...
... and this, dedicated to UNESCO Edinburgh City of Literature, titled "LOST (albeit in a good book)", sculpted from a copy of James Hogg's Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner
Staff at the Writer's Museum discovered this street scene under a silvery moon, crafted in the opened-out spine of a copy of Ian Rankin's Hide and Seek
and one of my favourites - a pair of paper gloves made in the texture of a bee ...
... accompanied by a cap made of a wing of tiny feathers ...
As the mystery deepened with each of the ten sculptures that gradually appeared, so has curiosity about the identity of the artist. All that is known to date is that she is a woman. With the announcement of this exhibition of her sculptures in the Scottish Poetry Library, she contributed via an anonymous email address her thoughts and motives, explaining that at the heart of the project is
Staff at the Writer's Museum discovered this street scene under a silvery moon, crafted in the opened-out spine of a copy of Ian Rankin's Hide and Seek
and one of my favourites - a pair of paper gloves made in the texture of a bee ...
... accompanied by a cap made of a wing of tiny feathers ...
As the mystery deepened with each of the ten sculptures that gradually appeared, so has curiosity about the identity of the artist. All that is known to date is that she is a woman. With the announcement of this exhibition of her sculptures in the Scottish Poetry Library, she contributed via an anonymous email address her thoughts and motives, explaining that at the heart of the project is
"a woman, who had been a girl, whose life would have been less rich had she been unable to wander freely into libraries, art galleries and museums. A woman who, now all grown, still wants access to these places and yes, wants them for her children ..."
All photos my own.