Main content

Durham: Time and the Tides

Poets Katrina Porteus and Phoebe Power and artist and archaeologist Rose Ferraby revisit the Durham coastline to reveal how this landscape inspired an artistic collaboration.

With its beaches, rugged cliffs and imposing headlands, the Durham coastline is a dramatic landscape, stretching from Sunderland to Hartlepool in North East England. Today it's designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty owing to its Magnesian Limestone grasslands, wildflower meadows and ancient woodlands. But this coastline was once the site of several of Durham’s last deep coal mines and notorious for its β€˜black beaches’ and heavily polluted landscape. In the late 1900s, after the closure of the pits, it was transformed in a multi-agency clean-up to remove well over a million tonnes of colliery spoil which had been tipped onto the coast. Today it's β€œa wonderful conglomeration of human and geological layers” says archaeologist and artist Rose Ferraby. Rose along with poets Katrina Porteus and Phoebe Power revisit this landscape which inspired a book of illustrated poems and prose as part of the National Trust’s People’s Landscape project which explores the role landscapes have played in social change. We hear from a former miner and a litter picker, discover beauty in an abandoned mattress, watch a butterfly through the lens of a child’s camera, uncover a kaleidoscope of colours, catch up on memories of life working underground and wind-blow corn cockles above ground.
Producer Sarah Blunt.

Further Information:
People’s Landscapes
https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/features/peoples-landscapes-explore-the-places-that-have-shaped-the-nation
Durham Heritage Coast
https://durhamheritagecoast.org/
Beach Cleans
https://durhamheritagecoast.org/our-coast/caring-for-our-coast/beach-cleans/
Sea Change
https://www.guillemotpress.co.uk/poetry/katrina-porteous-and-phoebe-power-sea-change
Katrina Porteus, Two Countries (2014)

Available now

24 minutes

Last on

Sat 17 Jul 2021 06:07

Broadcasts

  • Thu 15 Jul 2021 15:00
  • Sat 17 Jul 2021 06:07

Podcast