Inspiration and Knowledge

 

What inspiration…?

People always ask me “What are you inspired by?”. My immediate gut answer has always been, and always will be, ‘Malaysia’. The beautiful natural environment & cultures of my country are always on my mind. I love it. It is what I have grown up with, always close to the jungle, outdoors, free to roam around the plantations in which I grew up, mixing with people of all races, watching festivals and ways of life in little towns.

Parents and knowledge….

Through the years, as an adult,  my inspirations are being drawn from a much wider range of countries visited through my travels. However, my strongest inspirations still come down to the world’s environment and cultures. As a child, my parents made us observe nature, make things, draw things we saw. They encouraged artwork, an interest in natural history, and they encouraged general knowledge. The volumes of the Encyclopedia Britannica was always on hand and out on the big work table in my fathers study.

The inspiration of a teacher….

At school I developed an interest in art and pattern, anthropology, archaeology, natural history and art history. At boarding school in Dorset, UK doing my A levels, I took part in a new activity that was being offered, ‘Weaving’. It was there in the wonderful ‘weaving shack’ created by the totally inspiring textile artist Wendy Barber, I found the exact thing that allowed me to combine all my favorite interests; woven and printed textiles. I couldn’t get enough and there was never enough time in the day to keep working at creating and trying out ideas on the loom, block printing, dying natural colors, spinning wools, and learning about textiles from around the world. My short time living with Wendy Barber and her partner, the late artist John Hinchcliffe, after school before going to New York, has been fundamentally vital to my growth as an artist today.

On my own….

I carried all of this with me to New York and Parsons School of Design where I studied Print & Surface Design. Here I could mix up all the ideas I’d learnt from studying cultures around the world and found my own ‘hand’ and ‘colour sense’. It was here I was told “Stick with your own ideas and never be afraid of acting on them.” And so I managed to focus it all down to pattern, color, nature and culture. I took this back to Malaysia when I finished and set up Owen Rebecca Designs with my future husband specializing in prints that promoted the environment & culture of Malaysia.

Decide on a lifestyle….

That was 30 years ago and since then my ‘work’ has morphed into a ‘lifestyle choice’ of art, hospitality and activism highlighting Malaysia, nature, heritage and culture. Whilst living full time on Pangkor Island, I was all about the jungle. In George Town within the UNESCO heritage zone, I was all about what I saw on the street, intangible heritage, old trades and customs and a moral inkling to want to preserve some of that for the future. Still in Penang, as I watch the steady destruction of the islands fantastic natural environment & hills, my interest has swung again to nature: its patterns, colours and my own gut reaction to it.

Support a cause….

My participation in the recent ‘Save Our Hills’ campaign by the Penang Forum has pulled my focus out of the urban mess, into the hills of Penang and once again I’m fascinated by everything most people just simply dismiss as they go about their lives. The shapes of leaves, the colors of their veins, the patterns in bark, the types of birds that flit in and out of our view, the amazing blooms on our trees, the way the sunlight plays on the jungle canopy. Once you stop and start looking, you can find extraordinary things in the most ordinary places. I find this very uplifting and recently I have started to translate these daily ‘visual memories’ or ‘visual imprints’ into quick paintings.

Focus….

These quite large paintings on paper have stemmed from an exercise I started some time ago to create what I call ‘A travelling artists diary’. There have always been certain images that have stayed with me through time and my travels, visual memories that I have taken in. Instead of just leaving them be in my head, I started to translate and draw them in a sketchbook, filling the whole page with an ink drawing and pattern. Once started, I made myself complete the page even if I felt that I’d made a mistake or ‘didn’t like it’ along the way. I wanted to create a routine for myself by starting and then making sure I completed the page whilst working through the mistakes in order to make the image ‘whole’. I didn’t want to give up on that particular ‘visual imprint’.

Work to create….

I use the same technique with my quick paintings. There is no sketching or thought. I just start painting and work through it all with layers of color and pattern until I feel its complete. I have really enjoyed this process and the amount of work I have been able to produce in this way has been so very satisfying. Part of this focus is also because I’ve reached a stage in life where the kids are all grown up and I suddenly have time to give myself. I’ve also inherited a certain ‘work ethic’ from my parents, my father in particular, that does not allow me to be idle for too long. I’m throughly enjoying my ability to spontaneously produce these ‘visual diaries’, a collection of pattern and colour. That is to me, the essence of my art, a visual record of things that I see on a daily basis, often ‘ordinary’ but absolutely not!

The essence of my work….

I am a ‘hoarder’ and I love producing a collection of work rather than individual pieces. My ideas and inspirations then have a ‘story’ and together I feel the works make more sense. The ‘collection’ relays my thoughts and emotions during the space of time in which I produced them.

Stop and look….the importance of Knowledge….

I always have my camera with me and I take many many photographs to use for ideas and to look at again for inspiration. However, most important, when I’m out, I take the time to look at things and inspect how they are formed. A flower for example is not just a four petaled thing. It has been designed specifically to be pollinated by its chosen creature or element. It may be designed to shake in the wind, float on a river, be rubbed by the back of a beetle, to be entered by the long tongue of a moth or be fluttered by the wings of little tiny bat. These shapes look disjointed and strange but as soon as you understand how nature has interconnected everything, ones ability to draw and put marks on paper becomes all the more easy and fluid. Ultimately, it is this ‘Knowledge’, that I find incredibly inspiring.

My Artwork: http://rebeccaduckett.com

https://www.facebook.com/RebeccaDuckettWilkinsonArt/?ref=hl

Harking back to my childhood: http://tigerrock.info

https://www.facebook.com/tigerrock.info/?ref=hl

A Traveling Artists Diary: For you to colour in! https://www.instagram.com/atravellingartistsdiary/

Hinchcliffe and Barber today: https://www.facebook.com/hinchcliffeandbarber/?fref=ts

Go for a walk in the Penang Botanic Gardens https://www.facebook.com/pages/Penang-Botanic-Gardens/137102772979219?fref=ts

Support this cause: http://penangforum.net

https://www.facebook.com/penangforum/?ref=hl

Birdwatching on Gurney Drive

Please stop and watch the birds on Gurney Drive….

 

Gurney Drive is the main point where the public can visually connect and meet the sea, here on Penang Island. It is here that you can view Kedah Peak on the mainland, an often ethereal and hazy shadow of a mountain that floats on the view. All the early voyagers to Penang made reference to Mount Kedah. It marks the entry by sea into Penang Island.

The promenade (originally called New Coast Road & completed in 1936) was renamed in 1952 after Sir Henry Gurney the British colonial Administrator, was assassinated on route to the hill station Frasers Hill on Oct 6th 1951, by communist insurgents during the Malayan Emergency. Thousands of people attended his funeral at Cheras War Cemetery in Kuala Lumpur. The Rolls Royce in which he was assassinated is displayed at the Penang State Museum.

Wake up early….

I walk on Gurney Drive, with lots of other people, early morning at least 5 times a week. I always aim for sunrise. It is a stunning introduction to each day. I’m always surprised by the beauty of it all. The Drive is approximately 2.5kms in length and most times, there is too much traffic, noise and fumes. Where the drains discharge, and especially around the seafood restaurants, your nostrils will smart in protest at the sharp scent of ammonia and rotten food. It is at times unpleasant, but if you walk with purpose, or run, past these points, you’ll get over it. I smile at each municipal street cleaner as I walk by, acutely aware of the fact that without them thanklessly sweeping everyday, the pavements and the beaches here, would be a tip.

I started walking here for exercise, a routine I wanted to keep to. A minimum of 10,000 steps a day!  What a change this has made to my mind, body and mood, despite fumes and nasty smells. It has now become a bit of an addictive passion and I carry both my big Nikon camera & my iPhone6 with me each day.

Wildlife….

I look forward to the sunrises each day, but it is the birdlife that has really got me gripped here. In particular, the very beautiful, small colony of white egrets that fish so elegantly along the shore line. There are also little herons, redshanks, waders and at night, a change of guard with larger night herons, standing still as sentries, where the island water discharges at the main drains out to the sea.

Otters, dolphins, monitor lizards, mud skippers, bats, crows and pigeons add to the mix. Everyday there is something different. You cannot come to Penang and miss a walk along Gurney Drive. With reclamation for more development about to start, the line of the shore, the mudflats, the bird colonies and wildlife,  are all at risk. Before it all disappears, sunrise or sunset, get your steps in now and take a moment to look out, up and around. Stop and watch the birds!

For me they are an inspiration for my artwork, and their elegance and calm resilience, a call to become more aware of what the natural environment means to me. I do not wish for them to disappear.

How to get there….

From China Tiger, our apartments on China Street in the centre of the UNESCO heritage zone of George Town, take the Rapid Bus 101 from Weld Quay. Bring your camera! Ask to get off in front of Gurney Plaza. Walk the length and back, from the ‘Sunrise’ Apartments roundabout to the collection of fishing boats on the end. It is here you can wait for the sun to rise above the hills. The egrets are fishing all day long, shining bright white in the sun, moving position with the tides.

Get savvy….

Pepper Cake

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Pepper is probably the most well known spice. Its historical value was such that it was treated like gold. It was used as currency in the Middle Ages and used to pay rent and taxes. The term ‘peppercorn rent’ indicated ‘payment in full’, but today the term has become to mean ‘a nominal amount’.

Peper nigrum, a vine grown on tall stakes in a wigwam shape, is indigenous to the Malabar Coast, India, but was taken to Java by the wave of Hindu traders and colonists. It spread throughout the Far East. In Malaysia it was grown widely in the past here in Penang, but Sarawak is now best known for its wonderful quality pepper. Black peppercorns are green berries dried and raked until they shrink and wrinkle. White peppercorns are red and orange berries, packed in sacks, then soaked in slowly running water until the outer husks rot and can be sloughed off.  Green peppercorns are fresh, often freeze-dried or pickled in brine or vinegar.

Pepper is extremely versatile and is used at all stages of the cooking process, as well as a table condiment. Pepper enhances flavours and can be happily, often surprisingly, paired with sweet ingredients: try it ground on strawberries or pineapple. This tastes great! Specks of ground black pepper add interest to otherwise pale sauces.

Pepper stimulates the appetite, is thought to help in the preservation of cooked food when used in larger quantities, and if consumed in copious amounts, is also thought to help your body repel mosquitoes.

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Christmas is coming….

Spices have always traditionally been used at Christmas time to decorate and add flavour to the feast of food. Spiced tea and mulled wine are traditional cold weather drinks and here in the tropics, a heavily spiced chai tea is not only stimulating for the body but a good way to keep off colds and sinus troubles.

The Recipe….

Here is a good easy recipe for a heavy current cake, very copiously spiced with ground pepper. I always get asked the recipe when I serve it and at last…. here it is!

It can easily replace the traditional sweet Christmas cake and in fact, I much prefer it. You could ice it with sugar and marzipan. I don’t, and wrapped in wide Christmas coloured ribbons or fabric, it looks an honest part of the festive table. When I make this cake, I make several in different sizes all at once. They can keep for months in the fridge & longer in the freezer. Fresh out of the oven, they are crumbly and served hot or cool, excellent with a dollop of good quality butter and a good citrusy homemade marmalade. Every time I make them, they disappear fast, brilliant with an afternoon cup of strong tea. It is a real energy giving food.

I’m afraid that I’m not good at using measures when I cook and in this recipe, no matter how much pepper I add ( and you start with a lot) the cake seems to be able to cope with the spice and it never seems too much. I do not use sugar in these cakes but some people do prefer them sweeter, in which case add a couple of spoonfuls of dark sugar. I find the raisins well sweet enough, and I use proper full cream butter, NOT margarine. I use eye and texture more than anything to gage if my mixture is right, so please do experiment a couple of times. You will find your ideal way of making this cake. This recipe will yield me two bigger and two smaller cakes, but you can divide the batter up into any size cake you like.

You will need…

About 1 kilo + – of currents or raisins. I like using a mix of black & golden but either or, is fine too.

4 eggs

1 good sized bar of unsalted butter- 250 grams

Water

Self raising flour

Several heaped tablespoonfuls of pepper (I prefer black but I have mixed black and white before)- between 3 to 5 depending on amount of flavour in the pepper

1 small stick of real cinnamon

3 cloves

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When you pound all the spices above together, the cloves and cinnamon need to be totally powdered, but the pepper left still a little ‘gritty’. You may have to do this in batches if your pestle & mortar set is small. The pounding really releases the flavour, but you can also put the spices in a grinder and whizz them.

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-Put all your raisins in a big pot, pour in enough water so that the water level is just below the level of the raisins & currents in the pot. Add the lump of butter on top, cover & put on low heat until it boils. Take the lid off and let it all simmer nicely, the currents soften and the liquid is ‘creamy’ and opaque looking. Stir occasionally to make sure the butter is well mixed into the final liquid. About 45 minutes. Do not let it continue at a rolling boil as this will make the currents mushy.

-Grind and pound your spices while you wait for this.

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-Prepare your cake tins. Butter the bases and sides well. Put on the oven (mine is electric) to 180 degrees C.

-Once your currents have simmered, the pot should look a bit like this in the  photo below. The liquid is definitely there but is not overwhelming the currents. The currents look plumped but are not soggy. Throw in all your ground pepper and stir in well. Let the pot cool but make sure there is some considerable heat left for the next stage.

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And this is the weird part of this recipe. I find the texture of the cake is much better when this part of the recipe is done as fast as possible with the mixture still hot. Be aware that  the eggs could get ‘cooked’ as you mix them into the hot batter, so make sure your tins are prepared at hand & ready to put in the oven.

-Transfer the whole contents of your pot of currents into a large mixing bowl.

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-In a separate mixing bowl, beat your eggs together & add enough self raising flour so that you have a thickish batter.

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-Sprinkle a little flour over the top of your hot currents, stir into the mixture.

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-Then as fast as possible, dump the egg and flour batter over the top of your currents and stir in as fast as your arm is able. The batter is very heavy & its hard to work the wooden spoon through everything…but you need to do this as soon as possible, mixing properly, stirring up all the warm liquid at the bottom of the bowl.

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You end up with a thick mixture, heavy & gloopy. The batter is there just to keep the currents ‘locked’ together as it cooks. I have found, making these cakes many many times, that they will be good, even if you make the mixture slightly runnier. If it is runnier, you need to make sure there’s more batter in proportion to the currents, or else your finished cakes won’t have an even amount of peppery ‘binding’ throughout. They will be nicely ‘bound’ at the bottom of the cake but just loosely ‘current’y’ at the top.

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-Divide your batter between your tins, knock them heavily on your kitchen table to help level out the batter, and get them into the oven ASAP. On cooking they do not rise very much so make sure you are happy with their depth in the tins.

-As they cook keep a little watch as the exposed currents on top can get singed a little. You can adjust the heat down a little if you like. Once done, a knife put through the centre should come out clean. About 40 mins depending on the size of your cakes.

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-Let the cakes cool before you knock them out of the tins. To keep them in the fridge or freezer, wrap them tightly  in baking paper, then waxed paper, & store.

Note: Hot out of the oven, they are also great with good quality ice cream as a dessert.

Check Out….

Go check out the pepper vines at The Tropical Spice Garden, Teluk Bahang Penang and learn a lot more about what other spices Penang is known for. You can buy fresh pepper at their retail outlet at the Tropical Spice Garden itself, or at Tropical Spice Garden In The City at 29 China Street in the heart of George Town, Penang. They are also the only outlet selling real cinnamon in Penang, imported directly from Sri Lanka. Its a whole different ballgame to cassia, which is commonly and widely sold and packaged as ‘cinnamon’.   http://www.tropicalspicegarden.com