I May Be A Wage Slave On Monday But I Am A Free Man On Sunday , 2011
108 x 192 cm (h x w)
4000 GBP
HD Video projection, Duration 7 mins Ed 5 + 1 A/P

'I may be a wage slave on Monday but I am a free man on Sunday' is a lyric from a Ewan MacColl folk song, Manchester Rambler, in which he describes the mass trespass on the then private land of Kinder Scout in 1931.

Inspired by this mass trespass¹ in the Peak District, which led to the opening up of the countryside & the creation of National Parks, Kathleen Herbert¹s film explores the idea of contemporary landscape as a politicised space in which it is treated as an object rather than a resource.
The viewer is taken on a journey through different visions of the land, from the urban spaces used to contrive a form of natural landscape to the rural. The raw contrasting soundtrack embellishes the imagery of the land as a lost ancient antiquity.

Co-commissioned by the National Trust and Southbank Centre, London. Curated by Clare Cumberlidge & Co and supported by Museums Sheffield.

Exhibited by:

Danielle Arnaud

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