Make it Count

Make It Count is the first Power House project in which Barnet and Watt worked with University of Suffolk Fine Art researchers and undergraduate student artists on and off-site to examine and present existing archival data collection of flora and fauna from Orford Ness that has accumulated over the last thirty years.

Barnet and Watt undertook research in and around the Power House, transforming the building into a temporary pinhole camera, collected colour spectrum data. Alongside these activities, they supported students to research and experiment onsite on a two-day overnight residency as well as off-site experimentation at the University of Suffolk’s studios and workshops.

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“Orford Ness is a place where nature is in control, the windswept landscape is a surreal environment that can literally take your breath away. The ground pulses with a hidden energy, where nature and human have made their mark, the natural world is now reclaiming the ground. It is a place where you can simultaneously reflect on man's impact on this world and the transforming effect on the soul through time spent in this strange and beautiful place.”

“I was captivated by the place and really enjoyed taking in the environment. For me the key thing that stood out was that harsh contrast between the darker military past of the Ness and the way that nature was beginning to take back over the manmade and brutal architecture.”

Make It Count Exhibitions

The resulting work from the residency by the fifteen established and emerging artists included drawing, painting, sculpture, photography, video and text and was curated by Watt and Barnet into two public exhibitions: one at the Power House and a second in the Waterfront Building Foyer at University of Suffolk in Ipswich as part of Ipswich Art Society’s 150th year

  • 03/05 - 03/06/2024

    Waterfront Building Foyer

    University of Suffolk, Ipswich

  • 18/05 - 27/10/2024

    Power House

    Orford Ness