Secret wonders of unloved ‘blandscape’ revealed
New international art exhibition reveals which secret wonders of tidal wetlands Deluge is at Art Gene, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria 4-15 March 2025

A Cumbria exhibition will celebrate tidal wetlands, highlighting the hidden beauty and environmental significance of this often ignored flat landscape.
Deluge, at Art Gene, Barrow-in-Furness, 4-15 March 2025, shines a light on the many vital roles played by saltmarshes and asks people to look again at this misunderstood and often unloved terrain.
The exhibition is a collaboration between three international artists, who took part in a three-year relay-style travelling residency at three important European saltmarsh locations. Each went on to produce a number of works inspired by an extended stay at one of the saltmarshes.
Installation and performance artist Dana Olărescu spent time on the coast around Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria, photographer and filmmaker Oscar Van Heek studied the landscape around the seaside town of Portobello, near Edinburgh and fine art illustrator and installation artist Linde Ex spent time on Schiermonnikoog, one of the Wadden islands in the North Netherlands.
Inspiration through walks and workshops
Art Walk Projects invited the artists to lead walks and workshops with local people within the three habitats, and then to develop a series of works inspired by the tidal ecosystems.
It will be shown this March at Art Gene in Barrow for the first time. The exhibition hopes to make people look again and find the wonder within these coastal flatlands, which have even been described as ‘blandscape’.
The artworks on display include larger than life photographic panoramas, pencil drawings, audio stories and installations. Together, they invite audiences to take a closer look at the saltmarsh habitat and consider its importance in the fight against climate breakdown.
A free half day conference at Art Gene on Friday 28 February will give people more opportunity to explore the importance of saltmarshes. Speakers include Nick O’Keefee, coastal expert and lead advisor at Natural England, Charlotte Braungardt, environmental scientist and ecologist Jenny Holden.
Deluge was initiated by Rosy Naylor of Art Walk Projects (Edinburgh), and curated
in partnership with Barrow’s Art Gene and Anna-Rosja from University of Groningen, Netherlands). It is supported by funding from Creative Scotland (Art Walk Projects).
Transitional zones
Rosy Naylor curator and director, Art Walk Projects, said: “In this exhibition the saltmarsh is considered as a wasteland, a space historically without use; a landscape initially underwhelming in its features.
“It considers how to value, engage with and take care of these precious landscapes, largely forgotten and unnoticed, yet vital transitional zones between land and sea.”
Maddi Nicholson artist, founder and director, Art Gene, said: “Deluge takes its name from a landscape constantly under the threat of water, being flooded twice a day by the tides. It is a generous habitat that helps to protect our shorelines from erosion and slows down flooding.
“Saltmarshes play so many vital roles, including providing nurseries for fish and hiding places for many mammals, birds and insects.
“And we are only recently starting to realise their importance in the fight against climate breakdown. Saltmarshes act as giant carbon sinks, locking away carbon for millennia if undisturbed, and they also play a role in absorbing run-off from farms, filtering out herbicides, pesticides and heavy metals.
“We hope this exhibition makes people stop and consider the rare and crucial landscape on their doorstep and start to see the beauty and wonder within it.”
The UK only has about 45,000 hectares of natural saltmarsh remaining.
Deluge is free to attend and is at Art Gene, Bath St, Barrow LA14 5TY from Tuesday 4 -Saturday 15 March 2025 12-4pm. (Closed Sundays and Monday).
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