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There are middens all around Broulee Island on the
south coast of New South Wales. Over the centuries fires
lit again and again cause a permanent colour change
in the rock as the silcrete stones turned from greyish
ochre to a terracotta red.
They lie as mute stone circles - bleached and greyish
broken shells, pitted like old tombstones. Then the
grey, raw umber and ochre silcrete hearthstones, then
the red stones at the heart - still glowing with a ghost
of old heat.
The text on the quilt is not really meant to be read
- just as history cannot be read from these sites at
a glance - but needs some inner knowledge. I wanted
it to feel like a shimmer of heat or smoke above the
heat stones - smoke that leads to the source of a fire,
or heat that comes from it.
For those who need to know, it says:
"In the middens which are scattered down the NSW
coastline the silcrete stones have turned red from years
of heat and fire. Tribes travelled the edge of the sea
and carried their Hearthstones."
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