Brackish - S6 E3 Joanne Lamb & Trying

In this episode, Katie Treggiden speaks with Joanne Lamb, an Irish artist based in London, who creates delicate woven vessels inspired by nature and the Celtic Wheel of the Year."I want each of the baskets to tell a story, they are imbued with a sense of time and place for me. The power of telling stories helps us connect with nature, event the earliest humans have done that." – Joanne LambWhat we cover:* Joanne's artistic process and how she creates delicate vessels that look "grown rather than made"* Reconnecting with Irish heritage and Celtic traditions after growing up disconnected from them* Using the Celtic Wheel of the Year as a framework for deepening connections to nature* The importance of storytelling and "creating a new path through old wisdom"* How art can help us notice and appreciate seasonal changes* Finding hope through creativity and community during challenging timesMore from Joanne:* Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/joannelambstudio* Website: https://www.joannelambstudio.co.uk/* Exhibit: "Constructed" at Gallery 57 in West Sussex* Workshop: Woven textiles & expressive basketry workshop, April 2025More from Katie:* Instagram: @katietreggiden.1* Website: https://katietreggiden.com/* Blue Health Coaching: https://makingdesigncircular.org/* Nature-inspired poetry:Resources mentioned:* Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer* Slow Seasons by Rosie Steer* Works by Mary Oliver* Works by Nan Shepherd* Gaia by James Lovelock* Deep Work by Cal Newport* Flowers, Flora in Contemporary Art at Saatchi Gallery, 12 Feb - 5 May 2025What next?If all this talk of defiant hope has got you wondering where you can find some, I have something for you. Cultivating Hope is my three-part mini-course and it’s the three steps I move through whenever I start to feel despair tugging at my edges.You will move out of ‘fight, flight or freeze’ mode and into a calm and connected state, reconnect with nature, and find aligned actions that you can take now to keep you to remind you that you can make a difference.In the current climate, hope is an act of defiance, and it’s one I hope you’ll take with me. Get full access to Brackish at brackishbykatietreggiden.substack.com/subscribe

Om Podcasten

Welcome to this new iteration of my podcast, which was called Making Design Circular and now has the same name as my Substack, Brackish. Brackish is a term used to describe water that is a mixture of saltwater and freshwater, for example, where a river meets the sea. I first encountered it sitting in a boat in just such water and it immediately became one of my favourite words. I am fascinated by intersections, liminal and littoral spaces, overlaps and interconnections, and I want to use this space to explore all of those things – the ideas that don’t fit into neat boxes. So, I’ll be exploring those things here – the places where craft meets nature, where the rules don’t apply and ‘shoulds’ start to fall away. Which brings me to the second meaning of the word brackish. As well as meaning ‘somewhat salty’ in very neutral terms, it has also come to mean ‘unpalatable’ or ‘repulsive’. I didn’t know this until after I decided upon it as a name, but as a woman in her middle years, who is relearning how to take up space, I am so here for that alternative definition! From occasional ‘salty’ language to refusing to adhere to feminine standards of beauty or behaviour, I am leaning into my brackish era – and I’m doing it here with some brilliant women and non-binary folks who are doing the same. brackishbykatietreggiden.substack.com