Born in London,
Jill trained as an actress at RADA, and was later known as Jill Bruce.
In the 1970s and early 1980s she was a Performance Artist in partnership
with Bruce Lacey. For five years they received funding from the then
Arts Council of Great Britain.
Evolving through science fantasy
and alchemy, the performances were spectacular, largely outdoor, ceremonial,
ritual celebrations of the turning cycles of earth and cosmos.
Jill evolved her wonderful costumes as a form of living sculpture, wearing
them to evoke the spirits and energies of the elements and forces she was honouring.
The performances were at venues all over Britain: at faires, festivals,
art centres, colleges, art galleries; and alone at ancient sites – the
documentation of these being later exhibited with installation and Performance
at major exhibitions,
including two at the Acme Gallery and one at the Serpentine.
Moving to an old farm in Norfolk
and living the real cycles of nature for the first time, Jill realised
that her Performances had been a self-initiation into her woman-magic
and deep Goddess spirituality, and she received further profound teachings
from all aspects of the natural environment.
Known once again as ‘Smith’, she gave up the Performance and went
off on her own into the sacred landscape of Britain – for days on end
in all weathers and at all times of year – receiving more teachings from
the Ancestors and Grandmothers whose spirit still inhabits the long barrows,
cairns, wells, springs, stone circles, mounds etc of this ancient land.
She made several lengthy landscape
journeys, including “Awakening” in 1982 from Lands End
to the Hebrides and “The Gipsy Switch” – a year-long
journey round England, Wales and Ireland in 1984-85.
An Arts Council Performers Training Bursary enabled her to visit Australia
in 1984, including a month spent at Uluru which profoundly clarified her understanding
of the inter-relatedness of cosmos, human and earth and the patterns they interweave
together.
She moved to settle for ten years
in Gravir, Isle of Lewis in the Hebrides, where she honoured the turning
cycles at the ancient sites and sacred landscapes of those magical
islands. The Ancestors of these places honoured her with an even deeper
understanding of the integration of past, present and future.
This high spiritual experience was mellowed by the day-to-day, year-by-year
tasks of turfing, cutting, drying and getting home the peats for her winter
fires; continual red-and-grey-oxide painting of her corrugated roof and walls;
living the cycles of dark and light with no electricity; surviving the gale
force, storm force and sometimes hurricane force winds; keeping a neighbour’s
sheep off her saplings and vegetables (largely unsuccessfully!) and home-educating
her youngest child.
Here she developed her pastel art-work and poetry, exhibiting each summer in
her own beautiful hall and taking part in local Craft Fairs, as well as occasionally
touring Scotland and England with her slide-shows.
In 1996 she moved from the Islands
to Glastonbury in Somerset; needing electricity for a while, less of
a physical struggle, a time to pause, reflect and digest the experiences
of the previous 15-20 years, and to write her (so far) two books.
Glastonbury had always felt like her ‘second home’, spiritually
linked to the Islands, and a place to gain a perspective on life’s journeys.
Here she has held many of her own exhibitions and slide shows, as well
as exhibiting annually as part of The
Goddess Conference and bi-annually in
the Somerset Art Week.
The Hebrides, however,
remains her spiritual and heart home; much of her work still involving
the ancient sites and sacred landscapes of the Islands,
and she hopes one day – before too many more years have passed – to
return to live on the Isle of Lewis.
Jill is mother to a Water, an
Earth, a Fire and an Air and grandmother to Hazel and Alice.
A message from Jill:
NB. I collect stamps! If writing to me by the delicious old-fashioned method of a piece of paper in an envelope, please put a pretty or special issue stamp on it. You will make my day! I still think letters are the nicest way of communicating.
To contact Jill:
by e-mail:
airghid@hotmail.com
by post:
20, Monington Road
Glastonbury
BA6 8HE
UK