OCA was fascinating this week - I supported/hosted Karl
Foster looking at the idea of creative academic writing with year 3 students -
The reading for the session was the critical writing of Benson and Conners and the
poetry of Francis Ponge. There were many lessons in Benson and Conners,
especially the idea of the self, the I within and the wrestling bout that is
writing. I was drawn to Ponge - a little like a surreal version of Perec - it's
all in the detail. http://www.cbeditions.com/userfiles/file/ponge-unfinished-ode-to-mud.pdf
men actually rain - oh yes they do - its Pantomime
time again and the Wolsey theatre
has Cinderella - it is truly a
wonderful night out - some acid wincing terrible jokes, 'bad taste' characters
and a splendid set with dazzling lighting - you have to be there to get it - I
was surrounded by families having a great time https://www.wolseytheatre.co.uk/shows/cinderella/
During a workshop at Camberwell I found myself explaining the concept of Pantomime
to a room of International students which
was a feat of linguistic juggling - I think I may of learnt something myself -
and when the idea of camp was thrown up we digressed into another cul-de-sac.
Meanwhile Pete Holmes on Hot ones https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zXp-oWBF5x0
gave us wisdom on experiences that change us - it's not about knowing something
it's about becoming something - it's not about learning something it's about forgetting
everything.
Friday, 7 December 2018
Sunday, 2 December 2018
goimgtoseestuffsothaticanmakestuff
The
exhibition of year 3 textile design students from NUA in St Margarets is over
and has been a great success. Lots of learning took place and the route to the
final show seems to of started. A weekend in London with a huge gallery trawl -
Serpentine Gallery had Pierre Huyghe - last seen in Berlin
where the show was awesome, the whole building controlled by an algorithm
linked to yeast. The highlight in London was huge live bluebottle flies in the
gallery, the shop, the entrance, the toilets........The Sacker building had atelier
a.b the fashion art collective with, depending how you read it -
interesting ideas at the cross over or just highlighted a point where fashion
and art eat each other. A quick jaunt to the V&A is always a winner and I
popped into check out the textiles, both real and imaged in the Gothic gallery.
Meanwhile BlainSouthern had Chiharu Shiota with her theatrical
thread work, Hauser&Wirth's two
spaces had Zoe Leonard's beautiful
haunting aerial photographs in one and Martin
Creed in the other. David
Ostrowski's the thin red line was a gorgeous collection of digital tapestry
rugs, prints and painting all looking at the found and the red. The hang at Spruth Magers was stunningly
considered, especially the paintings floating in the middle of the room. Brent Wadden's tapestries at PACE were bold and monumental as ever. Michele Abeles collection of bits and
pieces at Sadie Coles was okay but I
mainly go to look at the space which is awesome and then drop into the Adidas
shop around the corner to stroke trainers. Fiona
Tan's video work at Frith Street
Gallery was stunning. The work flowed as a aesthetic visual but also said
something about us as humans at this point in history. And finally the video
structural apparatus excess that was Dara
Birnbaum at Marian Goodman - so
much kit. Upstairs was the thoughtfully funny brain-delayed-video-work by John Baldessari which always makes me
inwardly chuckle. Tried to get to see The
Clock as part of Tate's 24 hour
thing but the queues at 12:00, 1:30am 2:30am and 3:00am were
so huge that each time we just walked away back to a bar.
#mostexpensiveroundofdrinksever. Managed to see it at 11:00pm - 1:30am the
next day which was a great time as high noon featured. On the Netflix front
after wading through the bloodbath that was Narcos Mexico (why did they get involved with coke?) I have
'discovered' the Danish Nazi Biker Gang series Warrior. It is truly bizarre - I am now watching it for the overt
expressions of tasteful design the bikers exhibit - IKEA light fittings in
their garage and contemporary art sculptures in their den, let's not even talk
about the cars and clothes! Springs to mind the role of Hugo Boss in designing
Nazi uniforms.
The
Synthetic Anatomy project at Kings has started up again - an initial meeting
was a real solid good - it's great to be amongst interesting people who value
what you do and share great ideas creatively. Lots of thoughts around
developing problem solving workshops and reflective thinking which looks at how
to support individuals to develop the skills needed to engage in the act of
creating a reflective journal. Also we looked at how to build a set of learning
outcomes that covers creative reflection, aesthetic concerns and empirical
givens.
Sunday, 25 November 2018
stufftosee
a stroll through E London Galleries - Ginte Regina at Gao had
a sweet film, next door Carlos had
no history in a room filled with people with funny names 5, a bean-bag-immersive
three screen installation by Korakrit
Arunanondchai - some great images creating multiple narratives - Korakrit
keeps cropping up on my radar - last seen at Berlin Biennale and Palais de Tokyo. The
approach, with 2 shows - the oppressive/obsessive Manga/Bruegel hybrid drawings by Hun Kyu Kim and the paper collage by Peter Davies - really interesting work but
maybe too many in the room to be able to see them. Chisenhale
had a sound piece and installation of objects by Lawrence Abu Hamden. A fascinating show that introduced the idea of
oppression and violence in a prison measured by the released men's relationship
to silence - powerful stuff.
meanwhile Year 3 Textile Design students at nua have an exhibition
called - Can you give me some attention
please? at St Margarets Church of Art on St Benedicts Street in Norwich. It's Free entry November 27 - December 1 10am
- 5pm there will be some excellent work to view - if you are in the area come
along.
Tuesday, 20 November 2018
longweekendofartinfrance
Arriving in
Marseille the first thing to do is head to the marina to our favourite
restaurant xxx for soup d poisson. After that the day was all about the
wonderful space that is la Friche
one of my top 10 places to see stuff. The spaces held 3 shows - Planetoyenes - some interesting video
work, Biomorphisme - a show that had
as its core intention to show work influenced by the organic. Some beautiful
pieces exploring the maths of nature. Finally Chroniques a digital arts biennale - it’s always a good selection
of work and the standout pieces this time were a video by Renata Poljak where Croatian women walked to be reunited with their
men who had left for South America but with the water between them it’s a
journey of pain. The beautiful footage of floating clothes took you straight to
refugees. There was also an extraordinary piece where scale models of decimated cities were created using
imagery derived from drone footage. This footage was then shows on screens and
inserted into ‘breaking news’ feeds - truth and lies were all around us.
Bernar Venet at MAC in Lyon was a mixed bag. A huge
retrospective of his entire life but it was obvious that very little editing
had taken place as it was so full of work. You could of taken away 1/2 and
still cover all the different ideas he has worked in. The last floor of his
monumental steel ‘line’ sculptures had the best work and these alone could of
filled the whole 3 floors of the building. Imprints-Galerie
in Crest had Assemblages - a
beautiful body of work by Herman Ardila
Delgado. It was a luxury to spend 3 days with them.
I
have waited 20 years to see Courbusiers
masterpiece La Tourette. The visit
to the monastery has left a tremendous impression on me. The building is a real
triumph. There is a calm stillness that is embedded in every decision. From the
detail which include ‘floating’ surfaces and modular rhythmic lines to the
overall use of shuttering and huge walls enabling moments of revelation. The
body is both stimulated and restful. you are channelled by the materials yet
able to find deep inner peace. Grounded and elevated. It was so wonderful to be
introduced by Matthew and Isobel to Frere Marc who was a graceful host allowing
us to see spaces closed to the general public beyond and within the walls. My
many questions were entertained and answered with lightness enabling a rich
understanding. Just the material choices themselves were truly thrilling. I
could of spent days in the chapel watching the light change but we had to leave
to buy boudain noir for the next days breakfast.
Reply All podcast
130
has stunningly disturbing information about OG Snapchat accounts and cyber
hacking - you will be angry and fearful whilst considering your own engagement
with social media security.
Sunday, 11 November 2018
textilesonthemove
Year 3 Textile Design students at Norwich have an exhibition coming
up. It's a self organised opportunity for the students to share new work and
test exhibition ideas. It will be most excellent and everyone is invited. A lot of
the work will be for sale and would make superb presents.
I've received a copy of the exhibition catalogue Telling Tales by Debjani Bhardwaj of her exhibition at Tashkeel in Dubai. There are texts and images of mine within it as
I wrote a piece and had a conversation with Debjani as part of my mentoring
role. I love the Arabic typeface and it's really interesting to see my name and
text printed in a language that is totally impenetrable to me - the publication
also operates in a way unfamiliar to myself - with right to left opening one
becomes conscious of form. I've become a little obsessed with Michael
Kiwanuka's haunting some Cold Little Heart
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOubjLM9Cbc
it is actually possible to play it on
repeat for a whole morning.
Labels:
BA textiles,
exhibition,
music recommendation,
norwich. NUA,
NUA,
Tashkeel
Friday, 9 November 2018
lotsofbreathingin
A very busy and full on 'breathing in' day in London on
Tuesday - Tate to see Anni Albers a truly glorious
exhibition https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/exhibition/anni-albers It is a totally rigerous experience - the instagram festival that was Yayo Kasumi at Victoria Miro
and the more thoughtful experience displayed next door at Parasol unit https://parasol-unit.org/
by Hedi Bucher. The display of the
work is particularly interesting with it defining the work in so many ways. Looking at
the treasures at The British Library
with Book Art students gave us conversations rich and varied, especially around
translation and languages. A thoughtful visit to the bookart bookshop https://bookartbookshop.com/ was thoughtfully
wonderful - tea in a china cup complimented the atmosphere and underpinned a
wide ranging discussion informed and illustrated by the amazing books for sale
in the shop - I also managed to see Chris
Burden at Gagosian - it’s
actually quite mesmerising as well as beautiful. thank you for a really
positive session today - thought that you might be interested to
hear
Freakonomics
podcast 335 Where Does Creativity Come From (and Why Do Schools Kill It Off)? was
an excellent listen. It went some way to describe and explain intrinsic versus extrinsic motivations, how education
places value assessments, but don't assess the things we value. http://freakonomics.com/ Meanwhile I had
to see season 6 of House of Cards in 2 sittings https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1856010/
There are some stunning images within the filming that stop your breath and
make you consider what is established practice - when Claire reveals her new cabinet is
one.
Sunday, 4 November 2018
gogogoitsallgo
Another full on week of teaching with the end of Spill
and the making of work. At NUA one very successful workshop saw each student making an
equation of their practice and a proposed project - this equation was then
passed to another student who created a 3D sculpture that represented the
equation - the sculpture was then returned to the student who then reinterpreted
the work having had a revelatory moment. all good. OCA had a making day where I
focused on creating some internal hidden structures within a bookwork, but also
reflecting and building on the work created for Nano residency. During Spill I always like to document the end
of a performance (see slides) but I also had some highlights over the second
week - Clarion Call grew in
intensity - which was a good thing, it's so ethereal and otherworldly. Went to
see Winter's Tale by Forced entertainment - just so
clever/beautiful. Inter_versal by Carter Tuti and Kernschmelze II were 2 all encompassing sound experiences that I
would recommend if in the vicinity of them. Decasia by Bill Morrison
and The Mirror by Vicki Bennett were two film experiences. Decasia
is made of archive film that has decayed in many ways, often this decay takes
on meaning and form when seen within the context of the film's original
material, boxers battling a swirling mass of scratches or a merry go around
where the rides emerge from an ectoplasmatic surge and Mirror is a mash up of overlaid footage, often creating alternative
narratives and dialogue between the sequences.
Labels:
http://spillfestival.com/,
making,
norwich. NUA,
Spill,
teaching,
workshop
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)