Monday, 30 March 2009

learningandthinking


last week saw 3 intense days at Woodland Grange Training and Conference Centre on the first residential section of the Postgraduate Certificate in Learning and Teaching. it was good to spend time with like minded people talking creatively about issues one cares about. some interesting ways of considering what I do was represented in interesting ways – constructive alignment – transcultural disciplines – massification of higher education – threshold concepts – troublesome knowledge – context of ambiguity – enhancement led institutional review. I am looking forward to trying out some of the concepts presented with a new rigueur and clarity.

Tuesday, 24 March 2009

mixedbag





assessments - building a student show at STEW – finally finishing off a body of books around some walks in the autumn and more images of smoking architecture to add to the collection - an eclectic time


Friday, 6 March 2009

temporarysmokearchitecture




i have been documenting the construction of temporary architecture around pubs as a result of the smoking ban - here are some examples - i have been on jury service for the past 2 weeks so have been a little pushed for time - will post them onto my flicker site next week

Saturday, 28 February 2009

benchpossiblities

just found out about this http://whowantstobe.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/democracy_bench_commision.pdf so thought that i would send something in.

Hi my name is Les – I’m an artist who makes stuff and who works with people. I was really drawn to your particular experience of democracy – it sounds like it was a good night out mixed with radical thinking.
When I make things I am interested in my role as somebody in the middle – often working for and with several opposing sides – but at the core I’m trying to solve problems creatively.

Your proposal has thrown up a lot of questions in my household – what does democracy look like? What does democracy feel like? Should the bench illustrate or enable democracy? What shape is democracy?

I have made a few benches for different types of places and experiences. Like the 26 benches for a footpath in Norfolk each with a text that is specifically written in response to where it is. The words on each bench can be read individually or all benches can be read as a whole – they allow for a moment – a pause to reflect in our busy world.

The benches I made for a new supermarket in Diss, a town in East Anglia, take their forms from the shape of buildings previously on the site. They have equations cut into them, which were generated from conversations with the people of Diss. With each viewing their meaning can change.

Another example are the seating/benches for Norwich with the names of long forgotten buildings and people cut into steel which is wrapped around wooden blocks – reminiscent of bales of goods arriving on the river and taken off boats.

The bench needs to make one thoughtful – maybe a single word or sentence cut into the stone – or opposing shapes or symbols which would make up a third idea or form – the idea of one voice becoming strong by joining another. Or how about 50 words that are submitted and voted on by the audience, which are then developed into equations which are then cut into stone.

I am taken that the gardens you have chosen have so many influences and cultural references – the text could reference this through the use of different typefaces or use the languages of audience members.

I would want to make the bench very solid – unmovable – as if it had been there forever. I would use granite blocks saved from the old County Hall Greater London Council G.L.C. building. A stone mason I work with has in his field – a nice cyclical, symbolic experience that might be reflected in the possible shape of the proposed bench – a circle maybe but this could be voted on.

Not sure if you want a particular idea to vote on or to be part of an ongoing discussion – but I guess that i'm proposing blocks of granite recycled from the old G.L.C. cut into the shape of democracy with words chosen by yourselves cut into it.

Wednesday, 18 February 2009

pathdrawingsexhibited




as part of Triptych - a research project that reflects on drawing practice as knowledge - I am showing a number of drawings in the Project Space at Norwich University College of the arts - the work is some of the foot path drawings I made during the commission at Great Cornard

http://triangleprojecttriptych.blogspot.com/

Friday, 13 February 2009

bridgeforstratfordbid




the pitch for the bridge commission at Stratford went well. Westfield offices have relaxing pink leather sofas and after the journey - through floods, late trains and closed tube stations this was a welcome relief - as ever Keith at Perfitts and a new addition to the team Ross Sutherland - the poet - were very helpful in helping me to pull all the strands of the bid together - waiting now for consultation feedback

goahead


the outcome of the town council meeting was positive. the latest designs and model were much appreciated and the go ahead has been given to start work on the bench for Leiston