Category: Uncategorised

Corinna Spencer: Photo Booth Girls and the Nottingham Castle Solo Show 2015

Three years ago in June, I was on the train to Coventry going to meet Corinna Spencer.

I was on my way to see the Tainted Love Exhibition, a group show installed by her, its origins derived during a discussion with some of the artists taking part. As she succinctly described in the show’s exhibition diary:
Tainted Love was an idea that emerged from a chat in October 2011 between myself, Cathy Lomax and Alli Sharma about painting, obsessional love and what it is to be a fan.”

The venture included artists selected by Corinna and was arranged over three venues during the summer of 2012, starting at Transition Gallery in Hackney, moving on to Corinna’s home town of Coventry at The Meter Room, then to Great Brampton House, Down Stairs Gallery in Hertfordshire.


All three very different locations and spaces. The art work as I remember, looking perfectly at home in all. I also remember being quite amazed by the individual artist’s work. The whole being a great, complimentary and thought provoking combination.

 

 

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Corinna Spencer: Robert at Blue Cut, from Robert and Jesse, oil on found postcard, 15×10.5cm Tainted Love, 2012



I had first seen Corinna’s portraits during 2011 after visiting the new and now hugely successful Art event Sluice.

Her portraits, by their expressions alone, give an intriguing window into each individual, each subject’s inner world. The postures, a tilt of the neck, a framed back all transmit a sometimes spiritual feel or sometimes worldliness aura, full of emotion. More recently her portraits winged their way over to Theodore Art of Bushwick, NY during the summer of 2013 to be shown in group exhibition Notorious.

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Dressed 2

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part of the Wallis Simpson series

 

 

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Lady of the house series, 2014 oil on plywood 21x15cm

 

Back in 2012 closer to my home town of Nottingham I was also writing about a local artist Alex Pain who had just left college and found himself the winner of the first Nottingham Castle Open in 2011. This resulted in him holding his own solo show the following year during the next exhibition.
Technically Nottingham Castle Open dates back to 1878, with the first being held in the then new Dawson Gallery, showing contemporary work of the day, and so creating ground for artists in the locale to maintain an annual group exhibition.

Nottingham Castle Open in its present form, however is a relatively recent addition to Nottingham and East/West Midlands calendar of art events. An annual open call, that since 2011 has gained nationwide reputation. And offers equal platform, with good critical panels, for all artists wanting to take part. This year the solo show was given over to the wonderful works of Andrew Bracey.

 

 

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View from Nottingham Castle Balustrade

 

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This years Solo Show in the Main Gallery, by Andrew Bracey

 

So when I heard some of Corinna Spencer’s lovely ladies were taking part. I made tracks up to the castle to take a look. It was a great pleasure to see her Photo Booth Girls, not least amidst the quality of art work that was on view this year. I wandered around late on a wintry January afternoon without too many visitors so I could take in all the works, and there were some excellent pieces.

 

 

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Photo Booth Girls at Nottingham Castle Open

 

I must admit I was rooting for Corinna, since I first saw her work in 2011, I have been taken with each new painting she does…. Each individual face or gesture has a depth and subtly, that to me, is mesmerising.

 

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Some of my favourite Photo Booth Girls from Corinna’s more recent work

 

 

So, as I hurried along to the closing prize-event-proper, hoped I wasn’t going to be too late. And as Nottingham Castle, like most castles is on a hill, believe me you really don’t want to be running up that hill in a hurry. As it turned out the prizes had been scheduled to the beginning of the evening, probably a better approach than previous years. But just my luck I missed it!.

However the individual pieces had all been marked with the appropriate prize, so I was able to catch up. I spoke with Corinna later, and she mentioned the wait, along with all the artists expectancy when the list was read out, and it is a fairly long list!. So after what must have seemed an eternity the last prize was read out. The next Nottingham Solo Show, was handed to Corinna Spencer.

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The Artists at this years event

 

And when I spoke with her a few days after the event, she said the schedule was still to be laid out for 2015-16, apart from the time and place obviously. That and the fact that she was furiously painting!. So well done Corinna ! and I’m sure I am amongst quite a few others in wishing you congratulations and in looking forward to seeing your solo exhibition at Nottingham Castle Open in December 2015. 

New York: Art City (Part 2 Escape from New York)

 

New York : On the second leg of my trip I cross the bridge from Manhattan’s Lower East Side to Williamsburg and then Bushwick. (Part 1 – Follow the Art) First published in Garageland Review Aug2014 

 

 

It’s May 2014, and as a visitor to New York, during my short but fruitful stay in arguably one of the most prestigious centres of the art world, did I notice a pervasive attitude that is happening across cities globally. That of sky-rocketing rents.
Here though, the very essence of art and its purpose are thrown sharply into view. As many cutting edge, long time galleries, and studio spaces are increasingly priced out.

 

New York has been the base of the solid art market that exists today within the global one, due to a culturally rich and vibrant past, and historic encouragement of the arts. Small wonder it is such an intense draw for so many artists now.

And this is the problem, as rents rise, the few pricey art venues and artists who are shown in them, are creating an ever smaller clique. The go to of choice for the few who can afford these prices. And within this clique are many who are buying for profit alone.

So, the art may or may not be of quality, but the entry point into this world is undoubtedly about money and lots of it.

 

The Lower East Side, once an eclectic haunt of artists in the 80’s. Has had numerous high profile building projects of late, projecting this area into one of the trendiest sites on the Island. Some newer galleries like Brian Morris manage to incorporate these spiralling costs within their vision.

     

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Brian Morris Gallery on Chrystie St, LES

 

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basement steps to the gallery’s indoor and outdoor space

 

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As Above / So Below by Carol Salmanson and Ruth Hardinger
Brian Morris Gallery May, June 2014

 

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Carol Salmanson’s light works, inside and in the garden.                                                                                      

Carol is also part of artist run, non profit organisation Nurture Art, based in Bushwick

 

 

I went via the Lower East Side galleries as they are only a hop, skip from Williamsburg’s bright, young trendy professionals over the river in Brooklyn. Stopping off a few notches down the line in Bushwick for Bushwick Open Studios.

 

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Merged into the City of New York over 100 years ago, Long Island’s districts have become synonymous with the economic politics and flux of the City. Immigrants settled in Bushwick and invested in ownership over rent.

Then the perfect storm happened,  a well meaning policy encouraging  higher rents for those on welfare transformed into the reality of landlords snapping up huge swathes of the needy and placing them in vacant buildings around the Bushwick area. Drugs and crime followed in the 70s and people moved out. Riots ensued and reluctance to return to those days was understandably ingrained.

 

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Williamsburg Sunday

 

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Bushwick

 

The buildings in disrepair, a housing regeneration process began with assistance from  the NYPD’s narcotics branch. By then the artists had already moved in.

So in 2014, emerging from the Williamsburg subway, a stone’s throw from Manhattan, I ventured onto the streets. I was faced with what I can only describe as a wall of hipsters out on their Sunday stroll. Williamsburg’s artists have long been edged out by a steady influx of other creative professionals and city commuters.

 

Bushwick is two stops down from here and has over 900 artists registered in studio spaces in its long deserted industrial units. This number does not include the wider area of Brooklyn, purportedly one of the largest concentrations of artists in the world.

 

And in these units space is key. The studios I visited when I spent the weekend walking round the Bushwick Open Studios event (which incidentally is in its 8th successful year) were a surprise to me. Some averaging 50 square feet, with or without window, costing on average $1.50 to $2 and now up to $4-5 per luxury square foot. The type of art made in these spaces is obviously going to be smaller, accumulative pieces or internet based, and certainly not large unless you get lucky.

IMAG0622Carla Gannis in her studio at Varick Ave during Bushwick Open Studios

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Carla’s studio space

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Man Bartlett in his studio at Varick Ave during Bushwick Open

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Man Bartlett’s studio

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56 Bogart Street

 

Carol Salmanson of Nurture Art, a collection of artists running non-profit studio spaces and gallery located in the basement of 56 Bogart, spoke quite matter of factly about the very real and imminent threat of rent hikes, saying simply, “it will come.”

 

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Nurture Art

 

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Theodore Art at 56 Bogart

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Joyce Robbins exhibition Paint and Clay at Theodore Art June 2014

 

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Stephanie Theodore at NEWD Bushwick Open Studios


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Theodore Art representing Scooter La Forge at NEWD


56 Bogart is located adjacent to the Morgan St L train subway, probably one of the first areas to be seen as good pickings. Some of the gallery spaces around may just afford it, but it will alter the number and also type of artists who can be in studio spaces in this area.

The number of artists here in 2014 bares a similarity to Berlin’s Auguste Strasse district in the 90s when everyone flocked after the wall fell. That too was reaching community status until the cheap rents and boho life appeal took on currency. Those artists had to move.

 

Bushwick artists are a community, and a well organised one, not like their predecessors in Williamsburg. And they are in no doubt that they are going to be up against this tidal wave of gentrification very soon.

 

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Jefferson Street Bushwick

 

Rent, for residents, artists and gallerists alike is key, to whether they are to stay within this particular area of New York, which has, up until now, been one of the most accepting of cities as far as creativity goes.

 

As an outsider,  the only option I can see is to have a well organised time-relevant rent stabilisation programme with limits in place when leases are up. This will at least slow down the rampant focus on cash for space. And most importantly it will give time for communities, art or otherwise to evolve.

 

Art is at the very heart of New York, and so a balance has to be met.

It’s either that or head back out to the sticks. Escape from New York indeed.

New York: Art City (Part 1 Follow the Art)

 

New York  :  On the first leg of my trip I follow the art through Central Manhattan to Chelsea and then North to Harlem. First published in Garageland Review Aug2014

 

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View from Chelsea High Line

 

 

I visited New York.

And I specifically visited New York for its art. A visit, that on reflection confirmed that this is indeed one hell of a place to see it. And yes, people will disagree about the relevance of some, stacked up amongst all the art business hype. Which I get too. But from where I stood, I was pretty much blown away, not least with the attitude of the artists and gallerists I met.

It’s spring mid May 2014 and having landed relatively clueless in deciphering between districts, I found it was the art that led me rather than the area’s reputation. And I did see some amazingly good art.  But what struck me most was the abundance of the stuff.

 

The ‘bare bones’ of art in New York is fairly well defined by area. And the different areas are key in showing the city’s preoccupation with real estate, rents and gentrification.

For those who haven’t encountered art in Manhattan before, it has a rich population of public museums and galleries clustered around Central Park, all in pleasant (and extremely well-heeled) walking distance of each other.

Places like the old, established and massive Metropolitan. The all-American Whitney. The Guggenheim with its ‘no photos’ policy, not to mention the astonishing building itself. And the sometimes lamented new gallery space of MoMA, which I found pretty airy and impressive until a more attuned New Yorker pointed out that the art suffered a little with all the drama of the museum’s large atrium, which somewhat overpowers the smaller galley like rooms. That, and far too many gift shops. The sculpture garden en-route to the coffee shop, and if you missed those, there was always the MoMA design store on the street opposite. Yes I got that.

 

But there it was, all the art from an American perspective that you could ever possibly want to see, and in outstandingly gobsmacking spaces. An overwhelming experience, with or without the art. I wasn’t complaining.

 

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Cheek by jowl – apartments next door to The Guggenheim

 

Caravaggio, Matisse, Monet, Pollock, Van Gogh, Picasso, Hopper, even Cezanne’s The Bather – the foundation stone of MoMA, brought over for the opening in uncertain times between the wars, during depression, mass immigration and an American identity crisis. And just look at the museum now, everything I’ve ever heard about New York is epitomized here in the way honour is endowed on its art. MoMA has even officially set aside new space for time-based and performance works. A bold museum. Some would say not bold enough, pandering to the mass spectacle, popular footfall and of course those value-added sales.

 

This is not about cynicism though, I am trying to understand it – the absolute abundance of quality art in Manhattan and its outlying areas – and to get it into some kind of perspective. And I think I have. It isn’t rocket science. It is, however, very much about New York’s historic attitude toward the arts, which is at odds with its penchant for premium real estate.

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View from The Met

 

New York City has a law that requires no less than 1% of the first twenty million dollars of a building project, plus no less than 0.5% of the amount exceeding twenty million dollars be allocated for art work in any public building that is owned by the city.

 

However, in tandem with this, the New York art market today has fewer artists receiving a larger share of attention. Less buyers are willing or able to collect for passion over asset. At the top of the high-priced art bubble (and this is the bracket of art that receives the majority of public commissions) there is too much focus on asset mentality and flipping for profit.

If you believe what is being written by respected gallerists and art commentators alike, the talent being looked at or bought by most high-end collectors at this point has nothing to do with desire for art and a lot to do with the latest hot ticket and following a speculative hedge. Not healthy. Not creative.

To understand this current trend in art buying you also have to look at the movement of businesses and inhabitants in New York over a few decades.

 

Last year Postmasters Gallery, who show the cream of New York’s current artistic talent, moved from this Chelsea area down to Franklin Street because of imminent hikes. Postmasters has been in New York since the 1980s and is run by Polish born Magda Sawon. The space has had three locations in that time, four years in East Village, ten in SoHo and fifteen in Chelsea. They moved back down to SoHo/Tribeca last year. This was poignantly posted on their imminent move:

We want to afford ourselves the opportunity to show art that the market is not yet swallowing whole. We want to continue championing work with challenging but relevant content that may take time to be loved, appreciated, and acquired. We want to look for art by artists – old and young – that confounds us, that we don’t know or understand. We don’t want to anticipate the market and try to deliver on its demands. We want to challenge the market and perhaps teach it. We have, after all, sold some impossible things in the past. We want to search deep and wide for collectors who share this vision.

Aside from the ‘Museum Mile’ nestled in comfortable Upper Manhattan, one area is synonymous with creativity; the meatpacking district on the Lower West Side, which at the start of the 70s found its buildings in disrepair.

The district’s abandoned warehouses started to house clubs and also racketeers quick to prey on a fledgling neighbourhood (the Mafia gained a strong hold). The subsequent chaotic and creative style of the area spawned the advent of disco and the high energy music scene that eventually saw clubs and art studios littered all along Bleeker Street to Bowery and the Lower East Side.

 

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Nolita

 

The areas of West Village, Nolita (north of Little Italy) and East Village were the original settling grounds for the Italian and Chinese communities and lower rents gave rise to this episode in New York’s creative appeal. The list of notables to emerge from all this was significant and spanned decades, including: Warhol, Basquiat, Dylan, Lou Reed, Talking Heads.

This creative vibrancy though, ran side by side with the negatives of new neighbourhoods and the drug-fuelled culture of the time. This reached its peak in the mid 80s at the height of the Aids epidemic with the council closing some of the more salubrious sex clubs for health (as well as racketeering) reasons.

 

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Nolita

 

And so the clean up began. What you see today in Chelsea is evidence of this: a nice market and equally nice galleries like David Zwirner and Andrea Rosen, the latter of which recently housed Mika Rottenburg’s Bowls Balls Souls Holes, a sprawling mix of revolving doors and artefacts, giving minimal nods to her film. A frying pan on a small camper-like stove in the lobby complete with an exceptional amount of white wall surround. The work definitely has room to breathe in these galleries.

 

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Bowls Balls Souls Holes

 

The artists, either new or remaining, who do live around Chelsea, West Village or Nolita will be rubbing shoulders with the likes of David Bowie, who apparently has an apartment down on the corner of Lafayette and Houston. This lower side of Manhattan does have a life other than expensive artisan shops, Louis Vuitton and extensions of high end 5th Ave stores though.

 

Nolita houses Marcia Tucker’s innovative New Museum, founded in 1977 on Bowery off Prince Street, which most recently held Me, My Mother, My Father, and I by Icelandic artist Ragnar Kjartansson. This exhibition was typical of their global and innovative vision. Kjartan Sveinsson, composer and former member of the Icelandic band Sigur Rós, transformed the scene’s dialogue into a ten-part polyphony played by ten musicians, who sang and played guitar in the tradition of the troubadour to accompany a projection of film by Kjartansson.

 

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Ragnar Kjartansson at New Museum

 

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New Museum

 

The area around the reclaimed and pleasant to walk High Line in Chelsea steeped in this recent creativeness, is now facing more change. In 2013 Barneys luxury department store made moves to open another in Chelsea for a ‘new and pleasant go-to destination for its clients’ prompting real talk of rent hikes. 

 

Now, Chelsea may only be within the realms of less hands-on, major city chain galleries like David Zwirner or Hauser & Wirth, which typify the shift. Leo Koenig took over the Postmasters Gallery space.

 

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John Powers at Postmasters

 

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Postmasters

 

And so the type of art being made and the galleries that are able to show it is in flux. Another established and innovative gallery, Winkleman Gallery is on the move from Chelsea. Having had their lease expire in March, they too are looking for a new home.

 

They have also been active in setting up Moving Image Contemporary Art Fair, which is in its fourth year, holding regular bi-yearly events for moving image art during New York’s Armoury and London’s Frieze. With work coming in from all over the world and from various galleries in London and New York. They recently hosted a hugely succesful event in conjunction with Istanbul’s Art Internatinal.

 

Certainly there is no air of plaintive hurt in these gallery owner’s decisions. Their gallery is currently less concerned in permanent street presence and more in temporal events. Where their gallery space emerges in the future remains to be seen, but the idea of having to move and move quickly is obviously not new.

 

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Hoarding selling storage space Chelsea

 

Historically this is a city of migration; of Gershwin, Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald, also of the ‘American Bloomsbury Group’ and Ayn Rand’s thinking, the Beat poets, Pollock, Lichtenstein, Warhol, and Hip Hop. The maths of art and rent has always been paramount.

Manhattan is very, very wealthy. No more are the gritty and violent streets of 70s and 80s cop dramas. Always amazing, it is now a relatively safe and enjoyably amazing place, but still with its brownstone streets, iconic and tv-familiar buildings and gritty backdrop of seeming chaos and street mess – it looks the same.

In modern day New York you may work in a restaurant and live quite comfortably off your tips. Live the life, for as many years, in your tiny downtown apartment. Available square meters are snapped up and turned into living space from penthouse to small kitchenette studio apartments. There are no empty buildings for long.

But some resident artists have been saying that more and more this city is without the creative edge that defined so much of the collective memory of those inspired but dangerous times 30-odd years ago. Whilst a decrease in crime is definitively a positive, the logic behind this seems to be that things can only improve with gentrification, or rather, rent hikes.

 

This story isn’t new and it is happening all over the globe with vengeance at the moment, but here it seems far more pronounced, and is occurring with frightening speed. Space is a premium, an asset, and increasingly a realm only of the wealthy.

 

I ventured a little north of Manhattan  to West 155th Street and the not too frequented, wonderfully dusty museum of The Hispanic Society of America in Harlem, housing Goya, Velázquez, El Greco and much more.

 

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Francisco de Goya y Lucientes 1746 -1828   La Duquesa de Alba, 1797


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Escritorio de Salamanca, Spain 1630 -1650

 

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Nasrid door circa 1306 -1400


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Artist unknown. Altarpiece of the Assumption of the Virgin 1400 -1500  tempura on panel

 

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The Hispanic Society during the Sorolla exhibition 1909

 

I took the bus, the difference between Harlem and its nearby neighbourhood, the comfortably cultural zone of Upper West Side, was palpable. The shops are peppered with mobile gadgetry, convenience corner shops, Western Unions and local DIY stores, except the shop signs and billboards are in Spanish as well as American.

The bus had school kids and parents doing the school run, along a route that had cafes spilling out onto the street, local people sat outside on benches.

 

Around the same time I noticed an article describing this same area of Harlem as being the “bare bones” for investment, a new place to be discovered within easy distance of all that art and edge that ever was Manhattan. The human analogy of “bare bones” seems relevant, and these are not the desolate buildings of Chelsea’s abandoned meatpacking district or the 70s gun toting, crime ridden streets. There may be crime, but the bus I took seemed pretty normal to me.

Communities take time to grow and this one has been here for over 100 years, not transplanted by upward economic trend. And, just like these Harlem residents, for many art galleries and artists the cheaper rent will always be a defining factor. Reinventing areas with prime rent coffee shops does not creativity make.

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The Hispanic Society Museum Harlem

 

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Harlem

 


Next.
Part 2 – Escape from New York. Visits to Lower East Side, Williamsburg and the burgeoning Bushwick Open Studio event.

 

Cradle to Grave : Plastics, Resins, Infinity and Industry

Getting the Balance Right.


A few years ago I went to a discussion about sustainable fashion, one of the speakers was
Katherine Hamnett. Back then the organic cotton manufacturing industry was in
all sorts of conundrums about authenticity; from growing the cotton to its
destination of shop rail; from training to be a designer to retail ethics.
Katherine made it clear that the only way she could guarantee a truly fair
trade organic product was to oversee the entire process herself.


Katherine being who she is was able to do this. She sold her
successful business and started E.Hamnett. She purchased a farm in India and
hired local staff. She booked containers to carry the cotton, uncontaminated,
to a factory which she also owned in the UK where the garments were then made
up. And so receiving a genuine label of authenticity, rather than a nod in the
direction of one. The labelling of which many companies were then using more
than generously in their favour.

The details of these issues I had already covered at the
time
. But this week I found myself re-thinking this ethical sustainability
issue in a completely different light.



12
Sand : Water Under the Sand  twin : painting and sculpture


I had decided I wanted to create a piece of work connected
to my Sand painting with a piece about dessert storms. I’d collected
Saharan sand from one such storm while in Southern Spain. And to do this what better way than suspend it in
clear resin. To be able see the particles free floating encapsulated in a resin cube. To use plastic was always my intention, I use all
kinds of organic, in-organic and synthetic products in my works. So after
researching on the web for the best possible clarity of resin-for-purpose I
clicked and bought.


It arrived. It had Skull and Cross Bones on the labelling.

I
visited my old University for advice, and not surprisingly had a re-think about
the product I was about to use.


While I was in Spain I had also written my thoughts on
plastic and landfill in general. But this particular product made me think
again. I then started to look into using a resin which was more eco-friendly but was
surprised at my results.

Rather than using a Petrochemical sourced resin I was now
looking at a Bio-resin sourced from vegetable matter.

The biodegradable results were though as far from eco-friendly
as they initially sounded. Both types of resin start in liquid form and both
require a toxic “hardener” to be added. You can break the whole process down
into three different categories.

The Source :

Petro – from fossil fuel – not sustainable in the long run
hence recycling.

Bio – from vegetable matter like corn oil – dubiously sustainable
in its demand-requirement of land clearance in order to grow. Along
with pesticide usage, the pesticides themselves being toxic. The more we switch
to bio-plastics the more demand.

The Process :

Both are either toxic (as with Petro) or hazardous because
of use of the hardener, the Bio less so.          

The End Result :

Recycling plants are industrial composting machines which
heat the plastics and are a sustainable alternative to just dumping in landfill
or oceans. These have been set up to primarily deal with Petro and are certainly
not dealing with the vast majority of plastics produced of whatever
denomination. However when a plastic does reach the plant a conundrum becomes apparent
not least in abuse of actually labelling how degradable a product is.

In order to degrade quickly Petro has to be heated in the
compost this then turns it into a “humus” like substance. Bio on the other hand
does not respond to this composting process in the same way so even though it
can be argued it has been composted it has not actually been fully degraded. It
does on the other hand retain sustainable Carbon 14 which replenishes,
Petro does not.

I had always seen the plastics industry as a simple case of
Recycle, whereas actually it is far more complicated than that. Even the Standards Organizations cannot decide the exact labelling criteria (see below).


Katherine’s talk about cotton made me think a bit more about
the plastics industry. And I am only throwing this open as an idea as this may
be a little too simplistic to apply.

But at what stage does a manufacturer leave the responsibility of
process? when it has been sold onto the supplier? and in turn with them onto
the customer?. Governments and (true) industry have set up recycling plants.
But maybe we need to see a Cradle to Grave approach to producing whereby the
cost of disposing and recycling is an upfront cost of production in the first
place. Unpopular sure, more expensive yes.

As an idea it would place the onus wholly onto those
involved in the manufacturing process. The initiators in the chain of demand.
No hiding or at least no putting on a commercial face-saving act with the fickle use
of labelling.

 

A commitment from start to end of a products life.

When I was a child I saw no end to infinity – the world was
huge the oceans vast. This is not so today. Aside from the vortex of plastic in
the oceans the semi-degraded particles are now the size of plankton and are
well and truly absorbed into the food chain. The dust and sand storms carry
these same tiny plastic particles in the air. We are it seems surrounded by our
own detritus of plastic – a massive industry that has grown around us and is engulfing.

I realised this week with a clarity I had not felt before that this is
not just about a plastic shopping bag, a bottle of cola, eco friendly rhetoric
or nods in the ethical direction. It’s not even about a dwindling fossil fuel industry.
The sheer scale and toxicity of our use of plastic is mind boggling –literally everything
that can be is made from the stuff.

I have made the choice to use a bio-resin as eco-friendly as possible for this piece –
but I am now aware that one day the plastic produced – unless recycled Fully
may well end up back in the Sahara or some other arid place devoid of top soil ready
to be whipped up into a dust storm only to be dumped many miles away (and yes very probably in a
town near you) and ingested by some poor unsuspecting person.

Check this animated Sand and Dust Storm forcast for the next 7 days from the Turkish Met Office

http://www.mgm.gov.tr/en-US/forecast-sds.aspx?s=69&t=a&b=eu&c=conc&y=

Explanation of Bio-degradable standards from a Wikipedia article on Bio-Plastics

Withdrawal of ASTM D 6002

In January 2011, the ASTM withdrew standard ASTM D 6002, which is what provided plastic manufacturers with the legal credibility to label a plastic as compostable. Its description is as follows:

“This guide covered suggested criteria, procedures, and a general approach to establish the compostability of environmentally degradable plastics.”[36]

The ASTM has yet to replace this standard.

Biobased – ASTM D6866

The ASTM D6866 method has been developed to certify the biologically derived content of bioplastics. Cosmic rays colliding with the atmosphere mean that some of the carbon is the radioactive isotope carbon-14. CO2 from the atmosphere is used by plants in photosynthesis, so new plant material will contain both carbon-14 and carbon-12. Under the right conditions, and over geological timescales, the remains of living organisms can be transformed into fossil fuels. After ~100,000 years all the carbon-14 present in the original organic material will have undergone radioactive decay leaving only carbon-12. A product made from biomass will have a relatively high level of carbon-14, while a product made from petrochemicals will have no carbon-14. The percentage of renewable carbon in a material (solid or liquid) can be measured with an accelerator mass spectrometer.

There is an important difference between biodegradability and biobased content. A bioplastic such as high density polyethylene (HDPE) can be 100% biobased (i.e. contain 100% renewable carbon), yet be non-biodegradable. These bioplastics such HDPE play nonetheless an important role in greenhouse gas abatement, particularly when they are combusted for energy production. The biobased component of these bioplastics is considered carbon-neutral since their origin is from biomass.

Anaerobic biodegradability – ASTM D5511-02 and ASTM D5526

The ASTM D5511-12 and ASTM D5526-12 are testing methods that comply with international standards such as the ISO DIS 15985 for the biodegradability of plastic.


Hyperallergic’s Discussion on Tumblr, Social Media Platforms and Art

This is well worth a listen.

Hyperallergic’s discussion held Saturday 9th March in Brooklyn streamed via the link below.

Running at 2 hours 30min – is something to perhaps take in short bites. On the subject of art and the use of new communication technology platforms. The views may, on the surface sometimes seem to be going over ‘things we had already thought about’. The overall picture though, is far from that!.     

About

“Hyperallergic and Tumblr have joined forces to present “The World’s First Tumblr Art Symposium.” This project, which is part discussion and part exhibition, explores the fast-evolving artistic landscape of Tumblr, one of the world’s leading social media and blogging platforms. “Over the last few years, artists have been gravitating to Tumblr as an open and welcoming platform for artists and the art community,” says Hrag Vartanian, editor-in-chief of the Brooklyn-based art blogazine Hyperallergic. “The types of art projects being created on Tumblr are diverse and growing by the day, so we felt it was time to have a discussion about the art community on Tumblr and how they are impacting art making today.” “This is an exciting context for art on Tumblr,” says Tumblr Arts Evangelist Annie Werner. “What was once floating out into the ether is now constructed in an official, curatorial format. It’s an amazing experience for artists using the platform as a medium — we hope to see only more of it.” The one-day event on Saturday, March 9, which coincides with Armory Arts Week in New York, will feature an exhibition and function as a forum for work to be discussed, shared, liked, uploaded, and critiqued.”

       

take time also to link to the essays on the subject at the bottom of this article… 

http://hyperallergic.com/tumblrart/


Alex Pain :: Erratics

“Erratics are boulders or rocks lifted, transported and
deposited to an unfamiliar environment, far from their original location, by
glacial movement”.

I’d seen Alex Pain’s work earlier in the year at the
opening of Two Queens new gallery space in Leicester’s Cultural Quarter.

Back then I was immediately struck by his subtle use of
materials, and the ways he managed to subvert their actual meaning alongside their physical presence.  

Take Truncated Spur for example with its ramp like form,
corroded copper rods and concrete solidity offering a time worn and rigid
permanence. Made from jablite with purposely corroded patinated copper rods.

Alex Pain Truncated Spur

50 Alex Pain Patinated Copper Poles Jablite April 2012 052

 Alex pain Bergers


54 Alex Pain Bergers Metal Shammy Leather April 2012 093
Truncated Spur and Bergers : 2011

Close inspection of Alex’s work belies an immediate
assumption.

As with his four new pieces showing at Nottingham Castle’s
Open 2012.

Placed in the middle floor space amongst the walls of salon style Old
Masters. They have a presence that neither intrudes on nor excludes the
surrounding work. They just are …very much Alex Pains art.

Alex Pain Order Emerging from Chaos
Order Emerging From Chaos Or Architecture Reclaimed
By Nature : Foam, Jablite, Brass 2012

The four immediately strike you as a whole, a connection of
an idea of form and structure which travels through his art.

Alex’s use of foam and jablite (polystyrene insulation
material) give an overall sense of topsy turvy weightlessness to the pieces.


Especially from the suspended Order Emerging From Chaos, Or Architecture
Reclaimed By Nature.

Alex Pain Order Emerging From Chaos 3

Alex Pain Order Emerging From Chaos 4

Alex Pain Order Emerging from Chaos 2

Although rough hewn with a stained-like sliced and hacked exterior, it still suggests a softness through its recognisable natural foam state. The application gives an idea of another more rugged terrain, of a rock face for
example. And gazing into its interior more closely you are also struck, by regimented
sometimes gleaming, metal razor teeth. Protrusions sliced into the dark, smooth-hewn jablite of this rock like cavern.  All this waiting to descend frighteningly from the trapeze wire
suspension above with its suggested sheer weight. Standing underneath you
feel the sense of a would-be-coffin.


Alex Pain Bald Arch 4


Alex Pain Bald Arch 2

Alex Pain Bald Arch 3
Bald Arch : Flashing Strip, Underlay 2012

I found the upside down nature of this chair-like structure,
sealed in with flashing strip and buffered with underlay, spoke of all the usual
orders of structure used in architecture. And although it looked as though it had been
turned on its head at the same time it made sense as a form. All the weight
bearing elements of the materials used being true to their inner core of
physics. So imparting a logic as to its purpose.


Alex Pain Tor 2

Alex Pain Tor 3

Alex Pain Tor 4
Tor : Foam and Copper 2012

A ridged piece towering high. A notion of a place to sit
at the top, with a patinated copper seat or possible slide. The foam although
of dark grey solidity still giving no clue to its real physical susceptibility.
If a breeze were to blow would it topple?. The corrugated teeth although set slightly
off kilter with each other, as are want of grinding jaws, are given sharpened
bite as copper sheets fit strongly and neatly along the cutting edges. Adding
to the impression of an insecure but impenetrable and lonely place of rectitude or
governance.


Alex Pain Junction

Alex Pain Junction 2

Alex pain Junction 4

Alex Pain Junction 5

Alex Pain Junction 6
Junction : Brass,
Jablite 2012

As with Alex’s earlier work from 2011 this echoes the notions
of structure being held within an unlikely material. The wrapped and
impenetrable aspect from one side looks reminiscent of shiny gold (brass)
wrapping paper. Suggesting a child like temptation to unwrap. On a larger scale it could be seen as the kind of gleaming polished and smart exterior of so many skyscraper buildings. Built to eschew confidence in their surrounds and their clients. Turn the
corner on this piece and you find again the double question of exposed interior
held no less uniformly and sleekly within its brass strapping. A do not cross
the line brass strip, with the notion of that initial promise of the exterior being not
what it seems. By holding something stark, bare, dark and possibly rough to the
touch.

I’m becoming more and more intrigued by Alex’s art. A fascinating body of work and study of materials and aesthetics, which engage in our reactions to them and with each other. A distinct cognition of how they are used and work within our environment.


There are further images and video of his new work here. Erratics will be
showing at Nottingham Castle Gallery until October 28th  (note the opening times are changing for
winter this week 10 am until 4 pm last admission 3.30)

  Alex Pain Erratics

Tainted Love :: Part Three

It was in early May that I first came across Tainted Love.
Or rather I already knew about the exhibition while it had been in its first home at Transition
Gallery
in Hackney, London during the spring of 2012.

But now it was June and I was on the train to Coventry to see Corinna Spencer,
one of the artists and the curator, who’d also had the inception of the whole
idea.


And, newly installed I was interested to see how I would
react to it there, placed in a concrete and glass 1960’s built former council-office.

I’d heard of The Meter Room before and being a keen art-tweeter living in Nottingham had noticed that for a gallery somewhere outside the usual London area, that the artists who had been asked to join this
exhibition were an interesting group – whose base could have been from absolutely
anywhere in the uk.

The Meter Room is a great use of gallery studio space right in
the centre of Coventry. Looking out onto the main road only a short distance from
the station it’s easy to find. And, up a short flight of stairs I came across
Tainted Love’s second home and the lovely Corinna Spencer. She explained that
all the artists involved were people whom she thought would bring interesting
insights and also fun elements of expression to the idea of Tainted Love. A
traditionally tragic, sometimes illogical and emotive idea that seems closely connected to our
perception in understanding the fragility of pure love.


I had seen the work of some of the artists before. From Transition Gallery owner
Cathy Lomax’s The Sixteen Most Beautiful Men to Hayley Lock’s individual site specific collaboration with romantic writers set in English stately homes with (Now that would be) Telling. Which culminated at Transition Gallery earlier this year. Already hooked on Corinna’s paintings of Moss Haired Girls and her more recent Fanbook and Gems. I was
interested to see the sum of the whole.

P1140276 copy

Cathy Lomax :  The Sixteen Most Beautiful Men

P1140348 copy
Gallery View : Corinna Spencer ‘s  Robert and Jesse  and Alli Sharma ‘s paintings including Diana Dors. Yield to the Night.

 And a must-read specific Diary of Tainted Love events has been written to compliment this tour.

Corinna had made intimate spaces for each Tainted Love piece – a little
sanctuary of contemplation. With a new dimension revealed as you turned every
corner.

P1140282 copy

P1140286 copy

Georgie Flood : Shroud and Flower Eater

P1140300 copy

Tainted love july 2012 cov 030

Hayley Lock

Tainted love july 2012 cov 005Corinna Spencer : Robert and Jesse

Tainted love july 2012 cov 008

Tainted love july 2012 cov 009Andrea Hannon

Tainted love july 2012 cov 021Annabel Dover



Tainted love july 2012 cov 022

Tainted love july 2012 cov 023Paul Kindersley


One of the pieces caught my eye as its presence had a slightly
different visual effect….. in as much as all you could see were columns of
tightly wrapped copper coloured thread. They offered no insight other than
their finitely woven exterior. I later found that the artist
Alice Anderson had taken
objects of personal meaning and hidden them in each core, while having
meticulously and repetitively wrapped them in the fine copper thread. The only obvious differences within these columns from the outside were in their height and their
distance from each other.


Tainted love july 2012 cov 018
Alice Anderson : 8 full photographic containers



Tainted love july 2012 cov 033
Kirsty Buchanan 

Tainted love july 2012 cov 035


Tainted love july 2012 cov 036


Tainted love july 2012 cov 037
Mark Scott Wood

Tainted love july 2012 cov 026


Tainted love july 2012 cov 028


Tainted love july 2012 cov 029
Jessica Vorsanger

Each piece opened a window into this world encouraging a journey.
Different ideas surrounding the expression and subsequently the viewer’s
perception of a certain kind of Love.  Be
that from the point of view of the unrequited to the worshipped, the idolised, rejected, excluded or the hurt.


I found each artist took me on a slightly different and revealing tangent of
thought, within the more darker, subtle and humorous areas of how we feel love. Places I
had never been before. A journey well
worth taking.

Tainted Love is next in its final home of this year from
29th Sept until 18th November 2012 at Downstairs Gallery 
Downstairs opened in 2011 in the heritage building of Lady Pidgeon’s former Great Brampton House, Madley, Herefordshire.


Recommended reading!

A great artist on artist interview in a special Tainted Love edition of Arty Magazine which can be bought through Transition Gallery shop or by post.

And a Diary of Tainted Love events mentioned above.


Downstairs at Great Brampton House, Madley, Herefordshire.

View Larger Map

The Meter Room at 58-64 Corporation Street, Coventry, West Midlands. On the corner of Corporation St and Burges next to the pub.

View Larger Map

Transition Gallery Unit 25a Regent Studios, 8 Andrews Road, London E8 4QN
View Larger Map


Culture, Heritage, Art and car boot sales for the wealthy.

Acropolis

Ok ..I’m on a bit of a soapbox here, and I would like to be a hell of a lot more positive..

Not happy on reading about Europe’s crisis (and pretty damn well the whole world’s). Governments and councils are so desperate for cash, whatever they can sell it seems is up for grabs..

The problem is this deep ? – everything that has a price it seems, including public heritage buildings and sites are being sold off all over, if not sold, then kept in a state of moth-balled disrepair until they can. It isn’t just heritage and art, all public concerns have the potential to be – and are being sold, from parking meters to street lights – if it isn’t nailed down etc etc

But… Greece and Italy are extremely visual examples of this because of their massive cultural history, public buildings, and museums…
Rome’s ruins are crumbling (sited because of this disrepair rather than pure age). Pompei is another. Venice has for a while now been staving off massive billboard/advertisement projections onto its buildings as desperately needed public revenue for the city. Art has been burned (in protest). Art has been stolen for lack of protection.

Spain is careering along the same path and it is not just its Government and main banks in trouble but the local Cajas – the ones who borrowed heavily in the development *boom* years that ex-pats and Spaniards bought so heavily into. The local bank’s problems are set to topple the whole crisis in Spain.

There was a piece in The Observer this week about a private investment fund buying up Barceloneta port to render it exclusively for super yachts. Cutting off the locals from their bit of sea and port area, and most likely pricing them out. Law of the jungle, winner takes all.

Culture, and a whole lot more it seems, is being sold car-boot style to a few who obviously made enough out of the boom years to own even more.
Hundreds of years of culture and art are seen as assets and so valued purely in money terms.

It seems the world is no more than a playground for the very wealthy, and is being treated as such with naive? or just plain irresponsible bare faced arrogance.


Lives of Artists Series Four : On The Cusp


4 Cusp Gallery Entrance April 2012 006

CUSP and Vanilla Gallery space is new – literally since March. The cavernous space was opened in a vacated Cash & Carry building at 2 Queens Street in the Cultural Quarter of Leicester. 

With this literally being the 2nd exhibition opening in its history. It will be interesting to see what the artist-led vision of the space will be…a product of a collaboration between CUSP and Vanilla Galleries, housing two gallery spaces and 18 artist studios with the overall space being Two Queens.


This time CUSP playing host to Alex Pain’s sculptural angular curving shapes :

Cut Across the Grain to Give a Richly Textured Surface.

 
59 Alex Pain Bergers Metal Shammy Leather April 2012 100


But before reaching the sharp and clear lines of Alex Pain’s exhibition.
You had to encounter this:


TEXU a collaboration by two artists: Trans~Europe~Xpress~Urself  who are Jonny Ryall based in Berlin & Gino Attwood in Leicester. In a cross-continent over-the-net use of all mediums on offer, to enable, discuss, view and exchange ideas without the physicality of being in the same room. The end resulted in Attempt #1 Vasari’s Corridor: A look at the myths taken from Georgio Vasari’s ‘Lives’ …transformed into The Gossip Obstacles a series of exaggerated obstacles to be negotiated while travelling the length of the gallery space.
And so the use of this space was interesting on entering as Vasari’s Corridor seemed to be a precursor you had to navigate through first.. a slightly unnerving sensory dissonance of balance with spotlights moving across the space highlighting this sense of eerie surprise.



81 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Scary Shield April 2012 075

I’m really not going to say too much more about this collection of work! as navigation is key to the real journey. George Vasari should be a good starting place though….suffice to say…I hope the photographs will intrigue into a visit!. A pity I haven’t also the two sound tracks, which added to the overall meaning. Especially as the main music, created by Aberdeen musician graduate, Nathan Bissette, stands equally in its own right.

There is a short video on Vanilla Gallery’s website to give a visual feel. The music used here is an excerpt from the much longer and hauntingly atmospheric sound piece.

 


 

Alex Pain’s work too, like the gallery is relatively new – graduating from Nottingham Trent last year. Although having exhibited in exhibtions and shows from Hungary to China to Cromford in the Peak District UK. I somehow managed to miss his work last year at the Open Show in Nottingham Castle (plus point his solo show in the same space is coming up later this year!).
So anyway, I was pleased, finally to see some of those pieces that I had missed, along with a complete new body of work.

And I think you do really have to see these up close! although good because photographs do lend themselves to the curving sharp lines and subtle use of textures in his work. The gravity and weight of substance, though, along with aged, patinated, brushed and polished surfaces do far better justice under closer inspection.

However ! here’s the pictorial evidence :


5 Flotsam foam April 2012 007 

Flotsam : Aluminium, Foam, 2011

 

 

6 Alex Pain Patinated Copper Poles, Jablite April 2012 008

49 Alex Pain Patinated Copper Poles Jablite April 2012 051

50 Alex Pain Patinated Copper Poles Jablite April 2012 052

14 Alex Pain Patinated Copper Poles, Jablite April 2012 016

Untitled : Patinated Copper Poles, Jablite, 2012

 

15 Alex Pain Foam Chipboard Aluminium April 2012 018

17 Alex Pain Foam Chipboard Aluminium April 2012 019

Untitled : Foam, Chipboard, Aluminium, 2012

 

20 Alex Pain Brass and Foam April 2012 022

Flotsam : Brass, Foam 2011


23 Alex Pain Flotsam Copper Foam April 2012 025

24 Alex Pain Flotsam Copper Foam April 2012 026

26 Alex Pain Flotsam Copper Foam April 2012 028

Flotsam : Copper, Foam, 2011


30 Alex Pain Bergers Rusted Metal April 2012 032

33 Alex Pain Bergers Rusted Metal April 2012 035

35 Alex Pain Bergers Rusted Metal April 2012 037

Bergers : Rusted Steel, Aluminium, 2012

37 Alex Pain Bergers Metal Shammy Leather April 2012 039

39 Alex Pain Bergers Metal Shammy Leather April 2012 041

54 Alex Pain Bergers Metal Shammy Leather April 2012 093

55 Alex Pain Bergers Metal Shammy Leather April 2012 094

58 Alex Pain Bergers Metal Shammy Leather April 2012 099

Bergers : Leather, Aluminium, 2012

42 Alex Pain Bergers Wood Aluminium April 2012 044

46 Alex Pain Bergers Wood Aluminium April 2012 048

Bergers : Wood, Aluminium, 2012


9 Alex Pain Patinated Copper Poles, Jablite April 2012 011

21 Alex Pain Instalation View Flotsam Leicester Cusp Gallery April 2012 023

36 Alex Pain Bergers Rusted Metal April 2012 038

51 Alex Pain Installation View Leicester Cusp Gallery April 2012 053

53 Alex Pain Installation View Bergers April 2012 055

43 Alex Pain Installation View Bergers April 2012 045

44 Alex Pain Bergers Wood Aluminium April 2012 046

11 Alex Pain Flotsam Foam April 2012 014

Installation View


My navigation in images : Attempt #1 Vasari’s Corridor


61 TEXU Vasari's Corridor Circle  April 2012 059
 

Circle (After Giotto)


62 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Beetle & Candle April 2012 062
 

Circle and Candle backed beetle


71 TEXU Vasaris Corridor The Fish Crown hidden April 2012 065

73 TEXU Vasaris Corridor The Fish Crown April 2012 067

The Fish Crown

75 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Beetle & Circle April 2012 069

Circle and Candle backed beetle

77 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Watch Tower April 2012 071

79 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Watch Tower April 2012 073

The Watchtower

80 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Scary Shield April 2012 074

Leonardo’s Scary Shield

82 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Cloak April 2012 076

83 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Cloak April 2012 077

The Cloak of Truth and Lovingness


84 TEXU Vasaris Corridor The Fish Crown April 2012 079

The Fish Crown

91 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Text  April 2012 086

92 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Text April 2012 089

Text

78 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Beetle & Circle April 2012 072

81 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Scary Shield April 2012 075

89 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Installation View April 2012 083

93 TEXU Vasaris Corridor Installation View April 2012 091
 

Installation View

Cut Across the Grain to Give a Richly Textured Surface

And

TEXU  : Attempt #1 Vasari’s Corridor

Are now on at Two Queens Leicester until 21st April 2012


3 Cusp Gallery, Two Queens April 2012 003




View Larger Map

Space, Creativity and Relationships

 

 

Rodin

 

 

This Sunday’s report in the NYT Review on creativity, and the current shift toward group thinking has, I think, got some wider social connotations.

Taking the office space “brain storming”  ethic to its logical openplan-inclusive conclusion :

A video gaming company found their game thinkers unhappy…

“..It was one big warehouse space, with just tables, no walls, and everyone could see each other,” recalled Mike Mika, the former creative director. “We switched over to cubicles and were worried about it — you’d think in a creative environment that people would hate that. But it turns out they prefer having nooks and crannies they can hide away in and just be away from everybody.”

And Apple’s other man… 

“…The story of Apple’s origin speaks to the power of collaboration. Mr. Wozniak wouldn’t have been catalyzed by the Altair but for the kindred spirits of Homebrew. And he’d never have started Apple without Mr. Jobs.

But it’s also a story of solo spirit. If you look at how Mr. Wozniak got the work done — the sheer hard work of creating something from nothing — he did it alone. Late at night, all by himself.”

“ ..Mr. Wozniak offers this guidance to aspiring inventors:

Most inventors and engineers I’ve met are like me … they live in their heads. They’re almost like artists. In fact, the very best of them are artists. And artists work best alone …. I’m going to give you some advice that might be hard to take. That advice is: Work alone… Not on a committee. Not on a team.”

Artists and their strange bohemian approach to relationships also reached an almost mythical and clichéd status at one point. I don’t believe by any means this was ever the norm, but space needed to create does seem to be just as relevant today.

 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-16500768

In this short news clip on changing attitudes within youth in Japan, there also seems a similarity; a move toward a more general acceptance of a desire for personal head space.

And although the emphasis in this piece is about a shift in attitudes with Japanese youth toward forming relationships. Apparently they are not committing to having children and/or being in a permanent relationship by “turning their backs on it”.

The term lack of interest in sex may have also been glibly used here to describe this shift; “….a third of young men are admitting they have no interest in sex – a figure that has doubled in the last two years”, may sound shocking especially from a male perspective. But the topic covered is actually about a decline in birth rates and a disinterest in forming relationships.

Not sure either, about the accentuation on “men not feeling able to catch up with the women”.

But the crux is probably best found in two young people’s replies when asked how they felt about gender and relationships :

Her : “..People tell me I am too bubbly, maybe women are getting too strong, but I think that is a shame as I am only living my life in the way I like.”

Him : “..Building a relationship seems like too much effort, to get her to like me, and me to like her, I’d have to give up everything I do at the weekend for her.”

 

The idea that women and men don’t necessarily want to “give up” their personal space on a permanent basis, unless they specifically want to have children – that and the fact gender attraction and birth rates are certainly far more complex than this report touches on. The essence of it does seem to be hinting at a similar thing.

And ok, sure, statistics are statistics and reporting is reporting. And the women are coming across as not wanting to sacrifice a career or their hard earned embodiments of freedom, (in sharp contrast to what many of their mothers did). For example by renting/owing their own place. And the men subsequently come across as being apathetic or disinterested.

Whereas, if looked at, from the point of the stereotypical relationships of the last generation, the move toward having a re-think of this kind of commitment seems entirely logical. Especially when looked at in the light of previous generation’s divorce rates and emotional health issues that resulted.

Mutual-space relationships or non at all does seem to be a logical generational progression. Less emphasis on the biological and stereotypical mechanics of relationships and more on general personal emotional growth.

Note, the boy interviewed talked about his idea toward commitment in an a way that seemed almost the antithesis of many unhealthy aspects that can form in relationships, like co-dependence, lack of personal confidence etc etc.,.

So, not so much of an apathetic or selfish disinterest in relationships by the young, but maybe a move toward a collective breathing space with an interest in the future of human relationships in general, including their future offspring.

Sounds like the healthiest pre-approach to forming relationships that I’ve heard in years.