Showing posts with label artists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artists. Show all posts

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Sunday surprises #2

I went to check out the Primavera exhibition with Andzrej. This year due to the refurbishments of the museum, it is being held off-site in The Rocks area, with an exhibition in the Bond Store and surrounds. I am not sure whether it really works too well as a show- maybe that is the venue? Or maybe just that Primavera is a show that put together around a group of young artists without too much relation to each other? I enjoyed some works individually, although I think it was not so interesting for show that was at least partly conceived of as working in public space.
The Brown Council have three videos in the exhibition, I can't quiet remember the titles (the wall panels are non-existent which is REALLY frustrating. I had no idea who made all the works...), 2 in the Bond Store and one installed in this historic stone room that looked like it was a laundry at some point as there was some cement and brick troughs on one side of the room.
 The three videos are inter-related with the one installed outside playing on the idea of disappearing ( I just looked it up on their website it's called Disappearing Act.)
There are quiet a few nice things in the work- like the awkward mix of theatrical acting/movement and deadpan performance to carry out the "disappearing act". Its really clear how the artists 'magic' themselves away, and it that way the work opens up the magic of the viewers imagination rather than dazzling us with techno wizardry.

 
The room is not quiet light tight and there are plenty of gaps that let light in. There was a moment in the when the video went to black, which was just before the moment below when each of the four performers came into screen to start walking out backwards.
 Instead of getting a black screen there was an incidental image projected from an accidental camera obscura or the room was a giant pin hole camera. I couldn't work out what the image and was and where it was coming from but, it was a very nice unexpected magical moment.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Conversations with cats: the Shirlow gang again

Lisa Kelly, a Sydney based artist who I have linked to before, sent me an email recently letting me know about a project she did a couple of months ago. It was at an artist run space in Marrickville that had a policy, for a short time, of not naming the artists whose work was on display, so she was not able to blog about the work till the policy changed.

The anonymous policy had me thinking for a while. I would have loved to take up the offer, when an invitation popped into my box asking if I wanted to show some work, as it would have been a great way to test some old ideas: where they recognisable to my practice; or wildly experiment with some really new stuff: does the work stand without my past practice. But this year is all about writing that thesis...


But back to Lisa's work..
She made a couple of nice observational works and I include some images and direct quotes from her blog here about the Shirlow Street cats- but go to her blog for the full story- the lizard walk way artwork is wonderful!


Visiting the end of Shirlow St in the afternoon and no sign of cats. Riding back after dark and a pair come galloping towards me from down the road, seeming familiar with a figure on a bike. They prowl around, tails up, expecting food. Returning to the gallery to get the box of Friskies. Coming back they remain aloof and disinterested in me. Smart cats.

Sunday, July 17, 2011

not-knowing-experts


I have been a bit busy lately with writing my thesis. A couple of weeks ago I a gave a paper at the Festival of Ideas at Melbourne University. You can watch the session on their site. And belong is my transcript. I will upload some of Walking through clear fells soon.

*****

To get to the Styx Valley you take the Lyell highway out of Hobart that goes along the longer reaches of the Derwent River.

When the far edges of Hobart disappear you spend some time going through farming country and woodland patches till you turn into the Gordon River Rd. This road will eventually take you Lake Pedder and the South West, but way before the Lake, before you even get to the Styx valley, you will drive through the picturesque cluster of cherry orchards and hop fields that make up Bushy Park.

Continuing along the Gordon River Road after you past Westerway there is a small family owned saw mill on your right. On your left is the Styx Road, the main logging road that winds up the Styx valley.

As with many logging roads, at the beginning there is a locked gate.

This is the start of the narration that accompanies the video installation Walking through clear fells that I made in 2009 and 10.

The work is a video installation in two parts. One is the single channel being screened behind me.
I made the work with the Tasmanian cinematographer Joe Shemesh; it’s filmed using a red camera, which is a very high-resolution digital camera.

In this channel the camera tracks across the Styx and Florentine Valleys following first the Styx rd, and then the Gordon River.

As the helicopter is able to negotiate the hilly terrain it reveals coups hidden from the view of the highway by hills and rises. It reveals how narrow and small the uncleared areas of forest are. And In particular it reveals the network of roads: undeclared logging tracks, public roads closed to traffic because of logging trucks, and the highway which funnels tourists and locals through the disputed areas to the alpine National Parks. These roads, logging coups and destroyed forest reveal not only the level of destruction but also the construction of ‘wilderness’ and/or ‘high value conservation area’ as remote and untouched by human habitation.

The second part is a synchronised double channel of two people (myself and Joe Shemesh) walking through a series of clear fells in the Styx and Florentine. The camera again points directly down and captures our feet and the ground immediately around us.

At first it is not clear what kind of landscape this is, however with accumulative viewing an endless horror emerges. One clear fell is muddy and churned up by the machinery; a second is after fire bombing, and is black like forest fire except for the hard sharp lines of fallen timbers and giant stumps; and the third is a recently cut coup, littered with many “waste” rainforest trees.

As the camera is strapped directly to our chests the footage contains the motion and sway as our bodies struggle with the uneven ground. There is no horizon and this claustrophobic view creates nausea and disorientation within the viewer.

The two parts are exhibited at right angles to each other.
 


Walking through clear fells was motivated by a desire to describe the landscapes of the tall forests of Tasmania and their current destruction. While there are many photographs of clear fell logging used in activist campaigns, I felt these representations did not capture the visceral feeling of loss and destruction. Neither do they adequately capture the scale of individual logging coups and the way these coup effectively form a honeycomb pattern of deforestation across vast valleys. 

Rather than using a perspectival view creating sweeping vistas over destroyed forests, that I believed would evoke a feeling of catastrophic sublime, I instead employed a directly pointing down camera which I hoped would turn the viewers eye into a scanner like machine, so that the view seem dispassionate objective. And that it would disrupt the picturesque tradition that connotes ownership and control.  Yet because of the disorientation of both the aerial and walking footage the work evokes a very physical and emotional response in the body and mind of the viewer.  (It was interesting when filming how wearing the very large and heavy camera created a feeling of turning oneself into a machine).

The two parts Walking through clear together form a macro and micro view of the Styx and Florentine Valleys.

Returning to the narrative

Its funny looking at this landscape from the air even though I know this space there still a way in which what I know doesn’t quiet connect with what I am seeing from above.

There was a lot of logging activity happening when we filmed this in early 2010. The weather had been so bad for twelve months that the summer logging season was quiet intense.
Although you wouldn’t necessarily know that looking at this footage.

The helicopter, and pilot we hired, belong to the same company that Forestry uses to drop incendiaries onto clear fells to start fires in the Autumn months. Forestry burn them to stop the rainforest species regenerating there by facilitating the growth of a more profitable mono culture of eucalypts that will harvest for paper in 20 years.
The pilot did not want to fly over clear fells that contained working machinery, despite the company and Forestry, agreeing to a requested route, and so in 20 minutes of footage you only glimpse two cranes at the edge of the frame.

Instead of documenting the valley busy with people this landscape looks at once both occupied and strangely empty.

There are a few ideas that I want to briefly raise in relation to this work today that concern artist’s position and voice, in artworks that are motivated by conservation concerns, rather than discussing this work in relation to national or regional narratives. I should say that this point that I have no familial connection with Tasmania and while I have visited often in the last 8 years I have never lived there. Also I am not a long distance walker and the only landscape I know intimately is the Styx Valley. I have in fact spent more time in clear fells than in forests, and I actually find the tall closed forests quiet frightening.

My work is like many mainlanders who are interested in the environmental campaigns in Tasmania as much as I am interested in the campaigns to save the Kimberly and Queenslands wild rivers from resource exploitation.

Conservation campaigns are often focused on making present the unseen complexity of the natural world. Evoking both the wonder of nature, the horror of it’s destruction and potential lost. The motivation of environmentalists to depict and give voice to the unknown, or the known unkowns, by revealing the complex entanglement of human values and exploitation of nature; is particularly evocative and attractive to artists. I contend that this is because, these are projects where the questions raised by representation and documentation are central, and these are questions asked in interesting and dynamic ways by artists and artworks. Further more environmental projects have an increasing sense of urgency, which creates for the artist a sense of, or actualises, being engaged with the world.

Detailed and expert knowledge is highly valued within environmental campaigns whereas a cliché about artists is that they work from a position of not knowing. Although I think this is perpetuated by artists as a way of avoiding having to put into words that which sits outside of language, i.e. the sensation and effect created by visual artworks.

Working as an artist in relation to conservation raises questions then about how to negotiate communicating important information while not being a didactic or taking up an authoritarian position. I ask myself in what ways can the artwork I might make give space for the viewer experience? (I don’t necessarily think I have answered that question in this or other artworks I have made.)

In looking for potential models to address this problem of a not-knowing-expert I have been looking at the writings and artworks associated with post-conceptual practice.

Post-conceptual practices are cross and multi-disciplinary that focus on the process of making before the production of artwork. They emphasise connectivity between artists, subjects, artwork and audiences and often seek to employ artwork in the service of educating audiences in relation to politics and sometimes the environment.

Lisa Graziose Corrin describes these artists as:
‘cultural producers’ – at times social gadfly, researcher, performer, writer, filmmaker, curator, collaborator and occasional fabricator of objects. When an object was chosen as the communication medium, these artists avoided high production values and exhibited ‘context’ - the site of display- as an intrinsic component of the work. Moreover, their productions relententlessly questioned how we approach and understand ‘truth’.

Often these are artwork that we might describe as practicing an institutional critique, uncovering biases in museum collections, or past out dating thinking in relation to the types of items collected or the information attached to these objects. Post-conceptual artist often mine archives for alternative narratives, or organise tours of ignored or politically potent sites, often asking non artists- i.e. holders of other expert knowledges or marginalised culture groups to speak on these tours. Often installations seem like a collection of documents- an artwork one might read, interspersed with things that might be artworks.

I find these attractive as potential ways to negotiate the not-knowing-expert although in relation to discussing remote and un pictured landscapes, I don’t see them as a practical solution.

Instead I think of Walking through clear fells as part document and part artwork. The aerial channel is a important document of a landscape being exploited, I am open to it’s potential in being used in other ways and contexts- although I’m not sure how useful it is…

In the context of this document being an artwork, the narrative, read by myself describing an alternative way of moving through the landscape, and the process of making the film is an important self reflective element that is being added to by other voices (Peter Hay) and this also invites the viewer to construct their own narrative sequence or memory of visiting that landscape. The walking feet is in a sense the clear artistic interpretation of landscape and belong to the tradition of artist walking the landscape such as Smithson, Long and Fulton.

This footage is taken at the end of summer and you can see guy lines threading one tall tree to the next. The guy lines create a network between the protesters tree sits and platforms at the top of the tall eucalyptus regnans. They are there so that if the police try to evicted one platform or cut it down they will pull off the other protestors. It’s a way of slowing down and delaying the police break up of the camp.

The camp was evicted the pervious autumn.  It was before that coup had been logged..

This camp now blockades the logging road. In an effort to stop it from turning off to the right and going deeper into the Florentine valley.

The last section of this footage is where the helicopter has past the camp and into the World Hertiage Area. They then have turned around and are filming as they are flying back towards the camp. AS you cross the highway and there is some relief that there is no sign of logging activity the helicopter passing over health landscape, of tea-tree tickets and then forest. The film ends where you start to enter tall forest again; right at it’s edge, there is a road.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Field Guide to the Birds of Tokyo's Metro System.




Ryuto's hand holding the finished prototype of A Field Guide to the Birds of the Tokyo Metro System. One of my works in the exhibition Tokyo Story at TWS Shibuya is a collaboration with a talented young artist Ryuto Miyake.

It started with my recording of the bird sounds used as alarms in the metro system, soon after I meet Ryuto who has a passion for drawing birds. The question was then how do we illustrate a field guide to these Metro birds while avoiding the mannered ‘imaginative’ drawings of people who know too much. Children drawings? How do I find a group of children? Enter Kate Gane: an Australian who is teaching English in the Kanagawa area as Warnambool's cultural ambassador. Kate and I did a series of workshops with the students playing them the alarm sounds and shown them images of Japanese and Australian birds. Ryuto’s drawings are based on drawings by first year students in classes 1-1, 1-2 and 1-3 at Hasse Junior High School, Kanagawa, and photos of birds we thought they looked like.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

2nd Open Studio- Yuri and Affice opening







I spent open day working on a new zine- I'll post images of both zines in next entry.

After open studio we all headed over to Clear Editions to the opening of a collaboration between Åbäke and Yuri Suzuki- SUZUKI ÅFFICE.

The installation plays on the difficulty of finding locations in Tokyo, especially when you first arrive and are just looking for somewhere to eat or drink- they all seem to be down a narrow flight of stairs or a shop or business is upstairs- more likely up a tiny elevator- a kind of secret city.

From the street you see a small office with a sliver of a dark bar and disco ball. When you turn the corner and enter the gallery, it’s an‘empty’ white room with a small cupboard in the corner- which is the entry to the narrow, low, dark bar- playing good music- although I can’t remember what…

Part of the work is a series of multiples- including a printed glass- more for Glenn Barkley's collection!

More photos- post booze on flickr

From the street.

The gallery starts to fill up, Kajsa wearing an apron on the left.

Going in.

Yuri and Maki man the bar.

Kajsa at pouring beers at the end of the night.

Yuri coming out of the bar at the end of the night, Miwa on the right.

Shibuya Reality Tour- Monday




At the opening of Double Vision the current show at Tokyo WS Shibuya a group of artists from one of the art schools in Tokyo made a work called Shibuya reality tour. I was pretty interested how this would compare to Squatspace's ongoing project about the Redfern/Waterloo area of Sydney called Tour of Beauty. There was some social commentary, but more at a tangent, like when we drove under the rail and road overpass and saw the cardboard city. It was 200 metre from where I walk past nearly every second day but I had no idea it was there.
At two points we were broken up into groups of six and wound our way through the small streets of Shibuya. The tour sometimes pointed out historical interest, like the buildings covers in tin- a precaution against fire and earthquake, adopted for a short period after the 1923 earthquake; found installations like a garden of pot plants in front of a garage roller door, or a broom hanging from a lamppost; and at other times inserting an event or performance. Like when we went upstairs to a Hula dancing school and watched a singer perform in the empty lot below, with the sound amplified in the school only. This was a little surreal, as we had watched Hula Girls the night before at movie night in the artists’ residences.
The highlight for me was an intervention where the students had set up a professional film crew and where filming a scene where one of the French students was asking for directions, the camera angle is quiet wide so you see the boom operator and stage lights and generator. We encounter this as we stumbled out a very small alley directly into the film scene. It was a disorienting moment till you work out its part of the performance. When we arrived back at the gallery we entered to find this “film” being played with each small group emerging, and stumbling around. It was a really nice way to see ourselves as performers and not just consumers. An extra performative level was added when Åbäke handed around, to the silent audience watching the film, beer cans covered with a scan of Mountain Dew can, the room was filled with crack-ppssst of beers opening.
Kampai!

Monday, February 15, 2010

Kitsuné launch- wednesday







Maki, Kajsa (one half of Åbäke) and Yuri with the flowers sent for the opening of the “pop-up store” Kitsuné Boutique at Montoak. I still don’t have a photo that captures Kajsa’s joyful energy.
Kitsuné is another one of Åbäke projects, along with two others, a DJ and a fashion designer. It was a very fancy event full of fashionistas and one we only really managed to bluff our way into because I had no idea we weren’t strictly invited.
Second photo: Nicolas, Matt and Miwa after many of the translucent red, white and blue cocktails. Nicolas caught in full emphatic French point making, Matt winding him up, and Miwa laughing AT and with them. At this point I managed to scandalize some people in the uni-sex toilet queue because I bashed on the door of someone taking too long. It turned out to be an employee- probably checking her hair- bloody bludger.
Only on leaving, when I saw one of the store attendants vacuuming the newly laid tri-colour carpet, did I realize there was a French theme going on.
Third photo: After getting chucked out of the launch we went to what has become our “local”. It's a dangerous place- there are no windows, you don’t see the dawn light slowly coming, and end up leaving when the sun is already up. I wonder why I have put on a little weight and then I remember those second dinners at 3am.

Monday, February 1, 2010

snow!





I went to the opening pf Cyber Arts Japan at MOT last night. It was a show that looked at the 30-year history of Japanese artists participating in Ars Electronica (Linz). Unfortunately the exhibition was over designed (lots of wall vinyl- including burnt orange circles) while managing not to give much information. Some of the artists names where in odd places- no translations on the wall panels. This might sound picky but their last show, a fashion show, was really well done. So in some ways this show felt dated and internal- catering to a an “in the know” crowd, which is a pity as there are some really interesting works that I would have liked to know more about.
One of the high lights of the opening was seeing Maywa Denki perform. He has made a series of odd electronic percussive instruments that he plays with others in live performances. They where interesting to see as objects but where so much more when animated. I have been fascinated with the different kinds of Japanese work uniforms, so enjoyed Denki’s use of workers outfits.
Another highlight was Yuki Suzuki- whose locked groove record is pictured 2nd from the top.
When I left the gallery it had started to snow. It was really beautiful and magical- perhaps not for those who take snowing as a given in winters but I think its only about the 6th time I have seen snow falling. It snowed for a couple of hours and in the end there was a small (10cm?) layer on the ground- I had thought it would last the night but it was melting when I woke up this morning. I had been debating whether to go down last night at midnight when it was stopping- I guess I should’ve- will know for next time. They have forecast some more snow on Thursday but I guess that could change.
more snow pictures here

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Yesterday- Akihabara





I have a thing for loud hailers.
Success in Akihabara! I managed to find a reasonably priced omnidirectional lapel mic for background field recordings- AKG c417. Also I was told that the best prices are from an online supplier, so will order the rest of equipment from there. The store- Musicvox- only had one in stock, the other one is coming in on Wednesday so I might do some tourism then. But I have to get a zine finished by Saturday for the open studio. I only have ideas and research pictures at the moment.
Back in Aoyama, Takayuki took Nicolas and I to a local workers food/drink joint.