Tuesday 30 October 2012

Research presentation so far

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Sketchbook Library
Libraries are places where I spend most of my waking life, or it seems that way most of the time. You’d assume libraries are normally in place to lend books out to the public or a place to go and read books, if you’re not going to take them out. At the National Library of Scotland, for example, there is not a book there that they don’t have, that you can access, but on the condition that you read it there. You are not able to take books out at the National Library, they are too precious, and need to be available to the public at all times. I love going to the National Library of Scotland because of these strict rules. Others include, that you can only go into the reading room with paper, pencil and computer. No water, no ink, no phones- it is a strictly silent working area. And, boy, do you get work done.  Then there’s also the main university library which I have spent so much time in now that I only go when I really need to, and there’s no other option, which normally means that I have to go there when there is a book there but no where else or if it’s very late at night and I need to work. All the university libraries are shut. I have spent many nights in the main library working until about 2am in the morning. It’s a great place to work late at night, compared to the day time when it feels like a shopping mall- lots of girls window shopping for boys and boys window shopping for girls. Few purchases are made- I do know of a few friends who have been asked out in the library, some have been laid. How fun! Not very serious. It’s meant to be serious, isn’t it? The Library? Work? It’s somewhere where enrich our minds, not our bodies, of intellect not our handicrafts. Why is that the case? Is it impossible to enrich our minds and handicrafts in the library? I am an art student, how do I use the library for my art studies? Well, I read a lot of theory books, I translate the words and sentences, process the in my brain and either use them to strengthen my essays or they will feed into creative mode of production, occasions flick on a switch in my head at which point it whirls into action and I start seeing lots of objects and people, and hearing voices and imagining situations. Pictures in books can do this for me, but written concepts can too. Like at exhibitions, one can feel creatively inspired, it’s like that but with books and their pictures. I went to the Wide Open School last summer at the Southbank Centre- it was a month-long event that transformed the Southbank Centre’s Hayward Gallery into a school where the public could enrol in classes according to subject, teacher or date. I could only make it down for a few days as I had work commitments up in Edinburgh. On 7th July I attended Haegue Yang’s Vita Activa-  a Korean artist who uses a lot of basic manual skills to produce her work with. There is something about returning to the roots and basics of our functioning in this very developed and complex world that we all live in. Everything we encounter was built from foundations. So what are those foundations? Those basic structures? Are they dried out or can we continue to generate something new and enriching from them? Yang Hague was an extremely humble figure and she created an extremely democratic space in her class room. There are tables laid out in a circular formation and she had employed outside specialists to come in and teach their skills to the class. In such a large class, we ended up helping our neighbours and talking amongst ourselves for hours, once the basic skill had been learned. In the morning we leanrned some origami technqiues and in the afternoon we learned some knitting techniques. At the end of the morning, when we had made the origami, all of the finished pieces were placed on a table in the centre of the room and in the afternoon, all of the knitted pieces were sewed together. For some reason, I ended up naturally filling the role of sewer as I sat with Yang Hague and she and the rest of the table I was at talked amongst ourselves. The following day I attended a discussion held by the Californian collective The Public School who had invited theorist Mark Fisher, as part of their new External Programme, to talk about his book Capitalist Realism which links depression to the current neo-liberalist state of the world and the pressures it places upon us. Then there was Susan Philipz sound workshop, and the Public Faculty’s discussions, inspired by Joseph Beuy’s Untitled Sun State from 1974. Black boards as drawings that unite the cosmic and terrestrial, and idea state in which the social order is conceived as a living organism. It appeared that in these institutional spaces of contemporary art, knowledge was being produced in new and alternative ways to the common, dominating structures. Or existing structures were being used in different ways. Rather the education being supplementary to the exhibition, it was the exhibition. This is so interesting because I believe that a lot of the social problems we have in the country boil down to bad parenting and mis-education.  Art and its institutions can provide a space for experimentation and microtopias as places for social exchange theorized by Nicholas Bourriaud’s in his Relational Aesthetic. However, with education and learning as the premise, it has the potential to be more than conviviality between art elites (which is what always bothered me about this theory), but modes of knowledge production between the public.  As simultaneously a soft and implicit critique on dominating structures but ultimately a space for exploration and enrichment of the self and others within a civil society. So there was also the Marther Rosler Library at the Stills Gallery back in 2008 in which was the artist Marther Rosler’s entire book collection presented to the public as a library archive. The public was invited the to browse freely as a well as being able to participate in a variety of classes that were held in conjunction with the event. Then there’s was my tutor Zoe Walker’s Art Lending Library, a part of the Glasgow International art festival last year which I took part in. This was a mobile library which housed over 60 works of art for the public to browse, engage with and then loan out and take back home for a few days. This took the notion of the library to another conceptual level, where, in the place of books were works of art and instead of reading them, the public could interact with them in other ways. This year we all graduate from the Intermedia department and was thinking about the institution within which we all study together- ECA and how this art institution of learning transforms itself institutionally for a week into a gallery- commercial or non-profit- that’s up for debate.  How successful is this transformation? What needs to be altered for this transformation to take place? What needs to be added? What needs to be taken away? What needs to be extenuated? What needs to be concealed? Our messy studio spaces indeed need to be concealed or even taken away, and in place white clean walls are set in place. The foyer, rather being a place for art supply deliveries  needs to be transform into a reception to welcome visitors and to provide assistance. It is this transformation that I am interested in. And  what is needed for this transformation to be as effective and interesting as possible. It is for this reason, that, among many other interventions, I wish to set up a sketch-book library. Where I would like to ask to borrow any sketchbooks available (regardless of how old they are) of this year group. Catalogue and house them in my make-shift and ever-expanding library. I hope that this library, in its diversity and collectivity will be a reflection of the Intermedia department. I think good relations are important, so I hope that through this project, I will be able to get to know you all a lot better. In a way to do so, with this library I would like to hold daily classes of a few hours of paper skills. Such as calligraphy classes, embroidery classes and book-binding classes, where the photocopied pages of the archived sketchbooks find a new lease of life in these new collectively made paper creations. Here are some photographs of my first experiment with this sketchbook library taken over two days of workshops. We ended up creating new books from the sketchbooks. The time we spent together creating and exchanging skills was also important. We learned and enjoyed ourselves together. We talked about the project but we also talked about each other, and other daily chit chat. This was a really enjoyable experience that I hope that we could share together, but also with the public when they come to view our final efforts in our show in June.  From these open ended situation, like Yang Hague’s origami sessions at the Wide Open School, it is unknown what the specific outcome is. However, I am interested in the process being the focus, not the pre-determined outcome. I believe that much can be gained from examining and placing precedence on the process- the outcome will come later. The epicentre of this activity will physically manifest itself from within my 3-dimensional frame which I like to use in my practice to constantly remind myself of what I am framing, what I am questioning, what exists within the frame in relation to outside the frame. Can these spaces be switched? Can they exist in both? As we explore and develop the once-marked preliminary and research processes in our sketchbooks, the frame is placed on this activity itself, another process. A perpetual process I hope with innumerable outcomes.  

This will be pre-recorded and played over images that will be projected behind me while I make a performance



 

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