Showing posts with label scotland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scotland. Show all posts

Sunday, 14 January 2018

Jacqueline Donachie - Right here among them at The Fruitmarket Gallery



I fondly remember the artist talk that Jackie Donachie delivered to the Environmental Art students at Glasgow School of Art. I was in the second year of my undergraduate degree, and was really taken by the social aspect of Jackie's work and the way in which she goes about making work.


I specifically recall her telling us about how she struggled to make work immediately after graduating. She explained that after going to Art School, she needed to earn some money and so worked in a bar. It was while working at the bar that she created Advice Bar (1995), "a makeshift bar manned by the artist, who gave out drinks in exchange for problems, for which she would offer advice." It has since existed in many versions. For the Fruitmarket exhibition the gallery has been developed into Advice Bar (Expanded for the Times) (2017), a long concrete bar which cuts intrusively through the lower gallery. I enjoy the way that Donachie adapts the work according to the context. It seems particularly relevant that we have an opportunity and space to discuss problems given the current political and social state of the world. 





Also in the downstairs gallery, Temple of Jackie (2011), is another work that I was familiar with in a previous iteration. The adapted camping trailer was used to serve soup and drinks at the opening of the Glasgow Sculpture Studios when they relocated to Kelvinhaugh Street. I was working at Glasgow Sculpture Studios at the time, and so was involved in the set-up of this installation. The trailer has also been used "to screen films, as a DJ booth (as here), as part of the impromptu, socially engaged part of her practice. The Temple will be used for several events throughout the course of the exhibition."




Upstairs, the work took a slightly different slant. Through my knowledge of Donachie's work, I was aware that she has being investigating myotonic dystrophy, an inherited muscular degenerative disorder that affects several members of Donachie’s family, but not the artist herself. "In the video, Pose Work for Sisters (2016), shown upstairs, Donachie and her sister, Susan, pose before the camera in homage to Bruce McLean’s Pose Work for Plinths (1971). The sisters interact with the props in different ways, striking complementary poses that require various amounts of flexibility, balance and strength. Though the family resemblance can be seen, a disparity in the physical capabilities of the women becomes apparent."

The monitor showing Pose Work for Sisters (2016) is placed upon In the End Times (2017), a steel ramped platform that has been powder-coated dark grey. This non-slip surface is often used for stairs, walkways and ramps, and for the floors of trucks, trailers and ferries.

 
In the End Times (2017) has the appearance of an item of 'urban furniture', as do other works such as Walk With Me (2017), a green line of aluminium tubing that cuts through the gallery and acts as a drawing in space. 





The large drawings of lampposts and CCTV cameras on poles belong to Glimmer (2013–), an ongoing series. In the context of the other work, I became aware of the fragility of the structures, how they lean and can take on quite human-like stances.

 

It was fascinating to see such a range of new and old work made by Donachie. I enjoyed the more sculptural, material-focused aspects of her work alongside the more socially engaged event-based part of her practice. At the root of all the work there is an underlying interest in how individuals exist in the world, things that unite us, and things that distance us from others. There is a sense of trying to find a way of existing within society.










Wednesday, 23 November 2016

No Niceties contributing artist - Rosie O'Grady

Rosie O'Grady's contribution to the No Niceties exhibition was a short video titled Job Seeker. 


Rosie O’Grady lives and works in Glasgow, Scotland. She graduated from Glasgow School of Art and University of Glasgow with an MLitt Curatorial Practice (Contemporary Art) in 2015, and from Glasgow School of Art with a BA(Hons) Fine Art (Painting & Printmaking) in 2013. O'Grady was selected for a Graduate Residency at Hospitalfield (2015) and was awarded a special commendation as a Finalist in Saatchi’s New Sensations (2013). She was a committee member at Market Gallery between August 2014 - August 2016 and recently worked as Programme Coordinator at Glasgow Sculpture Studios.



"The video Job seeker responds to the biographical snapshots and colourful designs of Helen Shaddock's publication A lot can happen in fifteen minutes. Advertised job titles flash in succession over footage of rock pools, fluorescent buoys, and seaweed-clad boats. These coastal scenes operate like stock imagery of a beach holiday, although the hand-held camera, white skies and water surface – unsettled by high winds – bely a reality altogether less glossy and tropical."



"The role titles for jobs in various fields and industries briefly become suggested narratives, characters or extracted insights into a range of daily experiences."



"The accounts of simultaneous anxiety and absurdity within Shaddock's publication are mimicked in the video through the pace at which it offers a diverse selection of career paths to an accompanying soundtrack of song introductions relating to freedom, the weekend and a reluctance to work nine 'til five."



For more information about Rosie O'Grady's work, please visit her website: www.rosieogrady.co.uk (currently under maintenance)

Wednesday, 8 April 2015

Wild Oban by Sofija Sutton and Katie Wright

Delving into the faerie-seeped waters of Oban, Scotland to reveal the secrets of the mysterious basking shark.




"Wild Oban" combines travel, exploration, nature, folklore, and the production of a short narrative movie. Katie Wright and Sofija Sutton aim to create a film uniting local folklore elements with the real-life mystery of the elusive basking shark.

Find out more and support their project by clicking on the link below

http://kck.st/1CWzaxe

Friday, 18 July 2014

The Make Works Directory is live!

Make Works is an independent design company that facilitates, celebrates and debates design, craftsmanship and manufacture. They are interested in materials, machines and digital technology. 
Their mission is to make it easier for creative professionals to work with industry and produce high quality work locally. To do this they are opening up access to Scottish suppliers, trades and manufacturing in ways that are useful, informative and inspiring. The first of these is the Make Works Directory - a digital service that makes sourcing factories, fabricators, workshops and facilities simple. 

What a genius idea!

Browsing the directory is simple, partly due to the different subgroups that have been created to enable you to narrow your search, for example, by location or by material.


The site also consists of production guides which provide information about the way materials can be used.


There are a few case studies, and some articles about specific Scottish businesses.

Saturday, 10 May 2014

SAU invites you to a Scottish Independence Discussion Forum




SAU presents "A Scottish Independence Forum" in conjunction with Stereo's Living Room: Exploring the Referendum."

With representatives from both sides of the debate, this is an opportunity for SAU members to ask questions about the upcoming Independence Referendum and how it could affect the arts in Scotland.

6-7.30pm Wednesday 25th June 2014, at Stereo bar/cafe, 22-28 Renfield Lane, Glasgow, G2 5AR

All welcome!
www.stereocafebar.com

More details to follow...

Wednesday, 25 September 2013

Changin Scotland - Scotland’s alternative festival of ideas, culture and politics

This event sounds very interesting...

Changin Scotland

Scotland’s alternative festival of ideas, culture and politics

Friday 1st November - Sunday 3rd November 2013 

    Newbattle Abbey College, by Dalkeith

This November Gerry Hassan and Jean Urquhart are at Newbattle Abbey College just South of Edinburgh for a weekend on how to do social change, activism and campaigning in a different way!

This weekend will be a departure in feel, style and setting – and is facilitated and led by Stephen Duncombe and Steve Lambert of the Centre for Artistic Activism who are based at New York University.

This will be a participatory weekend bringing together community politics with cultural and civic engagement. It will look at how to be a creative kind of activist, build alliances, and beyond tactics and strategy, start to envision a different kind of politics and world!

We cannot promise to change the world in a single weekend but we can make a start! The weekend will address how cultural activists and practitioners can develop a better political intelligence, and political campaigners nurture a more informed cultural awareness, and the two influence and cross-fertilise each other.

This weekend will be stimulating, demanding and challenging, enjoyable and fun. We ask that people come rested, open minded and willing to collaborate with others.

Weekend Details:
The weekend runs from Friday 1st starting with a meal at 6.30pm, all day Saturday and Sunday concluding 4.00pm. Extra attractions include an intimate gig with acclaimed folksinger Karine Polwart on Saturday night.

Tickets for the weekend are £60 (accommodation and food extra). Please contact for booking: Newbattle Abbey College Reception: 0131 6631921.

What previous participants say about the Centre for Artistic Activism:
‘It’s magical. Recalibrating reality.’ ‘It made me rethink my politics and challenge people who say, “I am not political”’. ‘Culture is everywhere. We all do it and this helped me embrace how to do a more creative politics’.

What they say about Changin Scotland: ‘The alternative Davos’ National Collective

We have a limited number of places so book early!
Next Changin Scotland dates: March 28-30 at The Ceilidh Place, Ullapool

Thursday, 8 August 2013

Rosie Roberts, Director of 2|1|4|1, a new artist led collective

This afternoon I met with Rosie Roberts, Artist and Director of a new artist led collective called 2|1|4|1.



2|1|4|1 is an Artist Led Collective based in Scotland, established in May 2013 by director Rosie Roberts alongside founders Frances Lightbound and Kirsty Macleod. There are also 11 Key Members: Alexander Millar | Cat Meighan | Nick Thomas | Lauren Mclaughin | Jack Farrell | Joanna Peace | Sam De Santis | Silja Strøm | Kenneth Davidson | Rachel Gallacher.

Together they form the structure that hopes to encourage

COMMUNICATION | COLLABORATION | CONTRIBUTION

amongst emerging artists in Scotland.

2|1|4|1 MANIFESTO

2|1|4|1 is a brand new artist led collective responding to the need for artists in the youth of their career to be able to interact with their peers on a wider scale than is available at present.



2|1|4|1 wishes to create the space for a community to correspond, collaborate and contribute online, through events and opportunities enabled by the infrastructure of the collective. We aim to break down walls surrounding the mysterious timescale between graduation and a sustained professional career, that can often seem like an endless cloudy abyss we are all walking through - together, but alone. Accessibility and a critical commitment to making and showing contemporary works are at the heart of the collective’s ethos.



2|1|4|1 is overseen by three Founders and a core group of six to twelve Members who will contribute key skills to the successful and efficient running of the collective and its content.



2|1|4|1 is an open forum that will initially manifest itself in an active Internet presence. The content of this will be relevant critical writing, feature pieces, reviews, news on upcoming shows and opportunities, enabling 100% accessibility at all times.

UPCOMING EVENT

The first ever 

2|1|4|1 Annual Members Show will be held at the Main Gallery Space in Glasgow's SWG3!

Opening Thursday 5th September
After party in The Poetry Club with special guest DJ's
Show available to view Friday 6th 10-10
Saturday 7th 10-10 plus special events/performances/artist talks in The Poetry Club
last viewing day Sunday 8th 10-5 !

CONTACT

General Enquiries : contact.2141@gmail.com
Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/twooneforone
Twitter : @collective2141 https://twitter.com/collective2141
Website : www.2-1-4-1.com