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Planning ahead

Since finishing my MA in Fine Art at Liverpool John Moores University I am trying to plan ahead what projects and opportunities to apply for. I recently started a part-time job at Radleys at the Trafford centre for some regular money and to simply work in the ‘real’ world, which gives me balance in my life. I had really underestimated how working sporadically on arts education projects was stressing me out not being able to manage my finances from one month to the next, although now I feel I have a bit more control over the books. I enjoy the retail experience and find it fascinating watching and interacting with the customer and the product, which I see as a kind of dance/performance. I didn’t get selected for Hazard this year, which I was bit disappointed about although I was aware that the work I proposed didn’t exactly fit the theme of the event. I have just submitted an application for a three week residency at The Royal Standard in Liverpool which I am really excited about as it will offer the time, space and support to develop a project which I specifically want to realise in Liverpool. Fingers crossed for this one if you are interested in applying follow the link below:

http://www.the-royal-standard.com/events/

I had a meeting with Phil Davenport last week to discuss ideas for our two-week residency at The Chinese Arts Centre in November, 2010. Phil had also participated in the residency at the 501 Artspace in Chongqing and this opportunity is a chance for us both to develop some new work in response to our experience of working in China. We discussed two ideas the first was to have a loose theme called ‘Translation’ and we would individually make work and collaborate on a piece together. Our second idea was to collaborate on one piece a tour of the gallery that incorporates references to money and food, which were the two main influences on us from the trip. The gallery is an unusual space that houses a living and bedroom area, which is built into the gallery and is accessible by a ladder. There is a door in the opposing wall, which opens into an oddly shaped small storeroom. The gallery has another entrance from the street a door made of glass allowing a window into the gallery space.

Although my residency finished in February at the 501 Artspace I am still feeling the influence and inspiration the trip has had on my work, which I want to continue to document until it comes to a natural end.


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Departures

Airports represent the ultimate non-place, a space where temporarily nobody knows me and I know no one else. The airport architecturally and psychologically offers a release from the daily routine entering into a streamline of time and space, with the function of simply getting you from one place to the next. In my final piece I have combined using a live art presence with video and the context has been inspired by film footage I shot of a plane being prepared for take off at Hong Kong airport; which I see ­­­­­­­as a visual metaphor for my underlying anxiety of being an artist, portraying feelings of not making it, not taking off, and never reaching my destination. I have used the video as the framework for my performance and experimented with editing the material playing with the speed, duration and sequencing of the time line. I have explored actions that are influenced by the video which compliment and disrupt the image. It is my intention to disturb the unfolding of time and to involve the audience dissolving the fourth wall and bringing people directly into the work.

I have used the Cuban song ‘Guantanamera’ in my performance, which played when I was filming at Hong Kong airport although I was unaware of the songs origins although I assumed it maybe Mexican, Spanish or Cuban. The lyrics to the song have different interpretations. However, I am interested in how the words in the chorus are referred to as ‘guajira’ (the Cuban rhythm) a rhythmic structure rather than the words being a literal translation of something. Whilst researching the song I found many versions, even a cover performed by the 1960’s Liverpool band, Jerry & the Pacemakers. I have used ‘Guantanamera’ as it is a cheerful song which reminds me of summer holidays, it is also a trace material from my experience of going to China. In my final MA asessment piece I want to take the audience on a journey, yet leave them with a sense of never being taken anywhere.

Video documentation of performance:

www.youtube.com/watch?v=bj0yBcJOgLA

Departures performance script

Departure Lounge

People sitting in seats/standing

I come out of door

Place CD player on table

Press play

Start dance with back turned to the audience

Turn and dance singing Guantanamera into fake banana

Get on knees

Close eyes and wink

During music break put leis’s around people’s necks

Continue singing and dancing

Finish with back turned to audience

Stop CD

Turn direct people into the room with plastic bananas

Entering room

I lead people into room

Direct people to seats using bananas

Shut electronic blinds

Play video

I stand behind the audience

Video fades out

I leave the room

Video whites out playing Guantanamera


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A Wandering Practice

As my work is site and context specific I like to quickly engage with people and place by creating verbal and visual dialogues to start the process. To experience a place I simply move through a space by walking, observing and feeling my surroundings. I gather visual material by recording sound, taking digital images and video to accumulate research about a new environment. This way of working could be interpreted as a Wandering Practice, which is open to arriving with little or no expectations, the possibility of getting lost, or finding out something I didn’t already know. This way of working has been difficult for me to communicate as it is only now that I am realising how significant ‘wandering’ is in my work. To physically move I have to let go of pre-determined outcomes, forced to feel my way in a new environment and to experience what is right in front of me.

My practice has greatly benefited from moving around the country and travelling abroad which has taught me how cultural differences and alternative readings of work is a good thing this has made me feel more confident about the work I made in China, were I made solo performance pieces, collaborated with artists and culminated in a final performance titled ‘New Arrivals’ at the 501 Artspace. My working method of performing on the street is an unusual practice in China as most work is shown as part of an organised event. In my work I like to encourage some form of physical participation and create a balance of tension and humour which artist Zhou Bin, commented in his interview as ‘being very British, a far softer approach compared to some Chinese Live Art’.

I have disseminated my experience of working in China by presenting my work on the Internet by using video, blogging and social networking sites, which is a new way of working for me and a process that I have continued in my practice. Maintaining a blog allows a space for me to verbally and visually reflect on the work I have made and greatly compliments a wandering practice where the work is temporary in nature.


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Performance & Live Art/Intervention

When I introduce myself as a performance or live artist to people I am always met with assumptions that I must sing, dance or act really well which is not the case although I am becoming more interested in these expectations of ‘performing’ and have been using them in my work. I have become aware the power the presence of the artist can have over an audience in a presentation situation be that in the form of the artist talk or the display of work at an event. Although I am fully versed in the context of why I make my work it does not fill me with much confidence in the build up to my performances. However I use my natural awkwardness and anxiety of performing to create tension, which is very real and not acted out.

Joshua Sofaer questions, what is live art? he goes onto say that ‘at its most fundamental, Live Art is when an artist chooses to make work directly in front of the audience in space and time. So instead of making an object and leaving it for the audience to encounter in their own time, Live Art comes into being at the actual moment of encounter between artist and spectator. The artist sets up a situation in which the audience experiences the work in a particular space and time, and the notion of ‘presence’ is key to the concerns of the work.’ (www.joshuasofaer.com)

With few galleries representing artists and a small circuit of live art platform events I like to take the opportunity to make my work in the public realm. Working in public offers unpredictable situations, which I find exciting and the ideal place to engage accidental audiences. My interventions could be interpreted as political acts although this is not my intention the work is always context and situation specific. My drive is to take ownership of my work so I can take control as to where and how it is shown in public if this is taken as being ‘political’ then so be it. It is important for me to feel free to intervene myself when I like as this is the only act that gives me a true sense of autonomy from the institution and the art market.


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