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Ten years on

The other day I received an email from Glasgow School of Art asking alumni who had graduated ten years ago what they were doing now.

It stopped me in my tracks. Was it really ten years since I graduated?

During the past ten years there have been immense changes in the way the world operates thanks to digitisation of our cultural landscape and the globalisation of our economy, (and of course 9/11.)

How has this impacted on artists and on a personal level, my own practise?

Well to start with I use electronic devices and software (iphone an ipad) that were not even invented then and often distribute work through social networking sites like Youtube, Flickr, Facebook and Blipfoto.

None of this existed ten years ago.

The other evening at a gallery opening of Sue Grierson and Belinda Gilbert in the Changing Room, Stirling we discussed the impact of new technologies on artistic practises for Sue, a graduate of the GSA MFA programme, also works with new technologies.

She reckoned that the next ten years would see even bigger changes.

OMG!

Meanwhile I am about to suss out iCloud.

Does this mean that all my external hard drives are obsolete?

In the “real world” as opposed to the virtual world we had on Saturday the first ever Bridge of Allan Contemporary Arts and Craft event.

It was phenomenally successful, even the organisers were taken by surprise.

Far from the “virtual world” supplanting the real world it simply seems to fire up more enthusiasm for the arts, particularly crafts, by unleashing pent-up creativity in the community.

Three people working on email pulled this event together at short notice.

They built on the work of Forth Valley Open Studios and many people are now talking about an artistic “tipping point” having been reached with Bridge of Allan and Stirling becoming another focus for the arts in Scotland, a focus long shared by Glasgow and Edinburgh.

In fact two years ago, before Forth Valley Open Studios, the central belt of Scotland was considered an artistic wilderness.

But the next ten years could be radically different for all the arts throughout the UK as we face an uncertain future as the full force of cutbacks in arts education and budgets are felt.

I for one could not have afforded to go to Glasgow School of Art as a mature student. The fees are now £27,000 and I would not have been eligible for a student loan.


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Back from Morocco .

I am now a blip photo convert –www.blipfoto.com/Libra- and getting a pic up each day proved a challenge from my iphone in North Africa.

Despite all the very clear instructions they sent me from the site for uploading I failed to do so.

So I asked the IT guy in the Riad where we were staying, in the heart of the Medina in Marrakech, and he not only loaned me a card reader but the use of their computer too!

Morocco has a well-deserved international reputation for beautiful craftwork and I bought a genuine old Berber artefact. Except nobody, not even the Berber up in the Atlas mountains from whom I purchased it had any idea what it was once used for.

PS On my return I found the cause of my failure to upload pix – the confirmation email from the blipfoto site, an essential part of the uploading process had gone into junk mail. And I had not checked.

Ouch!


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In memori – Steve Jobs

He changed the way we live.

His motto was:” Stay hungry, stay foolish”.

The blogosphere is teeming with tributes to him.

This is mine on blipfoto.



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I used to work on The Herald newspaper in Glasgow many years ago – before I took redundancy to go to Glasgow School of Art-

I was one of the writers for the Women’s page (OMG! that sounds so sexist…).

Anyway The Herald has now launched a weekly Women’s Herald magazine and I bought my first copy today.

Will I buy it again? …..the jury is out.

Most of my newspaper reading is done online these days. For free.


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Well, we have signed the papers for Forth Valley Open Studios to become a C.I.C – Community interest Company.

This does not give us charity status – which would require us to jump through many more hoops- but it ensures we continue in perpetuity and opens the doors to, we hope, gaining grants and sponsorship.

Spring Fling Open Studios on the Scottish Borders already formed themselves into a C.I.C.some years and we are using them as our role model.

Unlike Spring Fling we have not had any public funding and the only reason we have been able to reach the stage we are at in less than two years is thanks to the internet. So much of the work from gathering a database to registering, design and marketing our Open Studios has been done online.

Another new venture I have become absorbed in is www.blipfoto.com

This Edinburgh based project have created an amazing online global village for photographers.

If you have never visited the site then I would strongly recommend it:

www.blipfoto.com

My work is on www.blipfoto.com/Libra


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