The last couple of days has been about adding and subtracting, a constant changing narrative. Links made and unmade. Enjoying working instinctively rather than having some sort of pre-justification. Have been doing a lot of visual research and running, giving my mind time to wander. The pile of chalk, which was my last act of today, links several of the pieces giving a circularity to the overall installation.
Long after the day has gone, there is light. It has been a tough week for the residency but, hopefully, I am in a new phase. Am also managing some studio practice as well. The determination that the residency should not be an extension of my normal (what is normal?) studio work has created a few complications. Think now that they can run side by side, not parallel but as linked areas of practice. Should I have posted at the lowest point of the week? Well, probably but….
Just another day! The gallery is beginning to like something is happening. The slow process of building an installation in response to the space and its environs takes place not just when you are there but when you aren’t there. Relating to everyday occurrences, emotions, meetings, there are nuances that are not seen as well as the overt. It is good to take time as well as space.
Dark space has a special quality to it, velvety and warm. Beginning my first collaboration, we used this quality to experiment with sound using materials that were lying around. Underpinned by someone’s clock ticking, by the buzz of the fridge and by the creaks and groans that were created in the old building by the wind, there appeared endless possibilities.
Beginning to engage with the space, creating an ongoing dialogue rather than just putting or building separate pieces of work in it. This is an important step forward and contributes also to my research into the nature of exhibition space as well as to the site-specific.
I have been very much occupied with a particular corner, where one side of the gallery meets what is almost a very wide corridor that also serves as an entrance. The fact that much of the space cannot be seen on entering and shadows are continually created and changing throughout the day lends itself to a continuing discourse.