Our meeting at Aid and Abet was a focused and productive hour, partly benefitting from having the train journey to chew the cud on ideas. Being a show about creative spaces and exchanging them, we’re hopeful that our chosen artist space will take up the first stage of our idea. Satellite’s creative space can be considered the whole, big-sky, vast-feeling East Anglian region, given the geographical spread of Satelliters and the requirement to travel distances within the region to meet, or see ‘art’ (or Art) in its many forms.
We’re excited about the space within our idea for the unexpected, the challenging and the unknown to emerge, as we will have no idea where within the region it may take us, or what physical objects may end up in the gallery space. Perhaps it will be only teeny-tiny things requiring much focus by the viewer, or a couple of large and awkward objects with a somewhat nasty smell. Working with the unknown within the prescribed, but wide, boundaries (and budget) we have set will hopefully encourage playful creativity, improvisation and a dose of adrenalin as we panic.
On the train back to Norwich we finalised the ‘Opt-In’ part of the project that will give the whole group a chance to sell prints within the commercial wing of Aid & Abet, curated by the gallery. The deadline is very tight on this project, with 22nd September the final deadline that any print editions must be ready. There is a heck of a lot to do before then.
Back to Aylsham in the afternoon for a meeting about a new Project Space, this time a physical space rather than Satellite’s virtual and geographical cultural landscape.
Dominique Rey
Ruminating on William Cobbett’s tour and his 1821 Norfolk and Suffolk Journal, here is a portrait of him.
Found a good, informative site when thining about tours of Britain, much to read and digest about hisorical, lierary tours through Norfolk, Suffolk and indeed Liverpool. I’ve only skimmed the surface and will return to this in a later post.
http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk
Here are a few names to start the touring research process – John Leland, George Head, Daniel Defoe and one woman,Celia Fiennes (1662-1741). “Between 1697 and 1698 she visited every English county, plus brief forays into Wales and Scotland.
She believed spending time in Britain “cured the itch of overvaluing foreign parts”. Touring the country was her lifelong obsession, and she did so on horseback – side-saddle, accompanied by two servants.”
Dominique Rey
Dominique and I had our meeting last Thursday. After a general catch up it was down to business and thinking about what we are wanting to be doing and where we want to be going. I was looking at ESP (Extra Special People) http://extraspecialpeople.org and how they offer away days / weekends to their members to visit other groups and places. Without a space of our own why would a group such as ESP choose to visit us?
Dominique hit the nail on the head when she said “we don’t have a physical space but we have a cultural landscape’ and then we explored designing tours we could take people on and what places are important to us here in the East of England. My last post sounded a bit like a Grande Tour of places visited and shows seen.
Anyway the main reason we were meeting was to discuss an invitation from Aid and Abet http://aidandabet.co.uk/ in Cambridge to be part of their next project Space Exchange which opens in the autumn and the ideas of tours and touring became more focused.
Working with Aid and Abet on this project will help us to
a. Do something: tour & talk
b. Present something physical in their project and/or curated selling space
c. Make links and open up relationships with others.
Our conversation was lively over cups of tea and coffee and we have focused on the idea of the tour as our starting point: we both have interests in this area: Dominique with William Cobbett and for me with the Baedecker Guides.
William Cobbett went riding around the country on horseback writing down what he saw from the point of view of both farmer and social reformer in the 1820’s resulting in Rural Rides published in two volumes: http://www.archive.org/details/ruralrides01cobb
The Baedecker Guides have been published since 1832 and are still going strong today, used by foreign tourists visiting the Great Britain (amongst other places) the guides were also used to identify targets for bombing in World War II. Norwich was on the list and subsequently bombed over 2 nights. Cambridge was to be targeted also as were other towns and cities in East Anglia. My primary interest in the guides is the inclusion of industrial sites of interest (to visit and presumably been able to gain access to) and how these would have been of genuine interest at the time.
I spoke with CJ Mahony at Aid and Abet on Friday with our initial thoughts and I have to get it all written into a proposal for next week. I hope our ideas can be developed further in collaboration with another group involved in the project. More to follow as ideas as discussions develop.
Nicola Naismith
I have been circulating with other people, places and spaces on my long overdue trip to other parts of the UK. Being away is always a bit of a busman’s holiday.
A brief stop in Manchester included the Peoples History Museum with great banners by Ed Hall and the Hilary Jack exhibition at Castlefield Gallery also wonderful. Next morning was The Lowry with all its bright colours and wonderful collection of yes you guessed it Lowry paintings and drawings.
Onwards to Dumfries and Galloway and a break to see friends and be at the beach with no art agenda, although most of my friends there are artists.
Back on the busman’s holiday and into Glasgow which is always a real treat. Went to see many spaces and many art works, i know i know its not all about quantity but when in Glasgow i like to immerse myself for a while if i can. Firstly Mary Mary on Dixon Street was showing Alistair Frost and Gerda Scheepers exploring a ‘certain kind of motif making’ which had left me with all sorts of ideas to develop, then onwards to see work British Art Show 7 at the Gallery of Modern Art but it was Kate Davis’ Peace at Last’, response to Glasgow’s Museum Collections with images of Goya and Jo Spence alongside her own works that were of real interest to me. On route to the Modern Institute an empty shop project Gallacher and Warren’s Nothing Fades Quicker than Yesterdays Ideas about Tomorrow exploring ‘fashionable vernaculars of ‘regeneration architecture’ that are played out across many post industrial cities’ www.gallacherandwarren.com . It was a smart looking show with interesting concepts and materials which i really enjoyed. Onwards to the Modern Institute to Urs Fischer & Georg Herold’s situation of a figurative life sculpture class complete with reclining life model. It was a beautiful work to see http://www.themoderninstitute.com/current-and-fort… . Transmission just around the corner next and the members show, featuring some really striking pieces and then last gallery stop of the day was Street Level Photoworks showing Gina Glover’s Playgrounds of War http://streetlevelphotoworks.org/streetlevel/archi… i was particularly interested in the ‘rejuvenating corrosion of nature’ within the work. It has been interesting to reflect on each venue, the way it uses it space and resources. The mission statement being an all important focus for communicating intentions. I’m wondering how the Satellite mission may be evolving.
Next morning the Centre for Contemporary Arts and more of the British Art Show, Wolfgang Tillmans Freischwimmer 155 made without a camera was impressive and Truth Study Centre Tillmans collection of printed materials on subjects of current concern to him made for sometimes very disturbing but entirely necessary viewing. A walk through a sunny Kelvingrove park was a treat as was the Museum with an exhibition by Patricia Cain Drawing (on) Riverside, an extensive and muti-media exhibition of work produced about the construction of the Riverside Museum on the river Clyde http://www.patriciacain.com/index.html . I always find Glasgow so lively with so many types of spaces and people I’m thinking i it would be great to work there both developing my own practice but also doing a Satellite project.
After a further non arts week in Fife, again spending much needed time at the beach, onwards and downwards to Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art to see Richard Forster’s new exhibition Fast and Slow Time. Richard was a speaker at our first Satellite in-conversation event (alongside Susan Collis) at Norwich Arts Centre. We tried to meet up for a cuppa but it wasn’t to be and i had to settle for seeing the exhibition which was awe inspiring, the drawings have to be seen to be believed, go visit… http://www.visitmima.com/exhibitions/currentdetail… .
So…i have been to many spaces and seen many art works and am left reflecting on both my own practice but also what Satellite is and where it could be going. Who might we want to work with and equally who might want to work with us? Which brings me to an offer of possible collaboration with an artist run space. Dominique and i are going to discuss ideas on Thursday so news of that after then.
Nicola Naismith