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Viewing single post of blog University Campus Suffolk

I’ve been experimenting with the 6ix Souls Drowning splash video in he last week or two. I’ve shortened the original footage considerably, and will now present a short, loud splash on the water screen.

I now (thankfully) have what is known as ‘The Black Space’ to use for my degree show. It’s a totally black installation space, and is (alongside the rather obviously white ‘White Space’) the main reason why I wanted to attend University Campus Suffolk; that, and living nearby …

Showing the water screen in the Black Space gives me the opportunity to create apprehension, anxiety… dread even. Subtly, of course. My film will be made up of 4 very short bursts of bright video (drowning//fading/crashing/burning) interspersed with irregular periods of complete darkness.

I have 8 static artworks to accompany the films, which are vital to the whole. 4 paintings that represent the last few seconds of 4 people. 4 shelves/assemblages that represent their lives and aftermath of their deaths.

It has been suggested to me that I could display some of this static artwork in the Black Space itself (rather than the two not perfect wall spaces outside the entrance, where I probably will). One reason for not putting them in there would be that they might be impossible to see. Now I’m a great believer in being conceptual, and if it works I’ll certainly go for it; but only if it works …

The other reason for not putting them in there is that I had always planned the piece to include static artworks representing memorials, to view before the spectator enters the darkness to see what lies within. It’s a narrative. Strip that back and the narrative is diminished. I must be careful about that. Picasso was right about standing your ground on issues of creative decision-making.

I hope that people will see that the result works – and if they don’t … ah well … that’s what being an artist is all about. I don’t particularly like or ‘get’ a lot of art by others in the rather artificially created ‘art world’ – and I accept that people won’t always ‘get’ what I do. I’ll still do it though. They keep doing theirs after all … and rightly so. Art is for all – not just for a few who tell us what to like. Those ‘thought police’ are not for me.

If you apply it to music – it’s akin to someone not liking the same music as you. Nothing to be devastated by – you’re just different. I wouldn’t tell a musician to play their music ‘more like wot I like’ …


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