0 Comments

Alice interviews Bob

AB: DIY in art practice means different things to different people. How do you define the term?

BM: It is a label and I instinctively dislike labels. I think for some people it is a genuine calling, a real belief that making art on your own terms is good, that selling it or even having it seen by a lot of people really doesn’t matter. Doing it is the important thing. In that sense it is closely tied to another label ‘Outsider Art’. But, a lot of young designers and illustrators seem to jump on the ‘DIY’ bandwagon, adopt a ‘rough’ style or fabricate the look of work in order to have some of that supposed ‘kudos’ that goes with being poor or from outside of the mainstream art education system. I hate that. They’re the first to sell it to a tee-shirt company. They think they’re poor because they can barely keep up with their credit card repayments for weighty arty purchases. They take all the honesty out of true DIY art.

AB: How do you distinguish between your roles as artist and curator?

BM: When I’m an artist, another label I dislike, I’m making work. Or having an idea for some work. Curating is arranging stuff from other people in a space, hoping that it shows their work in the best way and doesn’t expose you as a cock. I see both as very immediate and visual but backed up with a solid amount of knowledge and thought. Being involved in curation doesn’t leave you with a good opinion of other artists. I don’t think it is a case of two different roles; when I’m curating I’m working for someone else, often people I’ve never met.

AB: What was your first art collaboration?

BM: I’m not sure when I became an ‘artist’ and that makes it hard to pinpoint my first collaboration. I think I’ve always had the art thing going on but never had to attach a label or any significance to it until I entered the art education system. So, that would make it my foundation course, back in 1990; I started the ‘Museum Dedicated to the Enhancement of Green and Red’ and invited other students to contribute work that was red or green or red and green. I have a book of photographs of the best contributions.

AB: What do you think the main advantages and pitfalls of DIY practice can be?

BM: There is no pitfall to following your desire to make work. Ego is the biggest problem. The only advantage is if people believe your bullshit and start paying you to be a ‘bit of rough’.

AB: Artists’ opinions of public arts funding can often be complex and seemingly contradictory. What’s your stance on the subject?

BM: It is more of an unfortunate gait. Erm, fund the big things that benefit lots of people, especially those who are not ‘artists’, like galleries and museums but do not give money to individual artists. If you can’t afford your project, don’t do it. Don’t ask for money. Work within your means. Sell stuff. Get a proper job. If it needs £5000 to realise your ‘vision’ it is probably a short-sighted one. Go to Specsavers. Either that or make ‘being an artist’ a state funded occupation.

AB: We both live in West Yorkshire and are prolific in the region as well as working nationally and internationally. Do you think West Yorkshire is home to any particular approach, commonalities and/or abundance of DIY practice?

BM: Nah, not really. We’re Northern, so better that most people. And funnier. And sexier.

AB: And finally, the obligatory plugs. What else are you currently working on?

BM: http://aliceandbobcurate.wordpress.com/ And, I am trying to bring contemporary art to Knaresborough. And I am hoping that I will be making some decent paintings in the next six months.


0 Comments

Bob interviews Alice

BM: Does ‘art’ matter?

AB: Yes. And it shouldn’t be a luxury for the privileged, it should be for everyone.

BM: People like labels and especially in the ‘art world’, for example, nonsense such as ‘emerging artist’. I was once called a ‘DIY’ artist and I winced. I can’t seem to find the right label for you, can you suggest what it would be and what wider context you see your work in?

AB:The labeling and classification thing is really problematic. “Artist” is often not specific enough and artist/curator is another set of problems. “Artist” can cover such a wide range of disciplines, so I tend towards describing what I do in processes, and that I work with everyday objects and materials. I sometimes say I have an object-based practice, although it’s probably more encompassing to say my work deals with the everyday or the commonplace. In describing my practice to other people, they’ve sometimes said I’m a cross-disciplinary artist, which is probably true enough, but I tend to think most artists are, and that label is no more helpful than “artist.”

BM: All embracing terms like ‘DIY’ can be useful, so what does it mean to you?

AB: Wikipedia’s definition of DIY (generic) is interesting; “people creating things for themselves without the aid of paid professionals.” There’s a whole essay in that definition applied to art, or perhaps two! I think it’s an attitude towards making things happen with an immediacy and autonomy whether that’s individual or collective autonomy.

BM: Collaboration with other artists and curators on projects appears to be a crucial part of your practice. How did this develop and does it raise any issues that are particular to collaboration?

AB: I’ve found that I always curate collaboratively and it’s a conversational process. I’m co-founding member of Contents May Vary which was formed by Manchester Metropolitan University Fine Art Sculpture students who had some common ideas about art. Working collaboratively on exhibitions started there and further on I’ve met other artists with similar ideas to me and we’ve collaborated on shows. Collaborating with different people becomes different processes and results and I’m interested in exploring ideas through these processes. There’s also problems inherent in collaboration such as ownership and ego. At best it’s when people’s ideas converge and the whole becomes something greater than the sum of it’s parts.

BM: I know one artist who will only ever show a piece of work three times. Do you have any self-imposed tricks or rules that keep the creative cogs whirring?

AB: For me, it’s about making time for thinking and making, so not keeping too busy with the rest of the stuff surrounding practice like emails and applications and meetings and websites, and even research which is an important part of practice but is not making things. Going to exhibitions, conferences and lectures and reading is important to me and keeps cogs whirring, so it’s not all about productivity. The studio is often the best place for productivity but I also really like train journeys for that fixed time and space for doing nothing but thinking, reading, writing or drawing.

BM: If you had to select one image or one piece of work to feature on the cover of a book of your work, a DIY production or otherwise, what would it be?

AB: Some Blah Blah Blah work filling the cover.


0 Comments

Bob and I have interviewed each other for Jean McEwan’s new zine for New Work Yorkshire: I Stood Up And I Said Yeah Issue 1: DIY which launched yesterday, Friday 6th May at the Compass Live Art event at Bloc Projects, Sheffield.

I Stood Up And I Said Yeah Issue 1 is a multi-format loose leaf zine with accompanying CD, presenting an eclectic variety of reflective, critical, satirical, oblique, irreverent and personal responses to the theme of DIY, including interviews, performative writing video documentation, reviews, audio, photography, personal reflection and drawing from:

Alice Bradshaw and Bob Milner
Rachel Lois Clapham
Brian Gilson
Tim Ineaux
Sohail Khan
Nick Kilby
Dave Lynch
Milk Two Sugars
Christopher Mollon
popup
Jez Riley Smith
Sarah Spanton
Douglas Thompson
Nathan Walker

It’s published in a limited edition of 100 and viewable online here: http://issuu.com/istoodupandisaidyeah/docs/istoodu…


0 Comments

Matthew Smith

Matthew Smith makes projects in sculpture, drawing, photography and video, which deal with fictionalised and idealised representations of nature and place.

His work explores human kind’s relationship to and philosophical distance from the natural world, rejecting the idea of one all encompassing original ‘nature’ in favour of infinite interpretations, copies and inventions of the natural. We value nature for its health and integrity over the artificial works of man, seeing it as real or authentic. It is though a human construct who’s meaning is not fixed and permanent but is created, altered and re-imagined again and again by successive generations to many different ends. His practice reveals and navigates a way through these myriad natures.

http://www.matthewjsmith.co.uk

Kathy Toth

My recent work has been inspired by Einstein’s ideas on General Relativity which I have gathered information on from Leonard Susskind’s lectures at Stanford university (available through youtube).

Train is a representation based on Einstein’s example on how all movement is relative. A passenger in a train due to set off from a platform is looking out the window of the train. The passenger will not be able to tell whether it is he/she starting to move or another train next to him/her.

The piece is a drawing animation consisting of a handmade charcoal drawing that has been photographed. Each frame has been photographed and then rubbed out, the next frame has then been drawn on top of the previous frame. The result is a drawing where all moving objects leave traces behind them. I have chosen to propose my piece Train in particular for the exhibition because it illustrates movement and travelling, two concepts which are often associated with temporality.

http://www.kathytoth.co.uk/

Steve White

White’s wall drawings and writings in ink on the walls of the gallery depict his everyday experiences, thoughts and feelings. Subjects range from news stories to ‘what’s for tea?’ and animal displacement theory consisting of animals in human situations with technology, laws and regulations enforced upon them which they find difficult to deal with in daily life. White’s style is graphic and illustrative executed with urgency, passion and commitment.

‘I was told when I was younger that I could be anything I wanted to be. A fireman, policeman, even president it seemed. But like many kids growing up on a steady diet of wild west films; I wanted to be the loan cowboy roaming the west and fighting evil and corruption wherever I found it. And in my heart of hearts I still follow the remnants of that dream, wherever I go, into the setting sun.’ – Bill Hicks

White is a fine artist, author, poet, and curator, with a large body of work in various galleries, city walls, retail outlets, and filing cabinets not to mention cupboards in his studio.

http://www.idrinkcoffeeandraw.moonfruit.com/


0 Comments

Milk, Two Sugars

Society is in a mess. Enjoy your fickle pursuits whilst you can. Nothing goes on forever. We are all dust. We ought to get the maximum thrill from everything we do because one day and not as far away as you’d like to think, you won’t even want to get out of bed, let alone leave the house. Until then, what could be more exhilarating than looking at a book and then eating it? Two of life’s great comforts combined. Outstanding! Visual stimulation followed by oral pleasure. Life is good.

www.milktwosugars.org
www.wordpress.com/bobmilner
[email protected]

Susan Mortimer

The photographs that make up this piece were taken over 3 day’s visits to Westgate Studios during February and March 2011.

The aim of the project was to document the Westgate Studio building. During the process keeping in mind the role of many empty buildings which are currently being used in a similar way: empty shops and offices used for arts and community projects, buildings which otherwise would remain empty and disintegrating.

http://www.susanmortimer.com/

Music For Installations

Music For Installations has always been observing the soundworld of daily live, whether it is out in the outback or in the center of downtown.

“The first things I remember are sounds. When I listen to people I don’t hear words but melodies. When I stand in a room, I enjoy the way the music makes her way in the empty space around me.”

It is this collision of vibrations that meet each other. They lead into soundscapes and drones which can be used in empty spaces, dark rooms, or to accompany installations. It’s an impression sent out to catch a listeners ear. He/she can only experience and reflect on what he felt or saw.

http://www.musicforinstallations.com/

Georgie Park

Georgie Park is interested in the commitment that the process of acquiring skill demands and often take direction from properties and ideologies of production in traditional craft; the narrative (or reality) of the “master” that continually coaxes material in order to gain experiential knowledge of substance.

http://georgiepark.co.uk/


0 Comments