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It’s horrible. The vinyl lettering still hasn’t arrived. I’m going to have to re-order it first thing tomorrow and have it couriered to Edinburgh for the following day.

Still, I think I might amend the lettering. I want to add the title for “Making Ends Meet”, in which two people whistle to one another one note at a time, so neither has control of the tune. It ends up as a strangely sincere and inscrutable conversation, and I want to see how it works between strangers.

I’d like to trial the project at the Edinburgh show with a view to restaging it at a museum I met with on Friday.. more on that another day.

For now, the whole exhibition is packaged into a single suitcase (not sure where my clothes are going to go) and barring the vinyl it’s all ready to hang.

ps. it’s amazing how long I can spend formatting and reformatting an exhibition layout when it isn’t even on my URGENT list. It’s on my OK IF YOU MUST list. The things on that list seem more fun, even if it’s just because they’re non-urgent.


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The shelves are all painted and dry, lined up on the studio floor ready to package for Edinburgh. LOOK AT ME calling it “the studio”. There’s no furniture in here yet except for a little desk by the window, so the floor’s available for making a mess. Perhaps I should keep it like this. Only three posts ago I was writing about how I tend to set up designated art-making spaces only to work elsewhere, but now I’m making three-dimensional things again it’s more practical to keep everything in one contained room. A STUDIO.

Here’s a photo of the STUDIO floor.

And here are a couple of the trials I’ve been doing for the shelves. I’d been planning to make all the shelf poems in advance and bring them up ready to install. But they’ll get scrunched up in the suitcase and all the smooth lines will be crimped and might need replacing. So I think it makes more sense to bring the equipment and make the poems on site, even if the install takes longer. Site writing.

It means there’s less of a rush today too, which is a relief. There’s a lot of paperwork accumulating.


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GOOD: first coat finished.

BAD: still in pyjamas.


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Ahem. Turned out I didn’t get the illustrator file right after all. Had to resend it.

Today was B&Q and blisters from the drill. We’ve made 28 shelves, all fairly small and some excessively so (deeper than they are wide). I’m back home now with the shelves laid out on the floor dejectedly. There’s still so much to do. Tomorrow I’m going to paint them all white, then add the black edge. The vinyl lettering should (i.e. has to) arrive tomorrow, and I also hope to solve the mystery of how to stick 14 light bulbs to 14 glass bottle-stops. I’m thinking about sellotaping them, and making the join and the handiwork of it very visible. I’m suspicious of invisible joins.

I’ve had to find myself a bigger suitcase. The whole exhibition is coming on the train with me to Edinburgh, and I’ve just found out I’ll be stopping off for two nights in Manchester on the way. More about that another day…

I think I’ve gone slow because there’s too much to do. Sometimes when there’s too much to do I go FAST. Tonight it’s SLOW.


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Just helped a fly escape from the window. We were both having a miserable time with him thwacking himself against the glass. The first time I got him to fly out he bounced off the air and back into the room again. Silly. Eventually he got quite dozy and sat himself down on my hand, which helped.

Before that, I’d finally finished ordering the vinyl lettering for the Edinburgh show. I’m very bad with Adobe Illustrator so it took a long, long time to do something so simple it turned out could be done in one click. ONE CLICK!

Despite the fly and the click I’m excited to see how the show comes together: I’m putting together elements taken from several years of work, and I haven’t seen these connections among them before. All the work’s new, but the ideas have been here a while in various forms. The exhibition is called “THESE ARE NOT POEMS:” a three-day solo show during the evolving two-week I AM NOT A POET exhibition at TotalKunst Gallery, “a festival exploring connections of language, writing and art practice.”

On the walls I’m putting five installations I’m calling “shelf poems”; another poem made of plasticine suspended on nylon thread; and a couple of drawings in frames. There will be a screening or performance evening for the work of myself and other practitioners with related concerns, and possibly a discussion event. Not sure yet. There’s a lot to prepare, and not long to install what’s becoming fairly complicated show, but there remains a week to sort out all the details.

These shelf poems I’m preparing are made or found or assembled objects arranged on shelves. I’m making a visual parallel between the shelves and the lines on paper, which creates an invitation to read the objects left-to-right and head-to-foot like words on a page, and maybe look for rhymes or correspondences or narratives. I’ll post photos when they’re installed, but for now here’s an image of the vinyl lettering I’m going to cut up and stick around the room. These are the titles of the poems, together with a few spare shelf/lines for one of them. The titles will sit above the poems like a top shelf, with the black underscores exactly the same thickness as each wooden shelf’s black-painted edge. Not as complicated as it sounds, once you have all the stuff in front of you.

My very first solo exhibition (in a minute Bristol gallery in 2007) included a set of small paper models I’d made, the paper folded almost concertina-like but glued into thin horizontal shelves. On some of the models there was writing on each line, on some there were unintelligible scribbles in ink, on some there were tangles of black thread bunched against the paper and sometimes, like the ascenders and descenders of letters, threaded right through the shelves to appear in the space below or above the line. I was too hair-brained to take proper pictures back then, they’re lost forever. (Are you meant to write hair-brained, like your brain is full of hairballs, or hare-brained, like you have the brain of a hare? I’ll leave that open, either’s fine.)

Similar word-like scribbles turned up earlier this year in my commission for the London Word Festival, in my BSL/Scuplture performance “Doing Words with Things.” I produced handfuls of wire sculpture in collaboration with Alex Nowak a young Deaf actor, who signed simultaneous descriptions of my actions so that our gestures mirrored one another as we went on. Videos on another a-n blog here:

www.a-n.co.uk/p/1054772

You can see the wire turning up again, scribbles instead of conversation.

And another shelf poem comprises some of the cups and kitchen implements I showed on Princelet St in a joint exhibition called “Citations Lifted Loose” with Valerie Jolly in 2008. There are lots of pictures here – I’ll attach one to this post too:

www.a-n.co.uk/media//

I was working much more with assembled found objects back then, and I’m glad to return to this more tactile quality of my work. It feels a world away from the work I do at the moment, which has become more pared down and abstracted. The Goldsmiths effect..?


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