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Aims for 2015

  • Have a dedicated studio space
  • Build going to lectures and giving talks into year
  • Go out of my area to see art twice a month (book ahead!)

Aims for January

  • Train self to get up at 615am to add an hour to my working day
    (my son used to be at school for 8 hours a day and now it’s 6, so I need to claim some back!)
  • Build momentum in my practice
  • Develop PaperFields exhibition series
  • Send 1st mailchimp email
  • Write Framework Herefordshire timeplan
  • Arrange dates for solo show with Jill at The Print Shed

 

I’ve dashed through summer and autumn since the degree show – carried on a wave of exhibitions to work towards in the autumn and artist residency at The Print Shed and the Meadow Arts graduate award (both continuing through this year).

Towards the end of the year I found myself overtaken by admin tasks and feeling time, rather than task orientated and the tasks I wanted to do just piling up and dividing my time until there was hardly any left to focus.  I now want to keep up the fast pace, but be more discerning with what I take on/choose to do.  I was running and stumbling last year…a bit of stumbling I equate to (momentary) failure, but largely adding to my experience and pushing me on.  In this post-degree time, I feel a lot of two steps-forward, one step back going on, along with well-meaning friends, but especially family making what seem like helpful, yet unhelpful suggestions.  I have a tender surety in the nature of my practice and I am being careful not to expose myself to too much criticism of the unhelpful kind.

The break over Christmas this time was full on and messy.  Last year I worked through Christmas, keeping the momentum going I had built in the autumn term at college, plus the summer was high pressure with the h.Art Young Open Exhibition in Hereford in September and the PaperFields London Exhibition in October.  This all involved huge organisation on my part ( I can do it, but it sets my mind to a different frequency to art making / writing).  Having time at Christmas doing home things, seeing family and friends (last visitor left this Monday afternoon!) and having Christmas day on the Beach provided something that I needed.  Perspective and space.

 

So – my next studio?  This is something I have been trying to figure out for a while.   To rent a studio nearby (Abergavenny) or to save up / apply for funding for a large shed in my back garden?

Having a studio to rent in Abergavenny would be good as studio / home can be more defined then.

Rent would be ongoing

Shed –Studio in garden

High initial cost in time and money to get it.

Could still use it in the evenings while husband working away.

Once it’s up only costs are electricity.

 

Pros and cons for both…feel quite indecisive…added to which my husband is, as of this week, working from home.

Working at home without a shed-studio takes and insane amount of organisation to work (and it can’t work most of the time as the biggest space is right where you step into the cottage!)

I was lucky to get a book called ‘Sanctuary- Britain’s artists and their studios’ recently and am considering carefully what exactly it is that I need.

So – to the title of my post – the first day of practical this year has involved priming a large square piece of canvas on the floor and marking out a grid of squares and then beginning to fill these with tones of grey and burnt sienna. 

Why?  Well, there’s a couple of threads coming together here. 1st the stone writing I did back in March and displayed in my degree show and the paving I saw while visiting the opening of the John Moores Painting Prize in Liverpool in June/July, which involves similar stone colouring to the stones I’ve used from the Gavenny river in Stone Writing.  2nd My writing about chaos/order and art/maths (all the same subject) and which I did a first talk on in November at Hereford College of Arts is making me consider my PaintWrite series in a different way.

My painting has often been the chaotic element in these pairings and the writing the more orderly…so I am trying it the other way around – the painting element applied in order (squares) and the writing being messy (er).  This orderliness in my painting goes against the grain, but I need to see what it does to the work.

One way I am considering my PaintWrite series is by way of an aural equivalent; the Opera, combining the libretto which may or may not be understood and the musical score, which has an abstract nature.

 


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I’m currently looking over my art and projects in photographs on Pinterest: http://uk.pinterest.com/catherinewp/2014-review/

Review of 2014

A year of running before I can walk!

Tangible

Dissertation, being included in two books (Stitched Time, compiled by Clare Smith) and Dwell book by CollectConnect (also shown some of my work on Magnetic street art in Bath with same group in May) plus being interviewed in the a-n degrees show guide.  Becoming the chair of Framework Herefordshire.  I’ve shown work in Manchester at w0budong exhibition, Young Open exhibition (along with helping to run it), PaperFields London (plus co-ordinating it) and showing at The Print Shed at Christmas.  Graduating, getting the Meadow Arts Graduate Award and The Print Shed residency at the degree show.  Talking at the HCA Drawing Symposium in October and to students in November about Art, Maths and my practice (now being developed into Chaos & Order in Art, generally and in relation particularly to my own work).

Internally

Developing practice.
Searching for a studio solution.
Considering and planning own development / path to Masters (Realising need more time for practical than I currently have – no dedicated space I can create mess and find as I leave is part of the problem).
Art/Maths talk development by way of putting it in essay form.
Needing more stimulation – physically being in front of more great art/music/theatre etc.  IN last quarter I’ve not got to many exhibitions due to budget.  Planning to book travel tickets ahead to London to see more.
Developing the PaperFields exhibition into a series – The Courtyard in Hereford late 2015/early 2016 and possibly Hay-on-Wye before that.
Framework Herefordshire organisation – developing my own vision for it and currently applying for funding for website development.  Focussing on 3 main objectives: Website development, Magna Carta project (led by Daisy), the Open exhibition. Other activities to keep going and develop further: peer support meetings (to include learning to mount and frame work at Apple Store Gallery), talking at local college about organisation to promote group and planning the launch event.

The 2 exhibitions I visited this year which stick in my mind are: Matisse – the cut-outs at Tate and The Jerwood Drawing Prize – I saw both of these.  Plus the Mondrian exhibition at Tate Liverpool and at the Turner Contemporary which I missed.

My main practical focus early in 2015 is to gain a studio space – whether that is in my garden or in Abergavenny.  This is especially important as my other half is working from (our very small) home from early January.  Though a garden studio probably makes sense financially – once it’s there, it’s paid for – but I feel I need to be somewhere else for a while.  Have a bit more physical distance between home and my work space.  Having worked at home and at college studio for years, I know I can work at home, but it is not ideal.

2014 has been uncertain and unsettled, but actually very productive until I let admin type tasks get in the way of my practice.  It has been a time of realising though I have
done my BA that was just the time to give me some of the tools I need to develop my own occupation.  A way of preventing admin/screen time being a time-suck is definitely needed.  Practical tasks need to have elevated importance.  After this break during the holidays catching up with family and friends I am very ready to get back to my PaintWrite series, developing Framework, working at The Print Shed (temporary studio space), working with Meadow Arts on publicity and marketing, writing about Chaos/Order Art/Maths and getting into London for more stimulation.   (Particular interest in Fig-2 at the ICA https://www.ica.org.uk/whats-on/seasons/fig-2 where 50 projects are presented over 50 weeks, curated by Fatoş Üstek)


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What I’ve found great in books and films recently along with all-time favourites.

 

The books I’m absorbed and getting a lot out of now are:

 

Sanctuary; Britains artists and their studios edited by Hossein Amirsadeghi – a great tome with questions around where and how UK artists work plus delicious photos.  In was published in 2011.  When I’m working at home so much, trying to get commissioned to mess up a wall somewhere as well as sorting out somewhere more permanent to work, this is a tonic for me!

 

Show your work! by Austin Kleon. A friend bought this for my while in the Tate modern earlier this year – it’s something you read very quickly cover to cover, but I go back to it and open a page randomly for a pick me up.  Plus the cover feels nice, rubbery in a nice velvety way (kinda reminds me of another favourite book ‘The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy’ – there’s something about how the Guide is reassuring, even when its giving you bad news…that’s my memory.. but I found a quote now ‘ it does at least make the reassuring claim, that where it is inaccurate it is at least definitively inaccurate. In cases of major discrepancy it’s always reality that’s got it wrong.’   Thoroughly my kind of humour (I haven’t moved on from being 14 in this way!)

 

As I’m going down the DIY route to trying to get to Masters level without actually doing the course, at least not yet (due to circumstance, not choice) and so I have an overall plan (I probably already said – evolving my practice, attending lectures, giving talks, going to exhibitions, showing work etc ..whatever moves me on). And I felt the need to buy ‘Mastery’ by Robert Greene which has lots of approaches to getting great at anything.  One chapter, for example, is ‘see people as they are: social intelligence’. For me, it has tonnes to learn with and from.

 

I read Nineteen Eighty-four for the first time a few weeks ago, the scenes in it have stuck with me since.

 

More long term, I’ve enjoyed What Painting Is by James Elkins (you can download a few chapters from his website free, plus other writings.

I read Downcast Eyes by Martin Jay as part of my dissertation (‘What is found in reproduction’) reading.  Would like to read it again when not feeling so pushed.

 

In Praise of Shadows very short and thought-provoking.  Makes me think differently about bathrooms..how the Japanese ideally have theirs…

 

Tim Ingol Lines  great, especially for me in thinking about writing… what do walking, weaving, observing, storytelling, singing, drawing and writing all have in common? – they all proceed along lines

 

Bertrand Russell Wisdom of the West I think about this book as linking Maths, Art and philosophy…prob just rose-tinted spectacles as I was especially into Maths at 14, and this opened up the way I think about it all.

 

The best live performance I’ve seen recently was New Rope String Band I think they are based in Newcastle, 3 guys – 2 violists and an accordianist  hilarious, creative, kinda slapstick performance..if they are showing and you get a chance, go and see.


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Paul Westcombe

Wherever he is and whatever is to hand, Paul Westcombe will draw on it!

  • Paul colonises places with his drawings of weird and tortured imagery, with scenes replaying themselves out on and around different surfaces, often starting on everyday paraphernalia more commonly thrown away.
  • Boredom has fuelled his output.
  • His composite drawings were made out of frustration at having to stand for long periods of time, folded up to enable working on a large scale drawing, while being discreet.
  • He tries to make each drawing last as long as possible (limited material to draw on).
  • As his work can take a long time – an exhibition such as at The Jerwood Space (http://www.paulwestcombe.com/installation_4_jerwood.html) he made works to fit using paper, which was then glued to the wall for quick installation.
  • Faced with a white space problem, his solution is to throw coffee at it!

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