... but I stopped. Now I'm a dad, and may blog again...
Showing posts with label blankspace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blankspace. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 08, 2012

589: Liz West, Chroma & Crowdfunding

Today I visited Manchester-based artist Liz West, in her studio at Rogue, to talk about her forthcoming solo exhibition, Chroma, at BLANKSPACE, and her efforts to raise the money she needs via crowdsourcing.  To contribute please go to her sponsume.com page here.



For the collectors and completists here is the unedited text of the interview:

What first got you interested in colour collecting and this kind of work?

It goes right back to when I was a really young girl. I lived in Barnsley and their wasn't much happening, so I used to go and visit Barnsley market on a Saturday; go into town shopping. And I'd come back with really bright little bottles of nail varnish. I was about eight. I'd get home and then I'd arrange them in colour order along my bedroom window sill, until after a year or so I'd got so many that I had a complete spectrum lined up.

So that must have been the very first foray into collecting, way before the music memorabilia, the dolls' house furniture collecting; anything like that. My dad is a record collector as well. He has a wall that is full of CDs and records, so it's been in me from day dot.

I've always been naturally attracted to bright shiny colours. Brash colours. I'm not interested in subtle tones. They don't belong in my work. For me it exploring the manufactured quality, mainly plastics, which obviously always come in garish colours. Quite... POP!

When did your collecting and your colour obsession become your art?

I struggled on my degree. Went to Glasgow -great university, great art school- and spent two or three years faffing about with different ideas trying to make work that I thought I was interested in. I was making work about what I thought it would be like to be a celebrity. Work about life, drawing, and none of it really seemed to suit me. My tutors knew about the fact that I collected pop memorabilia, and therefore bright intense colouration.

The photographs that I would always take as documentation or research were always shots of brightly coloured things in shops, always lined up. Compacted together in a mass. In my third and final year I sat down and looked at all the elements that were feeding my practise and they said it's obvious. It's obvious it's about colour. It's obvious it's about collecting and using these two things in space so you are immersing the viewer in a kaleidoscopic environments... Why aren't you making work about this?

And it was one of those Ah-hah! moments. From the Christmas leading up to my degree show I started experimenting with making collections of single coloured objects. I started with yellow, hence why I've got quite a lot of yellow. I made a piece in my degree show using just yellow objects. And so it began.

How will you develop this in the new show, Chroma?

The work in Chroma is going to be on a much larger scale. The work I have made in the past, my chamber pieces where people can only look through a tiny slot in the wall, so it's not quite tangible; there's a barrier between. I've always wished I had a budget so I could completely envelop someone in a whole room. With Chroma I have that, so I'm given an opportunity.

There are four different rooms at BLANKSPACE [the gallery hosting Chroma]. One is going to be completely green -ceiling, flour, walls- the lighting is going to be intense. Garish green. Grass green. The the next room is going to be like walking into the sunshine: yellow. The royal blue, kind of a marine blue. And then postbox red. So very obvious colour choices. Your primary colours and then green, one of your secondaries.

Those colours and then the lighting in those rooms will then affect white objects which will run in a horizontal perspex tube through the four spaces as if the four spaces are joined together. So again I'm working with illusion, like in the chambers with the mirrors, but I'm being given the space to actually fabricate a huge structure.

You are crowdfunding through Sponsume to raise the money needed for Chroma. How much more do you need to raise, and what do people get in exchange for their donations?

I'm looking to raise one thousand pounds, and I've got about three hundred and fifty, so I'm looking for another six hundred and fifty. Is that right? Maths was never my strong point! There are different incentives for people depending on how much they donate. The top one: if they were to donate three hundred pounds I would make a piece of work especially for that person, a commission.

For a hundred pounds you get a day with me, oh joy! So, a studio tour, tour around the exhibition, nice cup of coffee, chat about whatever they want to... within reason! Seventy five pounds gets them one of my trolley prints, they can choose the primary colours or the secondary colours. I would personally go for one of the primary colours -either the blue, red, or yellow- because they were the originals. They have been exhibited nationwide and internationally and would ordinarily cost three hundred pounds each, but for this limited time only seventy five pounds will get them an unframed print. And they are limited edition.

For thirty pounds, a signed copy of the book, a limited edition publication of one hundred copies. And then as you get further down, ten pounds will get your name on my website, a set of postcards. Right down to a pound which will get you a smile, but in actual fact will buy me a purely coloured object from the pound shop and that will be in the show. Every little really does help.

What do you want to achieve with Chroma; artistically, career wise?

That's a big question. This is my first solo show and a rather major one because of the space I'm using. It's huge, it's vast and it's quite an interesting space as well. What I'm trying to do is get an array of people there; opinion formers, gallery curators, art collectors, dealers, critics, people who... and even if they don't actually come and see the show they will be sent a VIP private view card which illustrates my work, so they are getting to know my name. It is important for a young artist these days.

I'm just hoping to push my name out there a bit more than it has been up to this point. For people to see that I am ambitious with my ideas, with my work, and to see that I am capable of working in interesting spaces, site-specific work. Or even with, for example, the dolls' house piece; it was a piece that can be shown anywhere. Let's hope it moves my career on to the next rung of the ladder from where I am now.

So, what would you like that to be? The next rung of the ladder, artistically?

I would like to keep investing time in funding proposals that enable me to keep making large-scale work which is comparable in scale to James Turrell. Massive, all-immersive environments. That's what excites me as a viewer, so that's what I want to excite my viewers with. Obviously you have limitations when you haven't got a huge budget. That would be one thing; I want to just keep pushing the scale of the work.

Conceptually within the work I want to have a bit of time to really read up on my subjects, more so than I already have done. So I'm really immersing myself in information about colour theory, about collecting, and also about curating light, in space and immersive environments. So much has been written about these subjects that it is unreal, so I just want to fill some knowledge.

What would be really interesting would be to work collaboratively with a writer, to maybe come up with a piece of text relating to these subjects. That's something I would quite like to do. From a career level, having gallery representation would be fantastic, and getting more commissions.

What would be your dream space to do a site-specific piece in?

When I was... I went to the first show when the Tate Modern opened and I remembered seeing Louise Bourgeois' name in the vinyl lettering on the glass panels at the top of the Tate. I said to my mum, Mum, one day I want to see 'Liz West' on there. Which means I have to somehow fill the Turbine Hall. I like a challenge! Maybe in fifty years time! I think that's an interesting space.

I don't think I've seen enough spaces, perhaps?

Finally, is there anything else you'd like to say?

For the installation work in the Chroma exhibition there's going to be a mass of white objects and a mass of orange objects, and obviously I need to gather those somehow. So whether they are found, bought or given, so here's my opportunity to call out to people!

If you have got anything they would throw away -milk bottles, yogurt pots, etc- donate them to Blank Media, or bring them to me at Rogue Artists' Studios, then the more the merrier. It needs to be pure white or pure orange, but you can strip the labels off them, take tops off, clean them up.

For example, green egg box, I've just taken the labels off that. The same with a kind of domestic bottle, peeled off the labels and then that obviously turns it into a purely coloured object. So, they're my rules!

And! I quite like plastic materials because of the manufactured quality of them, rather than glass, or I completely hate natural things; it has to be artificial colour, cos that's quite a bright orange.

Saturday, March 31, 2012

559: Inside

Thursday night was the opening of 'Inside', Blank Media Collective's first Arts Council funded exhibition, and their most ambitious so far. The participating artists are Claudia Borgna, Philip Cheater, Drop Collective (Blair Zaye, Anna Louise Hale, Adam Dahrouge and Alison Thomson), Gill Greenhough, Rosie Leventon, David Ogle, Emily Rubner, Liz West and Chris Wright.  


"Within the insular and atmospheric setting of BLANKSPACE gallery, Inside explores the psychological connections we form with our environment, placing the participant within a collection of works that disturb, envelop, and engage."

OK, that's the spiel; the off-the-shelf opening paragraph expected of the unimaginative arts reviewer, the symptom of being a critic and not an artist. That's me; hello. I compiled it from cliches, links and press releases; the word is churnalism. I made a churn. I digress, I do.

Inside is the first time for a few months I've been down to BLANKSPACE since I stopped working with them last year. Michael Thorp, me and the rest of the blankpages team always fancied doing a printed issue. I'm reliably informed that one is on the way in the near future, and I look forward immensely to seeing this, but in the meantime BMC have released the Inside tie-in limited edition zine-like non-zine magazine not-a-zine zine. It's limited to 375 copies, goes at three quid a pop, and is well worth every penny. Illustration, flash fiction and poetry from a range of contributors, hand screen printed on big thick paper (you know, the kind that feels nice). Go to BLANKSPACE and buy one.

When you are entering BLANKSPACE to buy your zine (for want of a better word), don't stumble over the intricate wooden sculpture surrounding the front door. Look at it instead. Seriously, my words are flippant and silly, but the work in Inside is not. They are varied in their interpretation of the brief, and the show is coherent and engaging. I hope it will draw in more visitors to BLANKSPACE, and I hope this is the start of more printed material from Blank Media Collective.

During the launch I was taking tiny millisecond video clips that I've been editing together into a little sort-of teaser promo type thing. I expect it will win an Oscar or something. There's not enough major documentaries made using Windows Movie Maker. In case you were wondering, this isn't a review of Inside; I'll leave that to the serious arts blogs. This is Saturday morning, blanket, sofa, cup of coffee; the yawns and aches of a week at work. Have a nice weekend. Go and see Inside. It runs until Sunday 29th April. Go on, get!


Monday, January 23, 2012

505: BUY, ART, BUY

I wish I had the money to collect art; it's long been an ambition of mine. Occasionally I manage to get the odd piece here and there: I have a print by Gareth Hacking (a.k.a Cardboard Kid), given to me as a gift, for which I owe him a piece in return. The print by Gareth is of a skeleton in silhouette; its skull inverted and swapped positions with its pelvis. I also have a unique and original Cardboard Kid stored in a shoe box alongside myriad postcards and business cards. I have many artists' post/business cards which could be considered limited edition print runs. In my "collection" there are drawings by my niece and the children of other friends and relatives, art books, old prints (some original, others reproductions), etcetera, etc, &c.

The above paragraph was just preamble to this:

Want to own a piece of "art", in the form of a lovely postcard featuring my signature "Octus" octopus drawing? Well now you can by clicking the link on the right of the page; what lucky boys and girls you are! In our house there are octopuses everywhere, most notably the one tattooed on my arm, but also the prints and paintings on the walls, and the cuddly toys all over the shop. I get at least one octopus thing every Christmas. The original drawing (as reproduced on the postcard and my twitter profile) is in a sketchbook I bound myself using found paper; damn I'm such a fucking hipster.

I've already sold one!  Huzzah!  Thanks to Michael Thorp, the Manchester based illustrator and designer; yes, that's him, the fellow who made the banner for this blog.  He's a good lad that Michael Thorp.  Go and have a look at his website now.


In final art buying news:
Get down to BLANKSPACE this Saturday and buy a bit of art.  It's to raise money for independent artists, what with the government not bothering with it anymore.  I'll be there, and it's the day after pay day.

Saturday 28 January 2012, 3pm - 10pm
BLANKSPACE, 43 Hulme Street, Manchester, M15 6AW
We’re opening the doors to BLANKSPACE this New-Year for Blank Media Collective’s January Sale!
The January Sale is your chance to walk away with an original work of art and support further artistic development in Manchester and the UK. Each artwork has been kindly donated by artists and practitioners from Manchester, the North West and across the UK. All funds will go towards supporting Blank Media Collective’s 2012 exhibitions programme.
Come down to BLANKSPACE on Saturday 28 January to peruse the collection of original artwork available for auction or purchase artist books, prints and postcards from our January Sale Shop.
With live music from the Manchester’s very own foot-stomping lyrical genius Black Jack Barnett throughout the evening, this is a great chance to kick back, relax and buy some contemporary art.
Our live auction will take place at BLANKSPACE onSaturday 28 January from 7pm and is open to all. Visitors can bid for original contemporary artwork whilst investing in the future of arts in Manchester.
If you are unable to attend the live auction, silent bids can be made from 3pm the same day.
The January Sale is the place to go for original artwork ranging from paintings, sculpture, prints, books, photography, illustration from both established and emerging practitioners from Manchester and beyond. Start or continue your growing collection of contemporary artworks with Blank Media Collective.

Monday, August 15, 2011

372: #BLANKSPACE Chinese Whispers & #TheTitleArtPrize - @CreativeTransit @BlankMedia


The artists of Creative Transit are working on their open studio/exhibition Chinese Whispers at BLANKSPACE, Manchester. (I wrote that clunky sentence just so I could get all the links in together.) Open to the public, they are filling up BLANKSPACE with all kinds of art, working in the 'SPACE to create new work. You can pop down and watch the work being made, discuss it with the artists, put them on the spot with difficult and confusing questions, perhaps even influence the work as it progresses, and then on 25th August join Creative Transit and Blank Media Collective for drinks and brand new art from 20-ish young talents. (Excuse the overlong sentence, but I'm not really concentrating. There appears to be fireworks outside, and I'm listening to Richard Herring's Edinburgh Fringe Podcast. Pretty distracting.)

I had a bit of a chat with Enya Koster, one of the Creative Transit artists, whose work seems to be coming along very well. She makes puppets, ranging in size from tiny to larger than life-size, draws odd little characters, likes Betty Page, and collects scraps and scrapes of paper ephemera. Sometimes I'm not particularly good at describing art, especially when I'm listening to a podcast (remember them, podcasts? We used to listen to them on our pods, didn't we?), and in such cases the best thing to do is shut up and look at the pictures:

The rest of the show is very early days, but I intend to keep updating here most days with new photographs of the work in progress. More intersting for you would be to head down to BLANKSPACE yourself, see the artists at play, at work, and at rest, talk to them, pester them, etcetera, etc, &c... I command you, comand you, comend you...?




To celebrate 5 years of supporting emerging practitioners, Blank Media Collective is launching an important new art prize in Manchester. We are looking for exciting visual artists from the UK working within any medium, concept or scale to submit new works.


Who: Emerging visual artists / practitioners residing in the UKLocation: BLANKSPACE, 43 Hulme Street, Manchester, M15 6AWWhen: Exhibition launch: Thursday 27 October 2011 | Exhibition continues: 28 October – 27 November 2011 | Awards Evening: Saturday 12 November 2011Accepted media: 2D works (painting, photography, collage, printmaking etc.) | 3D works (sculpture, installation [including sound] etc) | Video works

Prizes:
1st Prize: £500 + Solo Exhibition Curated and Supported by Blank Media Collective | 3 other prizes and People’s Choice award TBA
Selection procedures:
All shortlisted works will be shown within The Title Art Prizeexhibition forming Blank Media Collective’s fifth birthday celebrations. Four winners will be selected by a panel of established artists, curators and directors, with each artist receiving prizes to help benefit their future creative practice. A fifth winner will then be selected through the People’s Choice Award. The Title Art Prize exhibition will be shortlisted and curated by the Blank Media Collective curatorial team.
How to apply:
1. Read our
Terms and Conditions
2. Download and complete
Entry Form
3. Include at least one image for each individual submission or if a video a URL link to view the submission online (please ensure images are in jpeg format and clearly labelled with name and title of work).
4. If you would like to provide supporting information such as a C.V or artists statement with your application please feel free to do so. Please keep all written information to 500 words (maximum) in Word (.doc) or PDF format.
5. To pay, please follow the PayPal link below. (£5 for the submission of 1 piece and £10 for up to 5 pieces). Blank Media Collective will automatically be sent confirmation from PayPal once you have paid. Please remember to include your transaction reference in the application form.
Blank Media Collective follow an online entry process therefore all submissions should be sent via email to:
exhibitions@blankmediacollective.org clearly stating ‘Submission: The Title Art Prize FAO Mark, Rose & Sophie by the closing date: Friday 9 September 2011 (midnight).
Submission Fee:
£5 for the submission of 1 piece and £10 for up to 5 pieces.
This fee is a non-refundable administration fee.
Submissions should be paid via the PayPal link on the Blank Media Collective website.
Please contact Blank Media Collective for alternative methods of payment if necessary.
Timetable:
Friday 9 September: Deadline for submissions (midnight)
Friday 23 September: All artists will be notified
Friday 7 October: Deadline for receiving artwork
Monday 17 – Wednesday 26 October: Installation period
Thursday 27 October: Public Preview
Thursday 27 October – Sunday 6 November: People’s Choice voting & Exhibition
Saturday 12 November: Evening Reception & The Title Art Prize Winners announced
Sunday 13 – Sunday 27 November: Exhibition continues
w/c Monday 21 November: Winning artists and Curators talk
For further information contact: Mark, Rose or Sophie at exhibitions@blankmediacollective.org

Thursday, August 04, 2011

360: What is Architectural Intervention?

The Last Land, Hans Schabus

What is Architectural Intervention? I don't know ; I only just heard of it. In conversations with Andy Broadey at BLANKSPACE I have learned that Architectual Intervention (which from now on I'll call AI to stop RSI calcifying my fingers), is a cross between installation art and architecture. The result can be staggering; huge works of art the size and apparant function of buildings, or subtle; apples placed in windows, or empty gallery spaces with cracks in the floor. Thinking about it I would probably say that When I am Pregnant by Anish Kapoor, which I am so fond of, is AI : Kapoor has intervened with the building to create a seemless mound poking out of the wall. Architectural Infertilisation, or whatever.

Hans Schabus, Monika Sosnowska, Andrea Zittel, Monica Bonvicini, Walead Beshty. Names I have never heard, but which are written in my notebook under the head Architectural Interventionists. Come on google, do your thang. Hans Schabus built and constructed a sort-of mountain sized play-ground/public building. I don't know what it is – it's just a sort of big, awesome, pointless building. That's my art degree training kicking in there : it's a thing, and it's big, and you can walk around inside it. I may not know much about art (or at least can't be arsed writing about it properly) but I know what I like, and (besides cartoons, whiskey, boobs and late 90's American pro-wrestling) that's big follies to be explored.

The Last LandHans Schabus
Monika Sosnowska, as well as having a strangely exciting name, creates strangely exciting work. Her MO seems to be the crushing of steel structures ; staircases, balconies, fences, balustrades, ladders. All looking as though pulled from the wreckage of a massive building collapse, cleaned up, painted, made all shiny. Their surface sparkles new, but their shape screams battered. Her monumental work 1:1 is an entire building in its steel skeleton form, bent out of form but still standing tall, and framed within the massive exhibition space of Shaulager. Incredible.

1:1, Monika Sosnowska
Don't Miss a Sec', Monica Bonvicini
Andrea Zittel's sculptures are room-thing-objects ; Living-Spaces ; also multiplying furniture-box/shelves, and seamless wollen tunics. Monica Bonvicini created a public toilet with two-way mirrored walls, thus guaranteeing her work would be seen the world over on internet forums, comedy websites, and the light-hearted page in free newspapers. The idea of sitting on a toilet surrounded by the busy street around you, able to see people perfectly as you shit, yet unsure that they cannot actually see you, even as they check their hair and pick their teeth in your mirrored walls. She also created a false gallery floor out of styrofoam board. It appeared to be an empty gallery room, until a punter stepped in and put their foot through the floor. The art is created in the empty space as the public walks across the styrofoam and destroys it. Walead Beshty created a similar self-destroying work of art, using glass mirrored tiles on the gallery floor.

And thus ends my short start into observing Architectural Intervention. Good night.

Don't Miss a Sec', Monica Bonvicini

Saturday, July 30, 2011

358: Andy Broadey, The View From Here @ BLANKSPACE

Display
Andy Broadey's works, currently showing at BLANKSPACE Manchester (Blank Media Collective), are installation-based experimental photography. As a description I think that works ; despite experimentation being a neccessity in keeping contemporary art fresh and new. Perhaps if it wasn't experimental I wouldn't be writing about it and Andy wouldn't be making it. The guy is an accomplished artist, and The View From Here is his PhD final show ; all goes well and he will be Doctor (of Philosophy) Artist, with a camera lens instead of a stethoscope and photographic paper instead of x-rays.

Three installation pieces comprise The View From Here: Day Room, Shadow Box and Display. The first you encounter is Display, a series of close-up clip-framed photo prints examining clear acrylic leaflet holders (of the sort you can buy at extortionate amounts from Ryman). "This piece emphasizes the way gallery contexts and display conventions allow audiences to see otherwise innocuous and familiar objects as something worthy of artistic appreciation," writes Andy. I interpret it as being an artistic display focusing on functional display units, almost as if the clip-frames had been left empty.

Shadow Box
The leaflet holders are designed to remain inconspicuous and invisible, but magically become visible once the leaflets are gone. I don't consider them to be everyday familiar objects however; they are not something people have in their homes and rarely if ever have need for. I worked in Ryman a while back, and they were not big sellers, however they looked quite alluring and mysterious all lined up, unsold, on the shelf. Like unborn ghosts of businesses as yet unstarted.

In four parts spread across BLANKSPACE's four upstairs studios is Shadow Box. Photographs of empty perspex boxes are created by shining the light of a desk lamp directly through the box and onto photographic paper. Exposure lasted about two seconds before the paper was printed ; entirely cameraless photography. The result is an image resembling scorching or smoke damage, like the pattern rising up the brickwork above a window where fire has torn through. The light has burnt the box onto the paper ; the mathematically predictable bending of the light through the box is sealed and seared in black and white. The images are displayed with the lamp and box used to create them. The lamp is unlit and the photo is set and developed. Although a three-dimensional installation, the scene is still as dead and captured as an old portrait of the long-forgotten. Strangely creepy. My favourite in the exhibition.

Day Room is the documentation of a private endurance performance (attended only by the artist). Andy photographed the empty main gallery of BLANKSPACE every two and a half minutes for an entire 24 hour period. He used these photographs to reproduce the gallery, within the gallery, as a cross between serial art and sequential art – moving both through time in two and a half minute jumps, and space a few inches at a time.

Day Room
The View From Here is subtle, sophisticated and challenging and a very well conceived series of related installations. Excellent for BLANKSPACE's first solo exhibition, and best of luck to Andy in his PhD.


Read further thoughts on The View From Here from
Valerie O'Riordan at Not Exactly True,
Sarah-Clare Conlon at Words & Fixtures, and
Manchester School of Architecture students (Jack and MSSA) at Look Up Manchester.

Updated with photos on 3rd August 2011.  All pictures by Gareth Hacking.  To see the complete set of pictures go to Gareth's flickr here.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

350: Cara B=Side B at #BLANKSPACE @BlankMedia


Time for a postmortem. BLANKSPACE recently hosted an incredible exhibition, cara b = side b, in collaboration between Manchester's Blank Media Collective, and Barcelona's Untitled BCN. The masterminds behind this exciting collab were BMC's Mark Devereux and BCN's Jessica Casey. The opening night was an exciting event of live art, some retrospective work from participating artists, beer supplied by SandBar and cocktails and tapas supplied by Sandinista (mmm @ the chili).

As the opening night kicked off the walls downstairs and the smaller studios upstairs contained some interesting pieces, but the main draw was the big open room up top. A raised platform was equipt for a DJ of some digital description, and a visual artist using the computer stuff and a projector aimed at a large blank wall. The same blank wall connected to a floor covered by painting sheets, and was armed with paint tins, brushes and a step ladder.

Against another wall leaned two wooden blocks supporting a large canvas. Next to this was some industrial builders spotlights and a bunch of painting stuff. Finally, on the opposite wall, a massive roll of paper spilled from the ceiling to the floor and halfway across the room. This was surrounded by a keyboard and drum set-up, and a guitar set-up, both amplified and with a wide array of effects pedals.

First to perform was Naomi Kendrick and her two accompanying musicians making wild effects-heavy noises on synth, guitar and drum. They played lost in the music, paying no heed to the drawing being create before them, and Naomi crawled around her paper stage, on her hands and knees, dragging patting and snapping her chunks of charcoal as she danced her improvised contemporary choreography. The result was a mesmerising performance and a beautiful drawing.

Next Xanu and eeeex began their attack on the wall ; armed with black and white paints and house-brushes they fought an ever changing war of monsters, fuck offs, laser beams and devil eyes. Improvised projections splash light on the increasingly less white wall, chasing, informing and disturbing the actions of the two painters.

Finally Takahashi's Shellfish Concern, combined live painting with electro-acoustic music, in the night's purest combination of performance painting and music. A blank canvas had been mic'ed up and the sounds produced - by paint, brush, water, splats, drips, dabs, pulls, pours and sponges – became amplified, echoed and distorted while travelling through a range of effects pedals and wires.


All three performances left behind a finished painting or drawing, however the performance was the real art; the resultant images are merely shadows of what happened. My personal favourite of these remnants was that of Takahashi's painted by Angela Guyton. Her work reminds me of Cy Twombly (although it is in no way derivative); aesthetically pricks my art-ears (and minces my metaphors) as well as being borne from a unique process.

All-in-all an excellent event of fine art, finger food and friends.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

309:on the eve of @Eurocultured ... (instead of sleeping)

Long day ahead tomorrow as Eurocultured kicks off in the streets (well, some of them) of Manchester; crowding the archways and side streets tunnelling underneath Oxford Road station.  I’m meeting mein mama und papa, and I’m gonna roll up packing press pass; promises to be a good day, weather permitting.  Weather, I permit you to rain down a short light cooling drizzle, if you promise to bring warm sunshine and gentle breezes.


If you’re heading down tomorrow you might want to download this pdf of the Sunday running order; bands, djs, breakdance competitions, etc.  Personally I’m most looking forward to the street art, and I’m anticipating stalls selling foods I’ve never tried before.  Get me a caramelised piglet on a stick and a packet of salted scorpion bones and I’m happy as a cat on the ‘nip.

So my camera batteries are on charge, I’ve got a pen and a notebook somewhere to hand, and a bank holiday weekend in the bank.  Now all I need to do is get some sleep, and get an early start tomorrow.  I’m all blogged out today after all the catch-up, so this is going to be a short one.  Tomorrow I am taking my parents to visit BLANKSPACE for the first time, where I hope they will enjoy Eurocultured X Manchester.  And let us all celebrate the historic occasion now by looking at some excellent photos of the preview nights way back on Thursday.

Photos supplied by Gareth Hacking and his flickr account:

Eurocultured X Manchester Exhibition Preview
Eurocultured X Manchester Exhibition Preview

Thursday, May 26, 2011

305: @Eurocultured X Manchester >>> COME!!!


Yes, I know; I’ve missed out 304, but it’s on its way.  It was going to be a clever dick thing about Ryan Giggs but then ol’ parliamentary privilege went and scuppered those plans.  It can still be done though; there is plenty of ranting and venting left in that.

The install is well under way for tomorrow’s launch of Eurocultured X Manchester at BLANKSPACE (43 Hulme St, Manchester, M15 6AW) is well underway.  All the donkey-work is done; the big canvases are hung, spray paint is drying on the walls, and the ‘SPACE is looking vibrant and like, well street, innit, ya get meh?  I’m just going to have a walk around and see what I can see.  And then I’m going to keep it all to myself, cos if you want to know what there is you had better come down yourself.  It’s tomorrow, remember?

Eurocultured is put together by some guys called Spearfish who “proudly present a group show featuring some of our favourite artists in one of Manchester’s premier art spaces for one week only!”
Brand new work featuring installations, sculptures, animation and work on canvases by...


Also a retrospective of original works created at past Eurocultured events including:

Mr Kern (France)
Impe & Woozy (Greece)
ECB (Germany)
Elph (UK)
Guy McKinley (UK)

There you go; that’s all the info you need and more.  Plenty of links for you to check out; a website here and a blogspot there, now go for it!  Get clicking and see what you can see!  I’ve invited you all on facebook (tried to plug it on twitter but the bloody thing is over capacity) and I’ll do it again here.
 
.........COME..........

Eurocultured X Manchester kicks off what will be a great bank holiday weekend.  Even my parents are coming down to shake their money makers and stroke their beards of a Sunday afternoon.  That is a mark of quality.  The last time they joined me for an event like this was for Lee ‘Scratch’ Perry at the Dome, Morecambe (R.I.P), where they skanked and dubbed with the best of them.  I had better get some sleep before tomorrow kicks in, or by the time the weekend is here I won’t even be able to keep up with mama and papa.  They will be out-walking me, out-talking me, out-eating me, and out-drinking me in and out of the arches under Oxford Road Station.


See you tomorrow :) 


Thursday, May 12, 2011

291: A Good Year for Fishing



Ross Sutherland is a performance poet/stand-up comedian, touring a multimedia show containing animation and music; The Three Stigmata of Pacman.  Yesterday BLANKSPACE hosted the show in a special In_Tuition creative writing event.  It was free to get in, free bar, and a brilliant show, all for the price of a smile.  I had never heard of Ross before, except when Abby and John mentioned they had booked him, and really had no idea what to expect.  Poetry, ho hum; but no!  It was lively, exciting, properly well produced, and most importantly, piss funny.


Occasional poems, some of which spilled over into a kind of rap or toast, fit nicely into a larger narrative about the last year of Ross’ life.  I don’t think it’s right to give away spoilers, and it’s certainly not write to ruin jokes, so I’ll stay away from any details (even though Ross himself gives some jokes away in trailer).  But needless to say, the narrative he has created is extremely strong, had me completely hooked, and never bored.  As a poet not all of it is played for laughs, but the quieter introspective moments help to build the show into a complete work of art.

I sat near the back for the show, drinking the biggest glass of white wine I could get, wishing I had my notebook with me to record some of the cleverer lines.  Early in to the show I thought to myself Ross is like a cross between Stewart Lee and Scroobius Pip.  I can’t quantify that thought; there is no actual sliding scale between those two disparate creatives, but if there were I would try and stick Ross on it somewhere.  It turns out I’m not the first to make the Stewart Lee observation; something called The List has already done that.  At least I didn’t lazily play the Dave Gorman documentary comedian card.


I want to talk a little about the bin, but that would set the spoiler alert flashing.  Needless to say it’s modified and it’s no ordinary bin; it’s symbolic.  Besides the props, music, and animation, Ross’ wordplay is satisfying enough to stand up by itself.  He throws away quality lines that lesser performers may milk more; he is confident enough to repeat himself, make obscure references, overplay and underplay, and all sorts of other great little tricks that inspire confidence and mirth.  I chuckled, chortled, and indeed guffawed.


Then we went to piss or smoke, charged our glasses, and grouped back for the Q&A.  I shoehorned an only partly relevant Stewart Lee quote into my question; partly because he was on my mind, and partly as a clever dick response to a reference to Simon Munnery that Ross made earlier in the evening.  By this point I was a bit drunk, and can’t remember the question or the answer.  The quote was the one about the last taboo in comedy being trying to do something well and sincerely without sneering sarcasm, bullying, or irony.  I feel strongly that Ross is among those breaking that taboo.

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While watching the show I was thinking I wish I could buy this on DVD.  It isn’t out, but it should be.  There is a fantastic independent company called Go Faster Stripe.  They release budget, but professionally done, comedy DVDs of people that I love (Stewart Lee, Richard Herring, Lucy Porter, Simon Munnery, the actor Kevin Eldon, Robin Ince, etcetera etc &c), and that you do to.  If you want to see a Ross Sutherland DVD do what I have just done and drop an email to Chris Evans (not that one) from Go Faster Stripe politely requesting he consider the idea.  And then buy a DVD; I recommend all of them.


Sunday, May 08, 2011

288: The cell wipes your memory; the cell holds your memory.


BLANKSPACE (#blankspace) has become The Cell; mysterious tweets warn that the cell is all around us; the cell has become detrimental; the cell is in your very make up.  It’s too late; you are already taken up.  There is no get-out, no vent, no release.  Your cell phone is your cell, is your mobile phone is your home is your tomb. 

BLANKSPACE is Switch Circuit (#switchcircuit) is FutureEverything.  You are a prisoner, a peon, a captured weasel thrashing in a snare.  Present your name and number at the door and endure the holding cell until such a time when you are processed.  Go to cell A, then E, B, F, D, C and finish at G.  Take your own mugshot, you dimwit.  Tweet @LiberatedVoice to speak in dire mechanical tones to the thronging slaves walled into the cell.

07527 439 972
07527 439 972
07527 439 972
07527 439 972
07527 439 972
07527 439 972
Phone me
07527 439 972
Phone me now
07527 439 972
07527 439 972

Phone 07527 439 972 to activate the aural weapons.  Please be aware that strobe lighting is used.  Danger, danger; shield your eyes, protect your ears, dial the number.  Dial it now.  Take your hatred out on me, make your victim my head.  My eyes, ears, fingers, thumbs, brain cells.

Link, connect, tweet, post, communicate, ignore, feed the cell, the box in your pocket holds more sway over your attention than the people around you.  Break off conversation suddenly in order to obey the call of the cell in your pocket.  Feed me, feed me, feed me fucker; do as I command thee.

You are the head of the snake; these orders are for you alone.  Forward backward inside out; forward backward upside down.  Forward backward inside out; forward backward upside down.  Be there:

Go to Cell G.  Choose your place on the grid.  Tell everyone in Cell G to be quiet and await further instructions...

BLANKSPACE and Switch Circuit push on until 6am – you have six hours remaining.  You have your orders; to present yourself for processing at BLANKSPACE immediately – 43 Hulme Street, Manchester, just off Oxford Road nr BBC building.  The cell has commanded you.  The cell is the final word.  The cell tweets, warbles and sings.  Listen to its siren call.  Listen. Listen.

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Saturday, May 07, 2011

287: In which my blog gets a new hair cut

Look at that; that thing up there.  The big splodgy pink and black rectangle with the words I BLOG EVERY DAY splashed across it.  That’s my new banner, that is.  It’s a first draught, and may be getting elongated slightly, but I love its 1950’s sci-fi movie poster/Hitchhikers’ Guide book cover feel.  It’s designed by Michael Thorp, Manchester based illustrator extraordinaire, whose work can regularly be seen in blankpages online magazine.  Here it is again just in case you missed it:

I-Blog-Every-Day

I recently switched the blog name from Block Chop to the simple, catchy and self-explanatory I Blog Every Day.  The thinking behind the whole block chop thing was that I was chopping through my writer’s block.  I think I may have done that by now, and besides I never even really like the clunky ham-fisted pun on a wrestling move/chopping block.  Always seemed a little forced, and I just banged out the logo in a few minutes and slapped it on the blog.  But that’s gone now.  Before block chop the blog was tediously called Kevin Bradshaw, Artist’s Blog and unsurprisingly this wasn’t hugely popular with the general punter.  Since changing the name and expanding the scope of what I write about, my hit rate has increased quite a lot.

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I’m not exactly top of the pile but have a lot of pretty good hits if you search for me on Google.  Also all the links and images I have started including are bringing flocks of people interested in Ernest Haeckel, Jean-Michel Basquiat, and a picture of some birds from Hollyoaks.  I get about 100 hits a day from all over the world.  Go! Me.

So, erm, what’s up?  Well, I’m going to discuss a new flat because we can’t afford this one, but looking forward to the move.  Then after that it’s down to BLANKSPACE to be taken prisoner by the launch of the exciting new show Switch Circuit (part of the FutureEverything festival).  BLANKSPACE has been transformed into a dark prison; a series of imposing cells, each holding a mysterious piece of interactive technology/performance-based art.  There is something to do with receiving instructions on your mobile phone, and off course free drinks and great art.  Looking forward to it as it’s all new to me; haven’t been involved in the planning or execution so it will be a great surprise.

And that’s all I have to say at the moment.  Gotta get my shit together a go out.  More blogging tonight.  Danke Schon, Bitte Schon, Auf Weidersehen, Tchuss.