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06 September 2007

pill orchard


pill orchard, originally uploaded by aesop.

This image comes from some work I did yesterday at the community orchard in Pill. I've been thinking about a 'book distributed in space'- one that happens as a real space (either as an installation, or, as here, only at the point of recording).  This has obvious similarities with the way that our experience of the environment works on a semiotic level. We read a city's signs much as we would a multi-authored text. some of what we see is in fact signification of the most classic sort: signs, writings. Others include behaviour and historical traces left on the environment.

With this idea I'm trying to work on a form of 'book-making' that tilts my point of view out of the reverie of the page, and into real life. As you can see, it's obviously still at an experimental stage, but I'm finding things out about the different rhetorical effects that the combination of space, word and camera achieve- to say nothing of the aspects of the installation that briefly exists. In this image I've come a little further along the road to clarity with the large bold words (my first experiment was illegible because it was just handwritten on paper), and elements like the path have been used to reinforce the spatial aspect. There's an argument between flat and deep readings here, because the simple left to right flat reading doesn't work. It has to be read as a space in order to be construed. When finally presented in book form, on flat pages, this technique will, I think, become even stranger than it is now. It also suggests a commentary on or echo of our 'reading tactics' in/of the world. Are we reading surfaces or structures? Straight lines or spaces? Is there an element of time to our perception, or is it more-or-less instant, arriving at the speed of perception (usually light)?

I also want this work to fit into my series on Whistling Copse, though here, the commodity and land are public, in contrast to Whistling Copse, which was emphatically and tragically not.

In this picture I'm starting to learn more about how I might use the contours of different objects to play with the space more: the grass obscures the feet of some of the stands- why not play with this? A sign could peer out from behind a bush.

I'm aware of the fact that the signs would present an even more unsettling, flat appearance if they were more carefully placed facing the camera, ie not at slight angles, but I'm entertaining the idea that I want to retain lots of evidence of the artifice (hence also the unashamed use of masking tape, which was nonetheless very necessary in the breeze).

As it happened I didn't have enough juice in my batteries to finish this shoot, which I initially cursed as it would be next to impossible to set up the shoot again, but I have enough of a sequence here to study the effect, and I will continue the experiment, with the added experiment of a caesura into a different spatial arrangement, most probably an entirely different space.
I'd like to continue in an urban setting, where the signs would become softer edged by comparison with the more similar environment, but I can't afford to leave a half dozen music stands in the street to get pinched! I need a half dozen assistants to hold onto them!

04 September 2007

orchard story

Tomorrow I'll be going to an orchard near Pill in Somerset, with my friend Lindy Clark. She's going to spend the time drawing, while I, meanwhile, am tooling up with my music stands, camera, tripod, and a small vocabulary printed out on A4 sheets to do some work on my 'distributed book' idea.

I've already done some of this with Atkinson over at Whistling copse, but the results could do with being more considered and less haphazard. The content itself- as well as the method, needs looking at in more detail.

This time, I have a slightly more considered bit of text for the piece, but it's still at the experimental stage.

The metaphorization of practice and the mobilisation of book artists.

 

 

My work will examine book artists'  practice and show how they use books as a strategy to 'metaphorize' their practice: that is, how they use books' capabilities and effects as a physical medium and as a social construction, to produce an interface between certain shifting terms that are brought together in their work. This is the 'metaphorical' work that books do through their physical form and in the significance they take on as a signifying social form. Amongst other things, I will be alert to ways that books allow book artists to bring together different media, different roles, different awareness and voice, and other forms of integration in the book form. In this way my work studies the practice of book artists to produce a compendium of effects that the book as a strategy produces in practice.

 

I admit to the prior intention in this study to show that books, in encapsulating a method of relation between radically different spheres of communication and action, provide a concourse on which discourse relevent to contemporary life can take place: that is, that book art itself is still, potentially, socially relevent, despite what I am increasingly viewing as its somnolent state over the last couple of decades. (I will work on criticism to support this) This suspicion centres around the work I see most often: that of artists who are committed to producing book art in preference to (and largely exclusive of) other work. It seems on the surface to me that many of the artists working most exclusively on the book do so with some intention of insulating themselves from the wider world. This does not have to be the case. Besides this, there is a competing critical sense that the works of these artists is no less worthwhile simply because it exhibits the concerns of 'a certain world' and no other (this is the case anywhere, including the 'avant-garde world'). Such work can be and often is poetically complete and satisfying. I merely state that something of the engagement with the world and with the avant garde has seemingly fallen away, to be replaced by a comfortable state of creative reverie. Although we can perform feats of critical analysis on this output, they remain based in a very particular place. From such reverie originality has been known to come, and I hope the same will be true for book artists. I would iterate, again, that I do not make a judgement about the value of book arts that tread this ground (one all too familiar to my own practice, anyway)- but I do see unfulfilled potential in the way that books can draw together many threads of experience in the metaphorization of practice. Unfulfilled in that books reserve privately what would be valuable in a more public realm. I admit that I find the notion of reworking book arts practice into a more public, and to my mind more contemporary setting, is uncongenial. I am persuaded that it would be worthwhile however. The structure suggested by 'public' and 'private' is, moreover, inaccurate. But I am trying to point towards a way of working that is perhaps less introspective, and more obviously related to the critical concerns of the moment.

 

What I had not hitherto considered about the possible outcomes of my study was that I might succeed in pushing myself and possibly others, away from book art as a more or less exclusive practice. By reverse-engineering the ways in which book art provides a heuristic framework for practices that work on the world in various tactical/rhetorical ways, I am reacquainting myself (and my imaginary reader) with the tools they had subsumed under the mantle of books. The problem of practice that books solved under their encompassing rubric, understood in this newly reflective way, affords an understanding of the metaphorical practice books make use of. The engineering of the book medium, its staging as intermedia and as a social construction, are incidental to the metaphorical practice itself, which might take place in other media. It merely happens that I (and the reader) have in the past found in the artists' book a congenial constellation of situation, strategy and tactic. Once we have understood these, we may be tempted to push away from books as a home base.

 

What about artists' books made by artists for whom book art is not a central practice?  In conversation with Julian Warren the other day, who is currently sorting through the Arnolfini's archives (including a vast artists' book collection), I found that he thinks the most interesting and most successful books are made by these artists. My thought, which I haven't entirely abandoned, is that these books tend to be made by established artists who have attracted the services of publishers such as bookworks who are keen to work with them. Simply because they're established (and therefore, we hope, 'good' artists), there tends to be more interesting output.

 

Notwithstanding my partial argument, I wonder if Warren is not correct, and that more interesting work is done by artists who don't see books as 'home' but as a situation much like any other to which they can bring their practice. There are physical forms, rhetorical possibilities, and the significance of the book, sure. But these are seen not as the identity of one's practice, but as part of the tools tactically available at the time. These artists remain in touch with the world, rather than taking on books as a turtle does its shell.

 

This sounds harsh. I don't mean to criticise book artists so strongly, nor to generalise as thoroughly as it sounds. However, I know from my own experience, if from no other, that books are a persuasive cocoon. Like certain other cocoons though, they are made of valuable stuff, and with drawing out, can be made to go far. 

 

Making books can teach us, as artists, useful things, and provide many useful solutions. But it is becoming important to me to see if there is not more that can be done with these tools. Whether this means abandoning books as an exclusive practice, or whether it means adapting my practical methods of production is not clear. But I want to be in touch with the world. I want the same for other book artists too,, and I wonder if, by collecting the ways in which artists' book practice works, I might not persuade some of them that there is more that could be done.

 

I come to these thoughts wondering if I am not enacting a supplement in the sense of a 'pharmakon' that at once works as a remedy and as a poison to the thing it supplements and usurps. To say so is to exaggerate the potency of my study. But certainly I seem to have reached a point where these questions- which, it should be remembered, come from my efforts to ratify book art- start to question whether it is the solution it thinks it is, and whether it is not, in fact, a way of doing things that potentially blocks me (if no one else) off from further development. It is equally persuasive to me that this is not the exclusive conclusion one could come to. The ways and means embodied by book art and criticised here could be transformed by reflection and bring about the rapprochement with the world that I seem to believe is necessary.

 

1 Sept, 2007.

28 August 2007

some angels

the angel of never was
the angel of the one you never met
the angel of the turn in the road
the angel of ash
the angel of your breath's journey
the angel of the mistake
the angel of glancing away
the angel that was buried and not seen
the angel that did not stop you
the angel that is on the next page
the angel that is too large for you to see
the angel that is illegible
the angel that is near and far
the angel lost in the archive
the angel who brought you
the angel you mistook for a bird
the angel that was in your dream
the angel in your photograph
the angel of your last footstep
the angel of your waking
the angel you were
the angel who took it away


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20 August 2007

Alex Hartley at the Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh

Alex Hartley at the Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh- Hartley is a 'builderer', meaning he climbs about on the surface of human-constructed objects. The photographs in this exhibition are of several main sorts. One records his buildering exploits, with the artist perched, clinging or splatted against various concrete, brick and stone surfaces, whilst others are photos of buildings where possible routes are mapped out with lines superimposed on the surface of the photos. Other work was of 'stolen' images of various private modernist homes (which Hartley later began clambering about on, in an attempt to get closer still to the buildings). He also creates sculptural pieces that include ;ife-size photos behind glass intended to create model spaces we have some voyeuristic access to, but into which we can never go.

This tension between our legitimate gaze and trespass is brought up time and again by Hartley in these pieces, and taken further in his buildering, which represents a particular form of creatively-motivated trespass. It is twofold: it involves his physical trespass on the property, and the wrongness of his encounter with the building in a way never intended by the architect. His body looks wrong, splatted against these surfaces. The architectonic framing of the modernist (and other) spaces he transgressses usually support the human being in a simple perspectival plane, not tilted at strange angles into crevices. The lines of ascent and traverse on other pieces represent the same thing- this time the line of looking for routes that deny the usual architectural progress through designated volumes.

Some photos involve a sort of collage of materials (wood, plastic) assembled in detailed form like architectural models, reading right into the photographic space, but projecting from it. The collage obscures any underlying image that might inform the object's construction. They might represent things that are 'really' in the photo, or they might not.
(Hartley's process of 'imagining what might be there' tells me there's nothing beneath') But the point is that it doesn't matter. Our imposition on the real landscape being photographed is every bit as transitory and flawed as the constructions Hartley glues onto the photo's flat surface. Hartley's constrcted buildings are always either flawed or deserted, the titles implying some sort of hiding place or flight from the inevitable. I think this ties in with the ravages of weather and time that are depicted in various other works. Inevitably, buildings turn to ruins. Inevitably, the aesthetic and ideological concerns of our culture are deconstructed by our traversing them in a new way. Hartley's art puts him in the position of an active participant in the ongoing conversation of what our built environment (and our representation of it, both in art and in language) means.

19 August 2007

William Kentridge at the Edinburgh Printmakers Workshop

I went to see the William Kentridge show at Edinburgh Printmakers on Saturday. I'll write more about this shortly:

for now...
Thinking of him as an example for practice
leporello
portage
commentary on narrated images
compare to Alex Hartley- surface line issue/the negotiation of contour
various strategies of continuation/assemblage/narrative. Held together by drawing itself

13 August 2007

Emblems on the Streets

I'm doing a project at work right now involving transcribing and working with listings from old Bristol directories. My work involves looking for artisans and artists and creating relationships of place and time for various trades. However, one of the things I'm struck by is the vast variety of different shop signs there must have been.

green man

squirrel

ship

ring of bells

little tower

white hart

fountain

crown

hole in the wall

bear

white horse

black horse

etc, etc. Some streets must have been teeming with animals, ships, kings and miniature architecture of all kinds. It would be an interesting art project to realise a couple of 18th century Bristol streets by their shop signs alone. Especially when we consider what the urban landscape has become because of adverisements.

11 August 2007

Practice Space

10 August 2007

First Portages

I took my first portage pictures this morning (of the model canoe I bought). My hope is that they will provide a foundation for a project I am working out to do with Chicago.

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09 August 2007

Borges Quotation

"People say that life is the thing but I prefer reading," says Borges. It is interesting that Borges, who, if anyone could, could see the way that the alphabetic world composes the life we live in, post-Gutenberg, bothers to set a distinction between the two. We are situated readers of the world itself, characters in our own emplotment.

I'm working on material that will help me towards expressing this. Mostly involving music stands and bits of paper.

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