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November 30, 2008: the art world as an imagined community

The ability of groups of people to construct communities has changed radically with the internet. Social networking sites, chat rooms and blogs make it easy for people within specialized subcultures and communities to connect with each other. Benedict Anderson’s theory from his 1983 book Imagined Communities focuses on the creation of national identities from within scattered ethnic and religious communities. This theory has been applied by many in relation to the internet and the growth of social networking sites, twitter and micro-communites of friends with common specialized interests.

I’ve been thinking about how Anderson’s research relates directly to how our identity as artists and our sense of the artworld develops from our time as art students. I can clearly remember as a young art student, the point that I saw myself as an artist and no longer a student and now I see how that relates to an imagined community of artists as I developed my ideas of being a part of a community of artists and the artworld. This relates closely to my web project and my research into my sense of place as online student at Camberwell College of Arts, University of the Arts London.

November 29, 2008

editing the semester, thinking about the artworld as an imagined community

November 27, 1975: John Knight

John Knight screens his film #285 McGuffin 8-2975 (9min 47 secs).

November 15, 2008: today’s presentations

I got up early this morning because we were discussing presentation topics and getting feedback. It was a long day, online chat takes more time than face to face- I have to remember to be patient. There’s not that much to say, but I got good feedback, and some friendly banter.

Overall, I think the dilemma is the same- that with digital arts, the field it too big. If the work or “pathway” was drawing, or painting, or sculpture it would be simple- the field is defined- the history is known. We know what a drawing or a painting is, that’s understood and we can move on from there- with digital arts the field it too big, it could be an animation or a website- that’s a huge difference and it is very hard to make useful comments or provide a valuable critique.

November 25, 1974: John Fernie

I remember John Fernie’s work- it was small three photographs- elevated on a simple stand in the centre of the space. The Mezzanine Gallery was on the mezzanine of the old Anna Leonowens Gallery on Coburg Road. You went up the back stairs to get there. I think there was a back way in from the upstairs if the building. His exhibition was one of the last in that space.

November 23, 2007: Social Networks

I’ve just set us a MADigitalArts social network in ning. It is more private than Facebook and may be a useful way for our group to communicate and post viseos, images, email each other etc. This past week Sean Clark created a Camberwell MA Digital Arts group in Facebook which will also be useful.

I’ve been thinking more about the Digital Arts Forum event and the videos that were posted, I’m struck by the number of works that used various effects to distort or filter the video image- I’m wondering what leads to that impulse? I have two intital thoughts and not sure which is more applicable- if it is the ability of these software apps to filter and distort and the seduction of that ability or if it is about the desire to conceal or hide. That desire may relate to how public the forum was- but I didn’t feel that vulnerable from this distance- perhaps if I was a Camberwell I might have felt differently.

containers

I haven’t been as reflective as I’d like to be over the past few weeks. I get busy, I research but don’t spend enough time reflecting. I’m amazed at how varied my colleagues are in their research- it’s great to actually read their weblogs and follow their thinking.


November 23, 1974: Carole Conde

Carole Conde was still making sculpture in 1974.

She installed a very minimal sculpture comprised of two long wooden beams on the outside patio of the gallery through to the spring of 1975. The piece consisted of two, long 8×8″ beams each probably about 16′ long. They ran along the outside patio of the gallery on Coburg Road. One sat flush on the brick ground of the patio, parallel to the low railing delineating the elevated patio and the second rested on the top edge of the end of the first meeting the ground at the far end, extending the overall length of the piece.

A very simple elegant gesture, sculpture as a material practice.

Novermber 19, 1976: Alan Barkley, Jim Schaeufele Recent Sculpture

Alan Barkley makes large wooden sculptures, Jim Schaeufele makes small ones.

November 17, 1975: Harris Edelman

Harris Edelman lives in this beautiful loft on the top floor of a building just below the citadel. He has this great idea to float hot air balloons made out of big polyethylene bags from the dry cleaners business downstairs.

It’s a calm evening and we’re all meeting at his loft where he has fabricated these crossed balsa wood structures which keep the bag open enough at the base not to melt the plastic as the hot air from a candle  slowly inflate the bag. We let six of them float off glowing and flickering into the night.

November 17, 2007: Making Artistic Inquiry Visible

Reflecting further on “action research” methodologies and the differences between creative production and artistic research in terms of what is actually produced, I am critical of how the written aspects of representing research in practice based visual arts have distorted some current art making. Any assessment process perverts behavior. I’m curious how a systematic approach to research and documenting research methodologies have skewed some contemporary art practices, and how the documentation of those practices within the University have transformed and distorted art made within the University context.

We need to be clear on the differences between creative production and research- as it is a complex ecology. I’m curious if creators can be researchers and can researchers be creators- and what is the difference? This is particularly interesting considering universities are full of smart people, who figure out how systems work, and as there are large amounts of funding that are at play. Is this question just about language or is it part of a more subtle or radical paradigm shift. Within Canada we are increasingly seeing how Canada Council is funding artist/creators and increasingly they are diverting artists employed in university towards Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council funded grant opportunities for researchers within institutions.

The challenge for artists is how to be clearer on the differences between creative production and visual arts research. How can we come up with language to articulate research in the visual arts, when research questions are often not clearly articulated until much later on in the artistic process. Traditional research attempts to describe the questions at the start. Artists tend to come to understand the research question much later or after the fact and more often rely on others- critics, curators and writers to articulate what has been investigated. As artists we don’t want to be just illustrating an idea or visualizing theory.

How do we assess and judge practice-based research in visual arts? How do we promote excellence in artistic inquiry and what are the determining factors? Can we propose that artworks that are held in world-class esteem and are an essential point of reference for others could be a measure of excellence? Do we use the same criteria as the art world, where success in the markets and the museums can be seen as the arbiters and determiners of quality?

November 17, 2007: weekly reflections

Busy week. I thought we had an excellent discussion on research methodologies and how they are not really established for art. Jonathan used Monday’s chat to describe and discuss “action research.” He posted a quote: “To do action research is to plan, act, observe and reflect more carefully, more systematically, and more rigorously than one usually does in everyday life.” (Kemmis & McTaggart, 1992).

He proposed other methodologies- comparative, experimental, historical and gave examples of these approaches. Then proposed- exploratory, testing out and problem solving- and we discussed whether exhibiting was dissemination or testing and problem solving. Jonathan proposed that by exhibiting and “along side your actual artistic practice you test, assess audience reaction and interaction and attempt to make a judgement against work of a similar nature” and this makes sense as “action research” which was originally defined for practice based social science research. As an artist you become a “reflective practitioner” in that you learn from your practice by reflecting on it as a way to inform your future work as an artist.

This makes sense as a way of describing practice based art research.

Wednesday was the Digital Arts Forum. From a distance it was hard to understand how our short projects were received, but I enjoyed viewing each piece on the forum website that John set up.  I noted that a number of the video images used a digitially processed video image that distorted, inverted or obscured what we were seeing. I am curious what leads to the urge to distort and the values that underlie that need.

November 16, 2008

Two days of rain, I’ve been shortlisted for my Mapping and Marking proposal for the Kingsway. I’m waiting to go to the City’s Works Yard to look at 18′ fluted light poles.

Here’s an image of Shigeru Uchida’s beautiful, egg shaped luovo floor lamp.

November 15, 2008: thinking about luminaires

I’ve been shortlisted for Mapping and Marking Vancouver 2010, Olympic and Paralympic Public Art Project based on a proposal that I made for slow-shifting coloured LED lights set on the top of six, 18 foot high poles on the Kingsway- three to the east and three to the west of Knight Street. I have to prepare for a technical review of my project for December 10th and then based on their feedback, to give a presentation to the selection panel early in January.

In my application I said that: my recent research focuses on observable, real-time coloured light events and environments. I am interested in exploring very slow-shifting coloured lights in exterior spaces. My particular interest is at twilight, as daylight fades and artificial light takes over the illumination of an environment.

Lots of details to clarify, but the biggest are the shapes of the lights- the luminaires that will sit on the tops of these poles. There’s a lot of urban visual noise all around them.

poles2

Friday, November 14, 1983

In the winter of 1983/84 Glenn Branca came to Vancouver and played at the Legion on Commercial Street. My friend Colin Griffiths was playing with him and probably organized some extra local the guitar players. Colin was living in New York at the time came out west for a visit traveling with the Glenn Branca Band. I remember there was at least 12 guitars, which probably included Thurston Moore, Ned Sublette and Lee Ranaldo all playing in unison, creating a wall of sound that built to a very loud din of dissonant harmonic overtones.

I remember having this Lesson No. 1 for Electric Guitar album (99 Records)- what a great cover! A few years ago I found a copy of Glenn Branca: Symphony No. 3 (Gloria) in a used record store on Granville Street. Listening to it now I can recall that evening at the Legion so well- the ambiance the excitement of hearing something radical, “no-wave” something extreme- underground musical research from New York.

Thinking about it now, it reminds me of hearing Charlemagne Palestine playing Strumming Music (1974) on a grand piano in the dark, in the dark at a small auditorium at Dalhousie University in Halifax in the mid 70’s where the only light in the room was from the kretek (Indonesian clove cigarettes) he was chain-smoking as he played.

I’m not sure how his entry from 1983 snuck in here, but Glen Branca does remain seminal as an artist who has managed to stick to his uncompromising vision. It is great to see that now he is being recognized for his particular clarity. The same would be true for Charlemagne Palestine.

November 14, 1974: Sandra Meigs’ Dogwatch Works

Sandra’s installation at the Miller Brothers Piano Room, 1889 Granvile Street was a two-night installation where Sandra waited for a dog to appear. The door to the space the future Anna Leonowens Gallery was open. The space was derelect and had been empty for many months and was about to be renovated.

NSCAD has just taken posession of this and a number of other buildings and renovations were about to start sometime in the next few months. I remember how cold it was as there was no heat in the builing. Sandra had a coat on, she was waiting on a chair on top of a table talking to people as they came into the space.

I helped John Hutcheson print Sandra’s book: Dogwatch Works on a grey stock, it was a small book with lots of reproductions and short texts. I had a couple of copies that I kept for many years, but now I’m not sure what I did with them. Sandra probably still has some.

November 12, 2007: entopic graphomania

I’m finding myself thinking about ways to represent visual information. I have been researching tag clouds and wondering if there are some more sophisticated way to represent research. I have been drawing complex connecting networks in an attempt to visualize the rhizomatic relationships between ideas.

The voronoi mathematical progression is one way. After looking for some art references I came across Dolfi Trost, a Romanian Surrealist artist. In 1945 he coined entoptic graphomania, where a drawing was made by connecting dots based on the marks, flaws and impurities in a blank sheet of paper.

graphomania.jpg

November 9, 2007: Julian Jans

What a rocky week! I spent most of the weekend figuring out how to edit and add audio onto a QuickTime movie I had made of a fly-by of the IDS space from the SoftImage XSI files. The first time I posted it to YouTube, I lost the first 3 seconds which was a problem, so it took a while to figure out a work-around.

I’m very interested in Julian’s weblog- it’s beautifully designed, using Ruby on Rails. I don’t really know enough about programming to understand how scaffolding works.

Monday we had what I thought was a productive chat. One of our tasks seems to be to design a poster. To me, designing something by committee is not the best way to get good design. I wasn’t clear on the purpose of the poster and I have no real idea of what is appropriate as I am so far away I don’t really know the context there at Camberwell. I don’t feel I can make an informed opinion.

The wiki has gone a little off the rails- in that the discussion aspects have now moved onto the wiki pages. I’m not quite clear how to get it back on track- it now looks like a bulletin board. We need to figure out how to address that. I’m still excited about wikis and open source options. I’ve been looking at ning as a possibility for a social space. I’m going to explore this further. I’ve been thinking about one of the key qualities of the internet- that it is viral- that it spreads and multiplies, and what that implies for digital arts.

November 1974: Ann Prim

Helping John Hutcheson print Ann Prim’s book Contusions on the Heidelburg on Coburg Road.

November 8, 2008

Jimi Hendrix, Rainy Day, Dream Away (still raining, still dreaming) on Electric Ladyland

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