Wednesday, 28 October 2015

Artist in Residence @ the Tunnel Gallery - Tonbridge School (Part 2)

During the second week of my Residency I put up the following:




And posted the following on the school blog:

"My Art Days Are Over"

"I'm no good at Art"

"I wouldn't know what to make"

"I was really bad at Art at school"

"I need to make something perfect" ...

All responses I've had when I suggest people come to the Tunnel to contribute to the sculpture installation. Which is why I've set up the poster ...
This in response to all kinds of preconceptions that were inhibiting both students and staff. These inhibitions and preconceptions will/should continue to evaporate as the project evolves over the second half of the term.
Other kinds of preconceptions - among the adults mainly rather than the boys; the younger generation seems to have no trouble with these - have been about the 'expectation' of what Art is or should be; boxes to be ticked before something can be called art/Art. Perhaps this Tunnel project may become an opening into beginning to question such preconceptions ...

My aim with this project is to bring about an installation, the main focus being the process of making, with the end product being an imprint, a trace of the creative process. So it's about the experience of creating something: from the contributors' perspective, creating something individually that will contribute to the making of something together, and from my own personal perspective, creating something together, the 'bringing-about' (orchestration) of which constitutes my individual 'creation'/art work. 

By which I mean that what is paramount here is the social aspect of this sculpture project, both the experience each individual has when they are in the Tunnel and the experience the sculpture installation creates by being a communal undertaking. What is paramount is the experience everyone takes away with them and what remains as a memory. 

The sculpture each individual creates during that experience is a poetic object which constitutes the imprint of their experience and which, when set up as part of the installation, will play its part in the joint enterprise, the community effort. One voice in the choir. A choir of individually poetic objects.

And here is how the beginnings of the installation looked after the first batch of firing a week ago:




 And this is how it looks at the moment, after the second batch of firing:







As you can see from the images above, some pieces demand more space around them; they have a certain presence that requires more breathing space.
Another aspect that is becoming apparent as I play around with the placing of the individual pieces is how narratives begin to emerge as a result of my placement choices. And I think these narratives will be different for every viewer.

The pieces that are too small or delicate to be on the floor, or need to be seen closer to eye-level are displayed on a long shelf:







Each piece is individual; each piece reflects what each person is about and/or their experience in the Tunnel. I am setting some parameters with regard to materials, to retain the tone I envisage for this project, which in turn dovetails with my own work overall (and ultimately my aesthetic). Indeed I spent the first few days of my Residency organizing the Tunnel space, bringing in some of my own work, and I have dotted various bits and pieces around in the Tunnel. And, as one boy put it, that sets the tone for the whole installation because you instinctively tune into the vibe.
So each piece is a poetic object in its own right because it is what that individual wanted to create at that time. Some tune into the idea of seeking to bring out the nature, the character of the material; letting the material speak - a core principle in my own work. Others seek/need to have more control. Many of them tune into the abstract form, some remain with the representational.

So, with this project, I'm inviting the Tonbridge School community to become (my) partners through creating a sculpture installation together. 

And by focussing on the 'together' there is a strong sense of bridging the gap between Art and life. Art can bring people together; brings connections. That is one of the joys of Art.


Tuesday, 27 October 2015

Artist in Residence @ The Tunnel Gallery - Tonbridge School (Part 1)

Well, I've now had three weeks in the Tunnel and they have been three very full weeks indeed.

First and foremost, however, a clarification on my closing paragraph in the previous post (26 August) "I plan, in my next post probably, to try to give a clearer, more succinct insight into what this Spheres project entails from my perspective". My mind-space has been and continues to be completely occupied by the Artist in Residency and to try and do justice to a clear and inspired synopsis on the Spheres project seems an impossibility at the moment. It will have to wait until my focus returns on my studio here at home - just after the Christmas holiday I would think. In the meantime, the 'Series/Themes' list I have recently added below the 'Blog Archive' on the right on the Home Page now includes a Fragility Spheres heading, which lists 8 labelled blog posts related to the Spheres. These posts give the contemporaneous account of how the Spheres project evolved. Less clear, probably, than a synopsis, but more alive, I would think ...

So, back to the Residency.
I'm currently on two weeks' Half Term break, although I'm going in on both Mondays and Fridays to give the non-teaching staff, who work through the holiday, a chance to come into the Tunnel to add their contribution.
Beginning with the beginning, this is the poster I put up in and around the Art Department building to invite (read encourage?) the students and staff to contribute to the project:



10 MINUTE
ART BURST
IN
THE TUNNEL


And here is the link to the first school blog post: 10 Minute Art Burst

The school blog post was headed by the same picture with the following text:


Just 10 minutes. That's all it need take from your busy schedule to contribute to the Tunnel sculpture installation. A quick BURST of creative energy to add something of you to what could become something inspired and inspiring: the whole school represented in one art installation. 
You can create something small, something big, in clay, in paper, in expandable foam, in plaster, with wire mesh, with string, wire, wooden sticks, or with found-objects, with words, ...
10 MINUTES ... or longer if you like.