Wednesday, 30 September 2015
Garry Barker: Exhibition Coming Up
Thursday, 24 September 2015
Collaborative Drawing: A Proposal
Michael Dumontier & Neil Farber: A Royal Art
Lodge members collaboration
In 2004 the magazine ‘D is
for Drawing’ published a pilot issue. The then editor Yane Calovski set out the
areas of drawing the magazine would cover and one of them was at the time
termed, ‘democratic expression’ stating that ‘in the primacy of the practice
lies the context for drawing as a successful collaborative practice.’ About
half way through the magazine was an essay by the curator Alex Baker called
‘Odd Fellows’, on a collaborative exhibition that had been held at the Morris
Gallery in Pennsylvania in 2003. This essay introduced me to two things. The
first was the work of Marcel Dzama, a Canadian artist who works in the field of
visual narrative and the second was an introduction to an alternative approach
to collaborative working.
Marcel Dzama
Baker set out the premise
for the ‘Odd Fellows’ exhibition as follows, ‘bring together artists who share
a similar aesthetic, an affinity for drawing and a track record of
collaboration and let them do what they do best and see what happens.’
The two other artists
selected for the exhibition besides Dzama were Michael Dumontier, and Andrew
Jeffery Wright. Dzama and Dumontier had already worked together as members of
the Royal Art Lodge, based in Winnipeg and Wright was a member of
Philadelphia’s ‘Space 1026’ another collective.
Andrew Jeffery Wright
I was intrigued to see how
these collectives worked and how they could benefit the artists involved, so I
decided to look at the work of the Royal Art Lodge in more detail. It was founded in 1996.The majority
of the work produced was drawing, which often incorporated text. The
group would meet once a week on an evening, at least three of the members would
then contribute to drawings made in a spontaneous response to a previous artist’s
work, and then when it was decided that an image was finished it would be date
stamped. It seemed as if by working as a collective they were becoming far more
successful than working as individuals. The work had a freshness and
originality that could only be maintained by a group of people stimulating each
other’s imagination and testing its limits. It was interesting to hear what
they had to say about working in collaboration and one of the things that
intrigued me was that they formed the group as a response to living in
Winnipeg. The city had no track record of being an ‘art’ centre and by forming
a group they felt both protected from the philistines they believed themselves
to be surrounded by and found it easier to make work in an environment of
mutual support. The fact that the work developed a unique style because of this
collaborative way of working seemed secondary, just a result of the process.
What they also found though, was because there were several people with
different communication skills, those more quiet practitioners, would find
themselves promoted by those who were very good at organizing shows and getting
work out there. The group had solved one of those perpetual conundrums, the
artists who just quietly get on with work are usually awful at self promotion,
and artists that have a very good set of communication skills, are often out
there communicating rather than getting on with work in the studio.
Leeds now has several groups that work collaboratively
and I think these are of real benefit to the city. Try and get to see what is
going on above Wharf Chambers on Wharf Street, both the artists’ collaboratives
‘Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun’ and ‘Leeds Weirdo Club’ are based
there.
Collaboration can also be something done at a distance
and can be a good way of making contacts with other artists and seeing yourself
as a ‘global’ practitioner.
The artist Gabriela
Boiangiu has recently initiated a project called ‘Drawing Dialogue’. The idea
for this began when she was working in Dalga near Craiova in Romania. While she
was there a left behind drawing was ‘finished’ by an artist who found it, decided
it was interesting and responded to it by making a drawing in dialogue with
what was already there. This intrigued her in particular because the new
drawing seemed to say something about two very different things at the same
time. Gabriela is though also interested in location, and the fact that an
entirely visual dialogue could be conducted at a distance. The other issue
about location is that the one you are in is always specific. A bedroom in
Leeds is totally different to a studio in Paris.
This is the proposal:
Stage one
Send Gabriela your postal
address via email to gabi_art@hotmail.com as a registration of your interest.
Stage two
Gabriela will pair up
registered artists by location, looking to find interesting geographical links.
Stage three
You are contacted by email
with the postal address of an artist you have been paired with.
Stage four
You make 6 A2 size unfinished
drawings that respond in some way to your specific location and post them to
your artist and then wait for 6 drawings to come to you. (Drawing can include collage or colour, be inventive)
Stage five
After they arrive, you respond to your 6 artist’s
drawings and ‘finish’ them.
Stage six
You send the 6 finished
drawings to Gabriela who will send an address to post them to nearer the time.
Once you have registered
your interest, you will have two months to complete the 6 drawings and send
them in the post to your paired artist. Gabriela will pair people up as the
project advances.
Final deadline for
registering an interest in participation: 30 March 2016
There is no funding for this project, so
this might cost around £20 all together with paper, materials and tubes sent in
the post world wide.
Remember if you do register
an interest you will need a fixed postal address and will have to be committed
to the project. As a student, if you were unsure of where you might be living
over the summer, you could always use your home address or have something
delivered to you at college.
Gabriela’s project was
initially intended for existing professional artists, and she has extended the
invitation to include students, this of course is a risk to the project, as it
is vital that all participants take full responsibility to ensure that no work
is lost or drawings become marooned without a responder. If you do decide to
participate in this, please make sure I don’t get egg on my face for suggesting
the project would be of interest to students. Participation would of course be
useful for your PPP modules.
It is also proposed that if the project is successful there will be an exhibition of the work done. As to where, that could be in Romania or elsewhere in Europe.
See also:
A dialogic drawing experiment (seen on a trip to Europe)
Monday, 14 September 2015
Support for collaborative drawing practices
Those of you interested in developing a collaborative drawing practice might want to look at the Exchange and Draw archive.
In
particular the archive hosts examples of a dialogical process of making drawings that
were swapped and collated in a 'take-it-in-turns'
fashion.
Click here Working collaboratively can be a wonderful way of extending your practice and it can take the pressure off you always having to come up with your own ideas.
It can also be done at a distance and there are examples of artists collaborating by post as well as via the internet.
You
can download some interesting writings on collaborative drawing research from the Tracy
website here
Swarm Intelligence
Swarm Intelligence have done some interesting large scale collaborative drawing work: seeEven if you dont like the idea of collaborating with others, you can use the methods employed by collaborators to open out your own creative practice. For instance you can begin to work with two totally different drawing styles and explore how the two can come together. Do they gradually merge, or can you make images that hold together more than one visual language? We all have very different aspects of our own personalities, and collaboration with two or more of these can be quite fruitful. Our world is full of competing and very different visual languages, you may want to make work that reflects this.
Paul McCarthy
The drawing above by Paul McCarthy is an interesting coming
together of a range of visual languages, from the cool precision of technical
drawing, to references to cartoon imagery and expressive mark making. He isnt collaborating with anyone else, however it feels as if he is trying to reconcile several different aspects of his research with what he feels is the current state of the world.
See also:
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