“the lamps are going out all over Europe, we shall not see them lit again in our life-time”
Sir Edward Grey, foreign secretary 1914
Seven days of light piercing the London sky to commemorate the anniversary of WWI
Artangel commission by Ryoji Ikeda acted as the beacon it represented
We are drawn to the light
I have been writing and reading about James Turrell for my dissertation. His use of light as medium for his work is poetic and magical.
Light is the materialization of energy. We are naturally eaters of light, our whole body is scattered with stray rods and cones outside of the retinal area which makes our relationship to light very primal.
Our bodies are made from matter fed by the fruits of photosynthesis.
Luckily we don’t suffer instant death like all the moths and flying insects
but it was a chance to think about the brutality of war and those that did suffer a terrible fate
With all that is happening now in Palestine, Iraq, Ukraine and elsewhere those words spoken a hundred years ago resonate, what progress have we made
when will the lamps be lit again
Social adhesion was a topic in our discussions during a workshop run by Sean Lynch at Flat Time House.
Flat Time House was the studio home of John Latham who died in 2006. Before he died he declared the house a living sculpture, naming it FTHo after his theory of time, ‘Flat Time’.
Flat Time House aims to make a wider audience aware of Latham’s work and ideas, his spirit of discovery, and through his example to understand and appreciate the crucial role of art and the artist in society.
Starting from a series of photographs of Bellenden Road taken by John Latham in 1986 a weekend workshop led by the generous and entertaining artist Sean Lynch aimed to speculate about how urban space and environment is constructed, and what allegories and associations we can draw from it. It was purely about discussion of ideas and sharing stories. Sean’s own work is about urban environments and interventions, looking at the crafts people involved in construction as well as how art is received within a community. He has extensive knowledge of the O’Shea brothers who were stone carvers in Oxford revered at one moment and shunned the next. Details of his exhibition on the subject at Modern Art Oxford here
Sean is brimming with idiosyncratic stories gleaned from newspapers or local characters telling of encounters with faeries and magic bushes or pub crawls as performance art.
Sean also talked about Robert Smithson who went to Mexico and was captivated by the delapidation of his hotel rather than the Mayan Ruins that most people would expect to be the focus of such an expedition.
Read the enigmatic essay ‘Yucatan is Elsewhere’ at this link – essay
Reminded me of visiting the ruins of a hotel on the Azores earlier this year
For the workshop we were asked to bring along our own thoughts on public space.
I read a section from my in progress dissertation about my visit to Paradise Industrial Estate.
We went for a couple of walks around Peckham looking at the local architecture and the council interventions.
We were joined on one walk by vocal local campaigner Eileen Conn who has a dream for a new society based on community and gave us the low down on the Bellenden Road area make over.
John Latham’s wife Barbara turned up too with more stories.
We walked down to the green to look at where in the 1760’s William Blake had his vision of shining angels in the tree.
For a local community project Artist, The Guy – created a mural on the side of a house for the Dulwich Festival 1993 with the help of local volunteers.
Great news – Sean Lynch will be representing Ireland at the 2015 Venice Biennale.
Also interested in how the values of society are articulated in public spaces is 2014 RCA graduate James Seow.
His beautiful inked etching plates on show at Anise Gallery depict iconic public squares such as 9/11 Memorial Plaza, Tiananmen Square and Paternoster Square in extruded structural form giving them the aura of sacred space.
The gallery exhibits chosen artists that capture architecture through a variety of architectural forms.
Delighted to have work selected by Gordon Cheung, Paul Coldwell, David Cleaton-Roberts and Eileen Cooper for the neo:print prize in Bolton.
A great team of selectors so feel really proud.
An extra bonus was to win an award sponsored by Hawthorn Printmaker Supplies for my etching ‘Forest of Eden’
Rei Matsushima who has just graduated from the RCA also won a prize for her wonderful print ‘Mentaiko (cod roe)’
A series of events were held as a celebration of ‘Myth’ at the Royal Opera House.
The ‘breath of life’ and ‘the sacred fire within’ could be experienced through yoga in the great hall
A screening of the stunning film interpretation of Leda and the Swan featuring Eric Underwood and Claire Calvert dancing in Richmond Park
A sudden blow: the great wings beating still
Above the staggering girl, her thighs caressed
By the dark webs, her nape caught in his bill, He holds her helpless breast upon his breast.
How can those terrified vague fingers push
The feathered glory from her loosening thighs?
And how can body, laid in that white rush,
But feel the strange heart beating where it lies?
A shudder in the loins engenders there
The broken wall, the burning roof and tower
And Agamemnon dead.
Being so caught up,
So mastered by the brute blood of the air,
Did she put on his knowledge with his power
Before the indifferent beak could let her drop?
Inspired by Yeats 1923 poem, choreographer Charlotte Edmonds wanted to convey the entwining bodies and passion of the encounter
Matt Collishaw also sought to convey burning passions
The dangers of desire.
Bill Viola gave us suffering for transcendence.
Andrea Büttner is interested in ideas of spirituality on a quieter scale.
The ‘Little Works’ of the Carmelite nuns of Notting Hill, ‘The Little Way’ of St. Thérèse of Lisieux, a carmelite saint which influenced the delicate drawings of Gwen John.
Noticing the small and lowly she makes connections between the humility of the nuns with the unobtrusive yet persistent spreading of moss.
Lives lived in the background.
She discussed her ideas with insightful curator Chus Martinez, Head of the Art Institute, Basel at Tate Britain. She was launching her book Hidden Marriages which draws inspiration from the National Museum of Wales collection of drawings by Gwen John (1876–1939) and the extensive collection of mosses preserved in its herbarium.
Much of her work makes connections between art history and social or ethical issues, with a particular interest in notions of poverty, shame, vulnerability and sexuality, and the belief systems that underpin them. Although working a hundred years apart, Gwen John and Andrea Büttner share an interest in the spiritual, social and aesthetic notions of ‘littleness.’
Mosses fall under the term cryptogam (meaning hidden sexuality). Moss is also described as a ‘lower plant’— implying a lesser, or more primitive, evolutionary development than flowering or ‘higher plants.’ Hidden Marriages: Gwen John and Moss draws these two seemingly unconnected collection areas together, making links between the reproductive processes of ‘lower plants’ and the contested sexuality of Gwen John; between littleness as an aesthetic, biological, and social discourse; between the scientific ordering of the Museum and the harmony and beauty that John sought in her work; and, ultimately, the way institutions ascribe relative importance to objects, ideas and people.
Büttner makes large woodcuts about lowly things like tents.
She said she views her woodcuts almost as brochures or advertisements to her videos.
She had some great duo scope images on slides and in her book of moss collectors intently surveying the ground, heads down, eyes lowered, kneeling as though in prayer