Reflexive

Exploratory Project - Wk 1 - 18/02/2018- 24/02/2018

      • Week 1 Feb 18th Complete Mapping the territory, print large scale mindmap to work in to, use to outline concepts, generate ideas and moving forward. Produce outline plan first draft, produce some experiments regarding initial thoughts from current practice. 

    This week has been productive. I created, filled and bound 8 books. I then went on to dip some of the books in white paint mixtures. I built my initial time outlines for both the contextual study and the exploratory project (although I would like to break these down further). I also continued to add to my Contextual Map which I had printed out large scale and at the end of the week attended a peer critique session (the last one, the course has now finished, Yay!) which felt extremely brutal; more on that later. Overall though there has been a lot of reflection, mainly through discussion with peers and some realisations to take forward through the next few assignments.

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    To start the week I conducted a brief audit of work up until now; looking back over the Form Fracture Frame task my book explorations stood out to me. Being in a personally anxious time at the moment, the security the books provided was calling out, so I proceeded to channel my nervous energies in to book creation. I loved it. I didn’t overthink content, working with pre-existing fractures from my sketchbook and archive piles.

[vimeo 257514583 w=640 h=360]

Katie Venner-Woodbridge, hand bound books from Katie Venner-Woodbridge on Vimeohttps://player.vimeo.com/video/257514583

[vimeo 257514551 w=640 h=360]

Katie Venner-Woodbridge, 50 page Vellum book from Katie Venner-Woodbridge on Vimeohttps://player.vimeo.com/video/257514551

I believed initially I came up with the concept of dipping the books into white paint to discuss the ‘whitewashing’ of history, of my family and myself. The fact that we don’t get a say in our histories, only in our futures but that realistically they are also somewhat constricted by our geographies and biographies. However, reevaluating the process, and slowing down my thinking, this has more to do with the inaccessibility of my own thoughts and feelings, how I restrict sharing personal aspects and struggle with articulation, which can make my work inaccessible to others. An internal binding. I self-censor…and massively self-censor my artwork. The colour white is somewhat irrelevant other than I did not want a symbolic association, but in a cultural context, most colours do have some associations, so it is difficult to avoid this.

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Some of the books were partially dipped so with pages can still be slightly seen in the gaps, others were utterly submerged rendering the pages and work inside eligible.

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In the critique the self-censorship issue became glaringly obvious. I asked them to ‘cold read’ the work and feedback with their initial thoughts before I explained the context. I asked this to see if it could be read without text. My peers expressed frustration and annoyance about not being able to access my work, not understanding or seeing the point. There was no read for them without my context, which I was refusing to give. I was somewhat pleased that they were frustrated as this is a feeling I embed in my work, but I don’t feel they were frustrated for the right reasons. When I gave my highly edited context regarding everyday life, routines and chaos they couldn’t see it. Something was missing and they began to write me off. I was dying inside, it hit me then that this was a ‘do or die’ moment and I blurted out my real inspiration, my reasons for moving through the work. I instantly regretted it and my emotions began to take over, trying to hold it together I listened to the feedback and realized it changed. They softened slightly and said it made more sense. The advice offered was to make more use of it (my obsessive nature, anxiety and compulsion), to time stamp and create work to a routine. Log work and mass create. They offered artist suggestions and support and agreed to confidentiality, as I was afraid of judgment and being held back. It was one of the most painful things I have ever done, I am not sure if it was the right thing to do and I still feel sore and manipulated in to handing over that info. BUT I do see the positivity in their feedback. It makes sense; it brings in the links I miss in my fast thinking.

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So a couple of days later and I have discussed the feedback with outside parties, I have gone over the really negative points and looked at what they could have reflected about the audience rather than taking everything entirely personally. Moving forward I’m thinking about risks for the project ahead….

Here's some honesty…I don't believe I can draw very well. I have always wanted to be a fabulous drawer, I have friends who can render a realistic portrait in biro in minutes, but I have to work at it... really work at it, and it frustrates me. I hate feeling frustrated, so I tend to quit and move on to something instantly gratifying. I know that’s why my work has moved into abstraction, its less risky and I feel less vulnerable. It's also quick and fulfils the need and desire for meditation and release.

Thinking about this project and one of the risks that keep coming up is this aspect of drawing. It feels like a huge risk to move into drawing for this project, and it didn't make much sense until yesterday after the critique. I was thinking about a comment regarding embracing this everyday aspect, building routine into my work so it is visible and it connected me to a piece I did at college. We were asked to paint a large (150cm x 200cm) image of a ladder we had been using for activities; I was using a small 3 step set, as I don't like heights. Everyone painted these large-scale, elaborate images, abstracted and full of colour; I painted the whole paper black and drew my ladder slightly smaller than it actually was and reasonably realistically. I got very mixed reviews, and they were disappointed by my lack of 'flare'. At the time I was deep in depression and finding it hard to deal with the outlandish activities the course demanded, and I actually left and joined a smaller class at a different college. I regret that decision, most of the activities I participated in during those few weeks have stayed with me, and I return to them for inspiration, but c'est la vie.

My point is, I found some catharsis at the time in painting those steps as mundane as they appeared. Thinking about building routine into my work I looked around my room and realised that I have a tendency to purchase simple objects that fulfil a need, I keep life simple and mundane, flare is left to artwork, singing and dancing, my objects and possessions are basic. What if my risk is to draw these objects, use them for my repetition and pattern beginnings? Key points from critique:

  • Too many ideas in one project
  • Keep it simple and dive in further
  • Really push the boundaries of routine and repetition by assigning times or routine to work etc. Make it obsessive, mountains of work.
  • Avoid bringing in subjects of race and history - allow others to add that if they wish.
  • Look at maps and the routine travels
  • Find artists that have obsessively mapped/logged work
  • Think Sharif and Kusama

IN PROGRESS - Contextual Essay - Starting Points & Outline

Deadlines:

  • Mon 26 Feb: Writing Workshop
  • Mon 12 Mar: Tutorial AR
  • Mon 19 Mar: Tutorial DK
  • Mon 16 Apr: Peer Review
  • Mon 30 Apr: Tutorial AR
  • Mon 14 May: DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION

The Contextual essay is a critical and contextual review of your work, positioning it within contemporary practice and detailing the relationship between theory and your own practice. You need to demonstrate an understanding of the development of your work, and analyse the impact of the research activity that you have been engaged in.What are your starting points? – be specificWhat has my work been about? The fundamentals of the Everyday - to date practices has addressed a concern for the decay of social decorum and the prevalence of neglect for the Everyday. - systematic disintegration leading to encasing the chaos in a confined space. How is communication and daily practices affected in environments where these vary due to cultural expectations? Is this discord accepted and how?Looking at: Henri Lefebvre in the Critique of Everyday Life, the bourgeoisie and their elevation from the everyday. Does this elevation exists today: does status or wealth create a simplified routine?; what are the commonalities and differences according to sociocultural factors?; or are the basic components of living so intrinsic that routines are fundamentally equivalent? Lefebvre, Rhythmanalysis creates a science of analysing daily rhythms,  inherent in my work. How do the rhythms of daily experience filter in to art? how has this shown up historically? how this affects artists and the current market?What are you curious about?What am I reading, what is drawing me in? What artist am I curious about? Currently reading on Colonialism, deconstructing Colonialism, post-Colonialism, Orientialism, 'whitewashing', the narrative of history, identity politics; these subjects specific to the gulf or UK 'commonwealth' - that term in itsself. Coexistence and intergroup cooperation. Transience, permanent impermanence, 'migrant, expat, national'. Time and consumption of time in routine. Routine, culture and place. Negotiation of routine, time. The chaos of routine, how routines are shaped, deconstructed and reconstructed. Textiles and routine, domesticity, the sense of touch and everyday life, pattern, repetition and fracturing/fragmenting.Artist in the region, looking at pattern, similar concepts, or materials? Whats more imaportant to my practice? Can I find artists that come under all of those headings? Do I use contemporary artists, peers? or art historical references? Do they need to be highly successful or can they be emerging?What strategies will you adopt?How Am I going to do this? Be structured and methodical, keeps clear notes - probably best to use this platform so it's in one place. Feel self conscious about that but can use passwords. Keep to the timeline, reference it regularly, make a time planner to map out slots during the weeks to accommodate each task for the course and other commitments. Thank goodness reading groups end this week! What challenges do you anticipate?Time, organisation, overwhelm, distraction, feelings of imposterism, insecurity, comparison, fear. An outline:

  • Week 1 Feb 18th Complete Mapping the territory, print large scale mindmap to work in to, use to outline concepts, generate ideas and moving forward. Produce outline plan first draft, initial thoughts from current practice. 
  • Week 2 Feb 25th Begin research reading and gathering, use Textile reader (Hemmings, 2012) and Everyday Reader (Highmore, 2002); texts related to touch, histories, colonialism, colour, routine, textile usage. Explore artists already working around my exploration. Mon 26 Feb: Writing Workshop
  • Week 3 Mar 4th  Reflect on current production, note relationship to readings, narrow down to key artists/works/methods.
  • Week 4 Mar 11th Continue with reading, reflect immediately to stay on top and compare with each other and practice - make links, why is it relevant? - Mon 12 Mar: Tutorial AR  
  • Week 5 Mar 18th Be aware of burn out or possible stopping points, seek support if feeling overwhelmed. Mon 19 Mar: Tutorial DK  ART WEEK DUBAI 
  • Week 6 Mar 25th begin to construct layout and possible structure of text
  • Week 7 Apr 1st HALF WAY POINT good time to review the current body of research and writing, what is successful and what isn't. Can anything be 'rescued' or needs to be cast off? is it fulfilling the initial concept and ideas? Does it need to? Has it produced new ways of thinking? Changed direction? What unexpected things have emerged? Does this still feel true? Am I doing something that needs to be discussed? Am I relevant?
  • Week 8 Apr 8th Working on draft for peer review, have a large majority of document ready. Possible proof read from outside source. Peer support.
  • Week 9 Apr 15th Work on document utilising feedback from peers.  Mon 16 Apr: Peer Review
  • Week 10 Apr 22nd Keeping writing, revising, checking. Prepare for tutorial with AR next week
  • Week 11 Apr 29th  Work towards completion using critique from tutorial. Mon 30 Apr: Tutorial AR  
  • Week 12 May 6th check document and referencing meet criteria. spell check and final proof reads.
  • Week 13 May 13th  Deadlines for contextual study and PPP.
  • Mon 4 Jun: End of unit review AR/CW 

  

16/10/2017 - Pecha Kucha Presentations - feedback

Pecha Kucha Presentation Seminar – online 5pm-8pm BST

Feedback from my presentation – notes:

Connection of private & public – domesticity – weaving/embroidery – reference to connection of everyday, layers looking through interesting – as an additional layer the light altering the work.

Shells – labour – domestic labour – subtly strong point – weaving an unexpected addition – why was the weaving added to the shell – becomes an uncanny object – common on windowsills so association present – time & attention – issue with lack of labeling – Gary Neil Kennedy, artist, dictates the label to be part of art work.

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In first half of session we covered issues via the presentations, such as:

  • Do sales equal success?

  • Illustration/painting are they different?

  • How long will the work sustain you?

  • Can it be too precious?

  • Flattery, validation, control, association, appropriation, truth, composition, context.

Thoughts:

Feedback was useful, do need to question why weaving is important to the shells, its can be seen as quite unrelated and perhaps why its seen as decorative.

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not for citation or circulation

28/09/2017 - Work review with thoughts

Work upload in preparation for tutorial 02/10/2017

Sketchbooks: video of two current sketchbooks.

Katie Venner-Woodbridge | Sketchbook from Katie Venner-Woodbridge on Vimeo

Link to Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/217086445

Watching this video of my sketchbook, I feel uncomfortable about the first half as I feel I have moved on so much from this. It makes me cringe a little. My research really developed from the second sketchbook onwards and had a positive impact on my work. I do, however, feel that it’s time to revisit starting points and clarify the connection between subject and research as it’s feeling disconnected. The style can remain the same; in the essence that they are abstracted and fragmented patterns but I feel that the initial subject matter of architecture may not be the right one.


Retrieval Practice:

Retrieval Practice
Completed March 2017
cotton thread, ceramic
Various, Max: W6cm L7.5cm D2cm
Exhibited in ‘Made in Tashkeel’ group show at Tashkeel Gallery Summer 2017

The routine and repeated act of retrieving shells from a shoreline, curated collections of natural debris gathered into vessels to claim and suspend memories. An act that transcends class, nationality, religion, gender and age, it interlaces the presence of persons on a coastline and the removal of artefacts contemporaneously.

Retrieval Practice
Completed March 2017

Retrieval Practice Completed March 2017 detail

Retrieval Practice
Completed March 2017
detail

Retrieval Practice Completed March 2017 detail

Retrieval Practice
Completed March 2017
detail

Still intrigued with this piece. Really enjoyed working with ceramics and the process of mould making although since creating these I have access to equipment that will make that process quicker if I deem it necessary. The fragility of the weavings, the thread and the intricacy brought about a feeling of the fragility of the environment from which the shells were originally collected, they aspect that it is repetitively put through rigours of human use daily, grinding and removing the debris of its natural inhabitants.


Divergent Resemblance:

Divergent Resemblance
Feb 2017
cotton thread, cotton muslin, aluminium mesh
80cm x 80cm
Exhibited in ‘Mind The Gap’ group show at Tashkeel Gallery March 2017

Embroidered panels of household cotton and wire mesh, symbolically interlace sub-cultures. Sunlight exposes the layers, reflecting the daily navigations of different sectors of the UAE. My work questions the ease of communication and quotidian practices in an environment where these vary due to cultural expectations, and how this discord can be accepted in a harmonious manner.   

Divergent Resemblance:  Mind the Gap 2017

Divergent Resemblance,
Feb 2017

Divergent Resemblance: Detail back, Feb 2017

Again, still enthralled by the research behind this pieces and wish to explore it further, by bringing the visual research into closer conjunction with the theoretical research taking place. Looking at whether to gain observational research from figurative, architectural or objects forms, whether gestural work is enough. Concerned about the obvious link between the genre of everyday studies and objects and thus have been avoiding that route so far.


The Entropy Series:

2D images (titles below each),
acrylic, archival watercolour paper
18cm x 28cm each

The Entropy Series aims to capture the gradual decline of routine through the repetitive cycles of discipline and disruption. I reflected on how the daily routines of humans transmute to accommodate unforeseen changes of circumstances, and how the chaos of life today provokes disparate reactions and actions in people.


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87 Unremitting,
July 2016

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84 Obstructed Pathways,
July 2016

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85 Heavy Grasping,
July 2016

Initially a lot of pride and satisfaction with these pieces, it felt like I had turned a corner, which I still think I did to a point. However, looking back at them now, they feel naïve and not well thought out. There was a lot of chance in these although executed in a routine manner, as was my personal brief.


The Development Series:

This is the Development Series; photography is used to document the structures and repetitions of the ‘planned city’ and translated into digital geometric studies. Inspired by an interest in the daily advancement of the city through its construction, the repetitive frameworks of humans creating growth and changing outcomes. I am intrigued by the monotony that leads to a conclusion, after which the same processes are picked up and moved forward to another project and recreated to provide yet another outcome.

4484 (a) 2016
digital print

4484 (c)2016
digital print

I feel there is commercial scope for these and have had some success with sales through an online art site. I enjoy the process of making them and they fulfil the need for digital and commercial design work that I was initially trained in. I have considered recreating in paint, at a very large scale to see the outcome as I feel the monochrome would be engulfing and the size of the block shapes quite overpowering which is a state I would like to see created in paint.

not for citation or circulation

21/09/2017 - Video Lecture 1 - Reflexive Practitioner

Video Lecture 1 - ARVL1 – Reflexive Practitioner (Viewed on 20/09/2017)

Part 1- Looking at artists reflecting on work

Part 2 – Strategies of developing a reflexive practice

  • Personal notes

  • Research notes

Part 1- Looking at artists reflecting on work

Graham Sullivan – many facets of Contemporary art, in many environments.‘Art Practice has long been a critical and creative means of inquiry that encourages new ways to think about what it is to be human within the uncertain world in which we live.’ (Sullivan, 2010)

David Buckland – Cape Farewell project – artic. – climate change - using art to draw focus

Reflexivity = reflection. Thinking, pondering, meditating, reviewing.

Turning back to oneself – looking at own thinking – stepping back, taking stock, distance. Reflection can be too self-indulgent.

Donald Schon’ – learning @work,

Michael Eraut – professionals on job, most learning happens informally during normal working practices, i.e. conversation, problem solving, etc.

  • Reflexive – thinking about your thinking

A reflexive practitioner – a learning practitioner.

It’s all Research – being reflective is doing research on your own way of working, investigating & gathering data/observation etc

As a fine artist you need to be reflecting on:

The way you make work,

What influences you, - important for me

Knowing where to position your work in relation to other artists, - important for me

Being conscious of yourself in the wider context, - need to be more aware, who are my contemporaries?

Research – techniques, materials, influences. The research is intrinsic if you see it that way, as Sullivan says:

‘Reflexive practice is a kind of research activity that uses different methods to work against existing theories and practices and offers the possibility of seeing things from new perspectives.’ (Sullivan, 2010)

Pompidou center – 1970’s Rodgers etc, designing services outside creating an open/flexible interior – new way of looking at something.

Pompidou Centre, photo credit: INSADCO Photography / Alamy, https://www.cntraveler.com/activities/paris/centre-pompidou

Pompidou Centre, photo credit: INSADCO Photography / Alamy, https://www.cntraveler.com/activities/paris/centre-pompidou

James Aldridge – Cold Mouth Prayer – Tate 2007

Royal college then scholarship – Rome.

Mundane and cliché work – painting of trees - as a child would draw trees with dad, copy birds from text books – inherited dads love of natural history.

Interests creep in from outside of art. – have I gone too far from this, one extreme to the other?

Personal experiences of art – ‘bringing these in was like allowing a part of myself in to the work. It was challenging to let them in, as they didn’t feel worthy of being included. Once they were allowed in, and then it allowed doors to be opened.’

‘His work came alive’ – THIS IS WHAT I NEED – Am I willing to find balance between personal motifs and research? – links to my work around routine and my struggle with the concept.

Research is past, things he already knew, became relevant. Don’t stop research or lose research as it may be come important, don’t dismiss past interests

Tracey Emin – confessional work, but does have distance? – is she too far involved?- living the drama of her story, biopic. Life as research

Shaun McNiff – arts therapist/artist

How to handle tension between personal experience and making of art. Emphasize – art comes from within me, I nevertheless attempt to study the subject with as much objectivity as possible. I am intimately connected to my work but the work is still separate. – thinking of my personal schedule compared to the people I research. – starts within becomes objective – links to work on Professional Practice Programme at Tashkeel last year.

AR – Artwork has to come from somewhere subjective but to be able to make a valued judgement about work you need critical distance and objectivity.

Langlands and Bell – want things we do to be well done. – their work is opposite of Emin.

Highly research driven practice

The meanings of art – arise in the makings of it – not that everything is free to us as artists but that we do feel free to explore if appropriate.

House of Bin Ladin – 2003 - Post 2002 visit, Politically sensitive - is art anti establishment? Many think we have no place to work with the establishment.- they work with people - intervening in peoples lives, not participants - subjects.

The experience changed them, life was hard for people in Afghanistan. – question to myself - should the creation of your work change you?

Use the opportunities to go/do something you haven’t, create something original, meaningful.- Research - things they are interested in - follow curiosity, this takes them to peoples lives in extreme circumstances.

Is there a moral or ethical dimension that they are not talking about? – this is what could make it personal, they leave opinion out, its data collection and presentation.

Do they have to much distance from their research? Does it make their artwork available to the viewer? Do they do to much research? Is that possible?

Baumgartner - Handmade prints/woodcuts, video source - Contemporary look but recognisably handmade. Speed, looking out of window, blur, view colour as horizontal lines, speed and standstill, together as a way of viewing our current condition, the faster we move the less we see.

Christiane Baumgartner, Allee II, 2008, Woodcut Diptych on Kozo, (right panel), http://www.christiane-baumgartner.com/allee2.html

Christiane Baumgartner, Allee II, 2008, Woodcut Diptych on Kozo, (right panel), http://www.christiane-baumgartner.com/allee2.html

Rose Wylie, Belgium painting: Cloven shoes. Diptych (slide, not shown here)

How do we prevent ourselves from becoming slick?

How do we stop ourselves from just going through the motions?

When are we just recycling our visual language because it has become our style?

What have we learnt?

Emily Ball - drawing and painting people - Looking at other peoples work is a good way to reflect on your own. – Do I have this book? Yes, read it again!

When EB saw RW’s Cloven Shoes, made her question own playfulness, ‘how much was she trying to rely on attractive gestured marks and colour to cover up the lack of a real connection to subject? If these were taken away, there wouldn’t be enough to make a striking memorable image. Was there any poetry or humour? Uncomfortable, because I felt exposed by recognizing something in her painting that was missing in my own.’

Frustration, difficulty - important, motivating - lead to letting go and make fresh connections with the work.

Helpful to recognize patterns and how habitually respond to them.

A research journal can help identify these unconstructive habits or dead end processes.

During MA - reflect on development of practice and theory that informs it.

Keep research journal

Support examination, scrutinize it and make changes. To take it in the direction you want, this takes time, attention and application. Using others work to informTranscriptions - copies, likenesses.

John Skinner – Scorn - Paulo Veronese– Moma podcast – Cezanne & Pissaro

Decided to paint it but too big to handle, chose a part to do - liked placement of heads, eroticism. Became ‘Two Scornful Women Watching As Their Lover Is Being Beaten To Death By Lust.’

And then ‘Vanitas: a homage to Helen Chadwick with nine roughly painted penises and two vaginas on strings.’

Considered Helen Chadwick a contemporary and envied her work

  • envy is important as it shows you what you want to be –

Transcription of one of her works – ‘Vanitas 1986’ - still life - Netherlands in 17th-century. Vanity of earthly life to repent, consider mortality

Skinner positioning himself in relation to art around him – this story makes me think of Turrell and Balka, can I create a small embroidered piece that is as engulfing as these large pieces – to feel safe, but isolated?

His research directly informed his work – it became work. It also comments on existing work – obviously he ‘owned’ it.Part 2 – Strategies of developing a reflexive practice

Studio –what is your studio or workplace for? – home office, Tashkeel, Surf House, hotels, coffee shops

All places of research whether theory or observation

Rachel Whiteread - Drawing studio in Berlin first-time important thinking place

Virginia Woolf - a room of one’s own. A place to be with oneself away from the rest of your life.

Or does your studio give you an identity as an artist? – Tashkeel gave me confidence, community gave me validation

Would you still be an artist without a studio? – motivation, inspiration & a voice.

Does it make you a member of a community? - yesDoes it put you in a social contact with other artists? - yes

Is it where you create stories that feed your work? – like this ideaIs it where you store tools, materials or finished work? - yes

Look at what you do in studio.- home office – budget for house, applications, writing, dictation, planning. Tashkeel – painting, printing, embroidery, DIALOGUE.

An audit!

What do you do in your studio?

Write down everything you do in your studio or the place where you usually work. Include drinking cups of tea (yes so much), dreaming, reading the paper (yes, mags at home), phoning friends etc. Be honest

Which of these things do you want to be doing and which do you not? – I’m okay with doing it all except distracting talk, discussion is welcome, but need more boundaries.

What else do you want to do that you don’t? And why aren’t you doing these things? – DRAWING – lack of confidence, time management

Is your studio set up for you to do the things you want to do? – reasonably. Do you have a comfortable chair to sit in to contemplate work? Is the light adequate? Are there enough in electrical sockets? Is there a good enough Internet connection? – yes

Where else do you make work, or think about work, or carry out research? – surf house, coffee shops – in the car – podcasts, to do lists, thoughts. What else do you do in these places? – socialize, quiet time, eat, commute

Are those serving and supporting or holding you back? Make some changes, - if needed.

In the studio - going round in circlesFine - okay and important, often a constructive way to work. Think about it in cycles of activity.

Similar to Kolbs learning cycle, familiar to research, learning and studio practice.

VL1 Activity cycle

VL1 Activity cycle

- Thoughts – separate – go through body of existing work, use apartment in Nov when moving? Or possibly LB’s spare room or space @ Tashkeel? Is that possible? Lounge? Evaluate own work in existence – feeling stuck.

Cycles - reflection, new cycle, repetition = iterations

Reflection allows to review process, perhaps moving into practice too quickly, perhaps more drawing – review current process using this cycle.

- This section should be printed out and placed in view of studio space.

Observe and reflect –Contemplate from different perspectives, sit with it. Draw from observation, draw a schematic diagram. Photograph, video, print and photocopy, draw on photocopies. Use different media to explore.

– go back to statement, take it apart, how has it evolved? What is important now? How does it effect you?

Write about what you see, touch, feel, smell etc. Describe using metaphor i.e. if it was a holiday or something. Record your description. Emotional response – important as influences created this.

Ask questions as if you know nothing about what it is or how it was made.

Put in a different environment, take it outside, place it next to other work. Give it a persona and interview it - Sean McNiff - Imaginary dialogue. Invite comment from a colleague. – Tashkeel is uninvited, ha! But I love it!

Evaluate –
How do you know when it is finished?

How do you know if it works?

What would be different if it didn’t work?

Intuition? Sense of rightness?

Intentionally executed? – run out of time? Deadline? Fulfils criteria?

Reflective outside the studio –

Understand the field you are working in - Fine art? Modern/western concept - only recently has fine arts taken an interest in non-western cultures and not defining it as exotic. – Moma Podcast – Global/World Art symposia 2009 (?) Defining fine art becomes difficult as artist appropriate methods and practices from other areas and disciplines. The purpose of art could be to critique, communicate, explore, evoke emotions, reveal.

Cultural, social, political, educational, philosophical.

James Elkin - value judgements rather than a definitive definition.

Theodor Adorno - Aesthetic Theory 1970 – “It’s taken for granted that nothing which, concerns art is taken for granted” – read this book, its on your desk

Who does it? What are its products? Where and when are they experienced or consumed?

- Artists, Assistants, experts, technical experts, participants, educators and collaborators.

- Experiences, events, object

- Physical or virtual manifestations, Commentary on art too.

- Galleries, cinemas, public spaces, TV, web, books, films, tea towels etc ‘merchandise’

How is it evaluated?

By art world commentary, critics and reviews, specialist magazines and journals, general publications, media commentary, auctions, celebrity endorsement, gallery sales, adverts, education. – what is relevant here in Gulf? Closed dialogue, lack of critique due to censorship and cultural values

How is fine art different from other fields such as craft, art history, arts theory, design, medicine, anthropology?

Craft - lines are blurring, markets and audience different.

Historically art has been about making now about history and theory.

Design - doesn’t solve real-world problem, is not for distribution or retail.

Medicine - Similar concerns - intention to do good. Aspect of artistry to medicine. Fields are different.

Anthropology - similar concerns regarding artefacts and the roles of individuals making cultural meaning in societies.

Sullivan: Be open to new and multiple interpretations of artworks – allow others to offer what they see and that you may see something different.

Debate and discuss processes and meanings that come out of these interpretations

  • Find a group to engage with, critical friends, reading group, studio group for reviews of work, uni where you can look at talks by artists, theorists, art historians, opportunities online. – Critical Dialogues @Tashkeel starts Wed 27th Sep w/Kevin Jones, Art Talks 101 @Alserkal, Global Art Forum @ Art Dubai, Sharjah Art Foundation talks & events, NYUAD talks & events

Question the contexts in which art is made

  • Impact etc – langlands & Bell. What statement is made? Who does it affect? Is it relevant?

Be aware of the potential artistic, social, political, educational or cultural impacts.(Sullivan, 2010)

Appropriation of other artists work - Gilllian Weiss, advert

Richard Serra – The Terminal - 1977. - Implicit and clear, art awkward and overpowering, resistance of community, 1930s repression, political alibi etc. Sculpture scapegoat.

Cape farewell project-explore on website. 

To Reiterate:

Recognise and acknowledge whose work you are building on – have clear influences – nothing is original & that is okay as long as you’re honest.

Being transparent in your methods and open about your methodology – its okay to get help etc.

Be rigorous in your recording – note everything and transcribe to journal

Be prepared to justify your methods – know what you are doing and why

Don’t confuse effort and quantity with quality – valid

Be careful of using theory to justify artwork – valid, slipped in to this and away from personal, need to find balance.

Being modest in your claims – clarify

Be honest with yourself – yes!

Most importantly, don’t lose curiosity or your courage.

  • After listening/watching the lecture, I went back through my notes with the pink pen and annotated my own thoughts. Something I wish I had done on previous courses, perhaps this is where learning fails/hinders some students, present them with 30mins after a lecture to annotate, later on encourage them to discuss their notes with a classmate, allow them to absorb and digest the information instead of telling them it in a short time, closing books and moving on.

Still to Do:

Revisit questionnaire
Type notes on to blog
- done 23/09
Add images if relevant - done 23/09
Consider revisiting sketchbooks this week or going through body of existing work.

Other themes:

Participant Involvement
Research
Art & other disciplines
Artists & issues
Life/art integration
The studio
 

References:

Cape Farewell Project: www.capefarewell.com

Christiane Baumgartner video: www.moma.org/explore/multimedia/audios/32/771

Emily Ball on Rose Wylie: Ball, E. (2009) Drawing and Painting People. Marlborough, Crowood Press.

James Aldridge, Christiane Baumgartner, and Langlands and Bell interviews: James, N. (2010) Interviews – Artists Volume 2: Recordings 2010. London, CV.John Skinner on Paulo Veronese and Helen Chadwick: Ball, E. as above.

Langlands and Bell video: www.langlandsandbell.com/new/the-house-og-osama-bin-laden-video.html

Richard Serra: Stiles, K. and Selz, P. (1996, republished April 2011) Theories and Documents of Contemporary Art: A Sourcebook of Artists Writings. London, University of California Press.

Shaun McNiff: McNiff, S. (2008) Art-based Research in Knowles and Cole (2008) Handbook of the Arts in Qualitative Research, SAGE.

Sullivan, G. (2010) Art Practice as Research: Inquiry in the Visual Arts. London and Thousand Oaks, CA, SAGE.

Schon, D. (1983) The Reflective Practitioner: How Professionals Think in Action. New York, Basic Books.

Eraut, M. (2004) Informal Learning in the Workplace.

Image source links:

Pompidou Centre, photo credit: INSADCO Photography / Alamy, https://www.cntraveler.com/activities/paris/centre-pompidou

James Aldridge, Cold Mouth Prayer, 2007, http://faariscar.blogspot.ae/2011/02/art-knowledge-news-keeping-you-in-touch_09.html

Tracey Emin, But I Never Stopped Loving You, 2002, http://www.traceyeminstudio.com/artworks/2002/01/but-i-never-stopped-loving-you/

Christiane Baumgartner, Allee II, 2008, Woodcut Diptych on Kozo, (right panel), http://www.christiane-baumgartner.com/allee2.html

Rose Wylie in her studio, http://www.tate.org.uk/context-comment/blogs/cornelia-parker-why-rose-wylie-true-originalWord count: 2714

not for citation or circulation

19/09/2017 - Readings for VL1: Reflexive Practitioner

Reading 1: James, N. (2010) Interviews – Artists Volume 2 Recordings 2010. London, CV Publications.

Pp.16-19 – Christiane Baumgartner –

Woodcuts of video imagery subtracted in to linear form to be visible from distance. – work is about speed, how we consume our surroundings with in speed and how ‘fast-paced’ life is slowing down.

Christiane Baumgartner, Transall, 2002, woodcut on Kozo paper, http://www.christiane-baumgartner.com/transall.html

Christiane Baumgartner, Transall, 2002, woodcut on Kozo paper, http://www.christiane-baumgartner.com/transall.html

Influences:

Gerhard Richter - abstract and figurative,

Paul Virillo – revolutions and speed. Contradictions – speed/slow, beauty/menace.

Research is from observation, gathers own materials and uses found material (newspaper photo), has researched technique, aware of history. Understands he contrast between the two, intrinsic to work. 

Reading 2: James, N. (2010) Interviews – Artists Volume 2 Recordings 2010. London, CV Publications.

Pp.6-12 – James Aldridge –Painter, graphic, silhouettes, nature, skulls, landscapes, lots of colour, mixed composition.

James Aldridge, Eye, 2013, acrylic on canvas, https://www.artslant.com/ew/works/show/751993

James Aldridge, Eye, 2013, acrylic on canvas, https://www.artslant.com/ew/works/show/751993

References – Japanese Art,

Raymond Pettibon,

Raymond Pettibon, Repeater Pencil, 2004, video installation, https://www.artslant.com/ew/works/show/213104

Raymond Pettibon, Repeater Pencil, 2004, video installation, https://www.artslant.com/ew/works/show/213104

Bird books – Ornithological guides,

James Aldridge, Circle, 2001, watercolour on paper. https://www.artslant.com/ew/works/show/496448

James Aldridge, Circle, 2001, watercolour on paper. https://www.artslant.com/ew/works/show/496448

heavy metal album covers/music,

folklore – belief & how that is manifested in images,

psychological space/atmosphere/feeling,

John James Audubon,

Renaissance frescos,

Schongauer print – leaves,

Martin Schongauer, Apanel of leaf ornament with two parrots and four other birds, Engraving, 1470-1474 http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=1432821&partId=1&people=108158&peoA=10…

Martin Schongauer, Apanel of leaf ornament with two parrots and four other birds, Engraving, 1470-1474 http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=1432821&partId=1&people=108158&peoA=108158-2-60&page=1

Munch painting – hay,

Mandala colouring books – symmetry, spiritual symbolism, link back to heavy metal logos.

Research is integral to personal interests, ‘creeps in’ from out side of art. Authentic. 

Reading 3: James, N. (2010) Interviews – Artists Volume 2 Recordings 2010. London, CV Publications.

Pp.44-53 – Langlands and Bell –

Web of relationships between people, architecture and mass communication & exchange to negotiate changing technological world. Film, Sculpture, architecture, neons. Flight path – data collection – ‘relevant to me’

Langlands and Bell, Air routes of Europe night and day, 2001, http://www.langlandsandbell.com/portfolio-item/air-routes-of-europe-night-day-2001/

Langlands and Bell, Air routes of Europe night and day, 2001, http://www.langlandsandbell.com/portfolio-item/air-routes-of-europe-night-day-2001/

Research – observation – first hand gathering/exploring.

References show knowledge and awareness of art world:

Giovanni Bellini,

William Burgess – byzantine – mirror floor piece,

Langlands and Bell, (William Burgess Chapel) Reawakening, 2004 http://www.langlandsandbell.com/portfolio-item/reawakening-2004/

Langlands and Bell, (William Burgess Chapel) Reawakening, 2004 http://www.langlandsandbell.com/portfolio-item/reawakening-2004/

Oscar Niemeyer – architect, reference façade.

Relationships – research infiltrates their practice, ethics, work.

Conceptual war - in attendance, visits, first hand material research gathering. Research trips – Afghanistan, Rwanda

People, places, & experiences are their research, use it to inform themselves and then pass that message/ information on. 

Bibliography:

James, N. (2010) Interviews – Artists Volume 2 Recordings 2010. London, CV Publications.

Links:

Christiane Baumgartner, Transall, 2002, woodcut on Kozo paper, http://www.christiane-baumgartner.com/transall.html

Gerhard Richter, Phantom Interceptors, 1964, oil on canvas https://www.gerhard-richter.com/en/art/paintings/photo-paintings/aeroplanes-19/phantom-interceptors-5538/?&categoryid=19&p=1&sp=32

Paul Virilio, quote http://www.azquotes.com/quote/1557856

James Aldridge, Eye, 2013, acrylic on canvas, https://www.artslant.com/ew/works/show/751993

Raymond Pettibon, Repeater Pencil, 2004, video installation, https://www.artslant.com/ew/works/show/213104

James Aldridge, Circle, 2001, watercolour on paper. https://www.artslant.com/ew/works/show/496448

John James Audubon, American Bitternhttp://www.audubon.org/birds-of-america/american-bittern

Martin Schongauer, A panel of leaf ornament with two parrots and four other birds, Engraving, 1470-1474http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?objectId=1432821&partId=1&people=108158&peoA=108158-2-60&page=1

Langlands and Bell, Air routes of Europe night and day, 2001, http://www.langlandsandbell.com/portfolio-item/air-routes-of-europe-night-day-2001/

Langlands and Bell, (William Burgess Chapel) Reawakening, 2004http://www.langlandsandbell.com/portfolio-item/reawakening-2004/

Oscar Niemeyer, Ministry of Education and Health, Brazil https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=the+ministry+of+education+oscar+niemeyer&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj805nj6brWAhWjAJoKHY-NDGoQ_AUICigB&biw=1344&bih=912#imgdii=HsfZRxBO4rA0fM:&imgrc=0aLO-aRBByu9MM:

Langlands and Bell, The Ministry, 2002http://www.langlandsandbell.com/portfolio-item/the-ministry-2002/

not for citation or circulation