other/other/other http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 other/other/other Fri, 19 Mar 2010 19:22:16 +0000 a-n rss generator a-n The Artists Information Company and contributors edit@a-n.co.uk technical@a-n.co.uk a-n project blog http://www.a-n.co.uk/img/logo.gif http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [6 May 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 We’ll be hosting an informal “show and tell” in The Tea House on Elm Hill, Norwich, on Monday 2nd June (6-8 pm). The topics discussed and artwork shown will focus on durational and site-responsive art. Participants thoughts and ideas will inform Other/Other/Other’s manifesto, ensuring that the collective can inspire and aid artists making ‘art that is difficult to describe’ in Norwich . Please email us with your thoughts. ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [12 May 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Saturday 10th May: Mall SurveyWe set out into Norwich's Castle Mall at 11am to explore performative recording in a public space. Dot attached a DV camera to her leg, filming the floor as she walked, and I attached a contact mic to a cane and dragged it behind me to record the variations in surface texture. The whole recording/walk took 24minutes and has resulted in some very interesting footage/sound, which we will be reviewing tonight. ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [13 May 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Last night Dot and I reviewed the recordings made on our path through the mall. Her video is focused on the top of her shoe as it passes over the various floor surfaces (granites, laminate wood, escalator grills, carpark concrete etc). The movement is almost twitchy and weightless, and the click of the camera hitting her leg is the only indicator that steps are being taken. The background (the floor surface) swims in and out of focus depending on the autofocus of the camera and the distance the leg is from the floor. She recorded the ambient sound as well, which gives a larger scale to the restricted image. My sound recording is the direct result of a bamboo cane dragging along these floor surfaces, sending the vibrations into a contact mic. It varies from hushed brushes along smooth vinyl to white noise along rough tarmac. When we reached escalators I pressed the stick against the brush at the side.  The sounds, although abstract (acousmatic) are still identifiably "the sound of a bamboo cane against a surface", which is very interesting. I want to try other materials too, but I like the familiarity of that particular sound quality: everyone knows what that should sound like.The combination of the two recordings is very interesting, because when either of us was walking behind the other there is a delay between encounters with a particular surface. It adds another space to the piece: you become aware of two explorations going on at once. When they correlate exactly it's wonderful, and allows the brain to make complete sense of the experience for a few seconds. And then we're off again. ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [14 June 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Since my last post there have been two meetings. The first was a public event held in a lovely little café in Norwich called the Tea House. We advertised it as a show-and-tell, focusing on site-responsive and durational art. It went incredibly well: there were ten of us in the end, and after an hour of introductions/ examples of work we moved on to group discussions about making work in Norwich.  We found that most of the group were not particularly interested in working in gallery spaces. There are plenty of empty shops in Norwich, and it has been suggested by three separate members of the group that we focus on Anglia Square as a possible location. Residents of Norwich may remember last year’s occupation of the shops in the square by British and European art collectives, organised by the Outpost gallery. It’s an interesting mid-20th century shopping and car park complex which has fallen into disrepair, and is now home to QD and Pound Stretchers. We are interested in having work that evolves during its occupancy of these spaces, and which is accessible/visible/audible to the public at all times. Another refreshing thing about the meeting was the chance it gave us all to discuss our work and related practical/theoretical issues. I found it incredibly useful having to discuss issues which I had not had to vocalise since graduation, and I know a number of the other artists felt the same. Even if you constantly write about your practice for applications and publicity it is very rare to discuss it in a large peer group. This is one of the aims for other/other/other:  a regular session for critical evaluation of work.The meeting resulted in discussions which have helped to form our collective’s manifesto. Dot and I held our own private meeting last Monday (9th), in which we pinned down our aims for the group and wrote the manifesto. It is now published on our website so that future members/interested parties can see what we are about. We are provisionally planning a three-day period in August where we hire a space and make work alongside each other. This would be treated as a public event, so the audience would be able to turn up at different times during the weekend to witness an evolving activity. We see this as a precursor to the Anglia Square event, and probably won’t be seeking additional funding for this one. It’s more explorative, and will help to formalise our ideas for an application at a later stage. Our next public meeting will be on the 7th July where we will outline the plan: new participants are welcome of course!This might be the last post for a few weeks: I’m doing a residency for a few days and then I’m off to Brighton for the Sonic Arts Network Expo. I’m playing at the University Café at 11.10pm (!) on Friday 4th July. Come along if you’re in the area. ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [15 June 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Evaluation of the Other/Other/Other meeting on 2nd JuneDot HowardClearly, the connections Other/Other/Other had made with other artists and the publicity throughout May ensured that ten local artists’ (inc. founder members Holly Rumble, Dot Howard and Holly Sutton) participated in an informal discussion centring on their creative practice, with a focus on durational and site-responsive art. The artists present were at various stages in their careers and the event began with each giving a short presentation/ explanation of the work they make which informed the group discussion in the 2nd half. These presentations sort of organically evolved into a general discussion about making live work and the problems and/or issues involved. Individuals spoke openly about their own experiences and the group offered possible antidotes and related stories. This was a useful method of getting to know others work and establishing similarities in practice. The discussion was rounded off with a chat about how Other/Other/Other might assist the artists in the future and a discussion about the possible use of empty shops in Anglia Square as an event “venue”.Emails and websites were exchanged and the promise of a follow-up manifesto based upon things raised so far.There were a couple of key issues raised and discussed: How important the space is in which the work is made and presentedThe documentation of live artwork: in particular, what element of the task/performance/installation etc. eventually is the artwork?The artists’ views on traditional gallery space as a platform for their workHow people in Norwich have reacted in the past to artwork in the public domainOutcomes:There were a couple of people present who are on the verge of shifting their practice and making work that might benefit from Other/Other/Other. Although they have little experience of making live art, they clearly want to pursue it. They are excited at the prospect of having a support network for the work they make in the future.Participants had obviously said positive things to others since the meeting - I received an email the next day from another artist interested in coming to the next event based upon her friends experience.A manifesto has been written based upon the issues raised and discussed at this meeting. Personal thoughts:For me, this meeting confirmed what we have speculated for the past months. People left saying very positive things about how unusual and useful it was to meet and talk like this (outside of an institution). Their enthusiasm suggested that working together in the future and continuing the dialogue would be beneficial for their individual practices.They seemed to appreciate simply talking about what they do but were also excited about a possible future event to work on together.The eclecticness of the work represented at the meeting was very encouraging, confirming to me that Other/Other/Other is not an exclusive “club” to join.DH/2008... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [8 July 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Battled through the wind and rain, leaving the Sonic Arts Network Expo behind me in Brighton on Monday morning, to get to the next meeting at 6pm.I made it in time, and we had a great meeting. Some of last month's attendees couldn't make it, but we got three new faces and a lovely moment when a nearby cafe customer came over to say that he'd seen Cornelius Cardew and the Scratch Orchestra in the 1960s.We've got all kinds of plans, starting with a two day collaborative exploration of a space, which will be open to the public at all times. For more information please check the website, which may get updated more regularly than this...Holly ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [20 July 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Dot/Holly meeting 11am-5pm Friday 18th July Issues Discussed: 1. New Collaborations Bursary: It’s important not to lose sight of our personal collaboration when working on the other/other/other collective: we must present our Mall Survey recordings in another space to see how they interact, and also make a new, shorter and more specific route using the information gathered from our existing piece. I suggested the sloped anti-slip lower entrance. We will be working collaboratively for the Unit 5 event in August, as well as developing our own work. 2. Anglia Square redevelopment:  Time frame researched, and management and developers contact details found. Idea of celebrating the last days of the 1960s architecture before the demolition starts in 2009. We need this to be a curated event: not necessarily everyone in other/other/other. We would put forward a Grants for the Arts application with a few specific commissions in mind, having discussed it thoroughly with the group beforehand. Practical Workshop: I showed Dot how to make a contact mic, which we then played with. It was nice to share skills, and felt a little bit like a knitting circle for sound artists. We also discussed Michael Ridge (a member of other/other/other) and his electromagnetic sounds, and I showed Dot a telephone pick up coil, and we spent a while playing with the sounds generated by the internal whirrings of a CD player, a printer, and a table lamp. I found an old electromagnet/bit of a radio that was in a bag of miscellaneous electrical bits I bought at a carboot sale, and worked out how to wire it up so that it made the same sounds as the commercial one. Stereo noises! I could take these around shopping malls plugged into my minidisc recorder and do a low-budget version of Christina Kubisch’s e-legend. Saturday 19th July, very late We pulled out the pick-up coil and minidisc in the pub and made great sounds from Dot’s phone. It’s a good thing to have in your handbag.... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [24 July 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 We have just spent the last two evenings folding 150 pieces of A4 paper into tiny booklets. Dot and I have decided to take advantage of the relatively cheap publicity method that is Talenteers East networking zine. We have made 'The Little Book of Other/Other/Other' with scissors and glue and a little bit of photocopying sponsorship from Norwich Arts Centre. It contains our manifesto and beautiful handcrafted cards from each of our members, somewhat flattened and contrasted by the photocopier. We'll put the designs up on our website (and here), once we've scanned them all. It's very lo-fi, but very satisfying when they're all piled up in front of you, waiting to go out into the wild... ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [25 July 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Here are the books! We posted them off this afternoon. ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [24 September 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Well, it's been a while, but we've done the Unit 5 weekender and been interviewed by Future Radio, and have all come away from it happy and tired and feeling like we've done something new and challenging. More details in a later post when I've gone through all the documentation... ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [24 September 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Monday 22nd September 6-8.30pmMeeting with Dot to test out plans for Colchester. Images and sound ended up being very scary, like insects or other scuttling creatures. Discussed the mutual benefits of the collaboration: we’ve each learnt huge amounts about using sound (Dot) and visuals (Holly) in ways we’d not been confident in before. I like the exchange of ideas, and the playfulness. It’s creating layers of meaning in the work where previously my work may have been to conceptual and dry…Having someone else to work with whose aims are so similar to my own has really helped me to challenge my practice and not stick to familiar areas.Friday 19th September 2pm-4pmDot and I met at the Tea House to plan our joint performance in Colchester on the 27th. It will be held in St Martins Church (which has a beautiful tiles-and-wood floor), and we want to make this work very site specific and responsive to the atmosphere. It will also be interesting to ‘perform’ to an audience (however small it may end up being), because our previous floor survey pieces have been more of a personal exploration of a space with witnesses rather than audience members; shoppers have seen us walk past but we’ve not been doing a performance for them. With this in mind we have thought a lot more about lighting and choreography, whilst still keeping the conceptual focus on generating (extracting?) tiny sounds and visual textures from the space. I’ve become aware that my previous work with the contact mic on the bamboo cane is flawed, because you can hear the cane impacting on the surfaces without the amplification. I want to explore the element of surprise that comes when an object makes a sound which it isn’t supposed to make. For that reason I will be using a peacock feather to trace along the surfaces; it is inaudible unless attached to the mic, when it becomes rustling, and snagging, and slightly like a long breath. We will both be using torchlight to limit the focal point for the audience, and allow us to extract ourselves from the ‘performance’; the sounds and images are the most important thing, not the authorship. The peacock feather was chosen because of its sound qualities and the length of its reach, but I am aware that it is also hugely theatrical and ostentatious. I love the contrast between its historical associations with decadent costume and theatre and the tiny, hushed little sounds it will be generating in this performance. I also like the ritualistic action it will impart. I recently went to see Adam Chodzko’s show at Tate St Ives, which had some lovely playful mythologies, and I think the careful, studied routes Dot and I make through spaces has some similar grounding; we’ll be more responsive to the space as a church, as a site for ritual, and allow the objects we use in this performance to be more evocative. ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [29 September 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 We had a great time at Vicki Weitz's event last night (Live Art Platform: Picnic in the Church). It was a mixture of performances and installations ranging from a headphone piece recorded in surround sound by Mike Challis, to energetic counterbalancing dances by Base Dance. Dot and I made a 10 minute torchlit exploration of the space which was relayed through amplifiers and a television. We're very excited with the results, and are planning new variations on the piece... ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [6 October 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 This is the summary of most of the things that happened at Unit 5. There were many others, and as it is this post has had to be divided into four sections!Section One of Four:other/other/other at Unit 530th and 31st August 2008Day one:We arrived at the warehouse space at 9am on Saturday morning, all lugging heavy bags of equipment (as far as I can tell only one of the members has a car...). We had a discussion about individual plans for work and space and any ideas for group projects throughout the weekend, and then set about installing and arranging. The work during this early period seemed to set the tone for the rest of the weekend: testing and experimenting were integral to the work, and was visible to the audience. The space was open to the public from 12pm, and they gradually drifted in, all fully engaging with the activities, and interacting where possible. We spoke to visitors to make sure that the process was transparent, and throughout the day we all added notes and drawings to the Documentation Wall, charting moments in other people's activity and in the space as a whole.John Boursnell made two or three reel-to-reel tape loops running through bars in the window, using computer generated sounds and live recordings of the ambient space. It provided a constant sound to which other artists (and public) could respond to. One loop was the starting point for a group improvisation in the middle of the afternoon.Bev Broadhead set up her laptop, bluetooth, projector and assistant (Kevin Hunn) in a corner, and then ventured into local streets asking members of the public to read a line of poetry into her mobile phone camera. We received the first transmission at about 2pm, which added a nice human sound to the very digital and industrial ones dominating the space. Apparently the proportion of public asked was far greater than the proportion brave enough to be recorded!Rachael Fisher installed a delicate nail and thread drawing across the whole of the back wall, using a circle and spoke arrangement which echoed the bicycle wheel we found in the space. Having work commitments, she left before the public opening, but in the spirit of group interaction left the work open to modification.Kate Hodges took up the challenge, and carefully hung a single bulb in the centre of Rachel's work, projecting a shadow drawing over the original. She moved around the space, arranging bulbs around installations and artists, and dramatically changing the dynamics of the room. Some of the bulbs were on a timer, and at one point beautifully coincided with a line from Bev's recording: "sometimes things appear", lighting up the whole space. ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [6 October 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Section Two of Four:Dot Howard installed the Floor Survey piece we made in May. She set up a television for her video, while I set up an amplifier with corresponding sound. It provided a chance for us to reflect on the method of working in advance of our new local version. She taped bubblewrap across the entrance floor as a basic sound source, which was very popular with children. She then set about creating a carpeted workspace and filling it with modelling balloons for video filtering experiments.Michael Ridge got straight to work on a Big Mouth Billy Bass he had found in a charity shop. It was skinned and suspended from a bracket near John's loop, with its wires hanging down to the floor. During the day he wired the sensor to a point near the entrance, and modified its sound so that whenever anyone entered the space the fish would twitch and squeal. He also began what looked like a constructivist assemblage, but which was actually pieces of charity shop cassette tape stuck to a board, which he then played with a tape head. By this stage, the room was getting very noisy...I attached a contact mic to the underside of the visitors' comments table so that whenever they wrote the sound would be amplified. This became an instrument later on during the group improvisation, and resulted in lots of scribbly drawings where the marks were secondary to the sounds they produced. I also set up the bicycle wheel as a playable object, attaching it to a girder and tying paper cups to the spokes, with the instruction "Hold Me Tight". There were two violin bows available to play the spokes, and moving the cups to your ear amplified the vibrations.The group came together at about 3pm to make a joint sound piece. John set up a new loop and then recorded the rest of us responding to it. Michael used his tape strips to generate short bursts of sound. Dot made low creaks with her balloons and a contact mic. I played the bicycle wheel, making drones. Kevin played extracts of audio, which at one point said "I am sending you the message now", coinciding with a lovely computer dial-up sound from John's loop. Kate made scratches and rhythms with the table. The whole piece was about 10 minutes long, and seemed to end quite naturally when one of the balloons burst.Later on, Dot, Michael and I linked all the balloons together to form a giant, wobbling mass. We each attached a contact mic to a part of it and set about trying to generate feedback through the vibrations in the balloons, producing wonderful drones at different pitches. There were moments where we managed to hold onto a chord between us before the balloons twisted away. It could be developed into a succinct repeatable performance if we ever needed anything to tour… ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [6 October 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Section Three of Four:Day two:Early on, Dot and I went out to Anglia Square to make new versions of the Floor Survey. I attached the mic directly to my shoe, in an attempt to echo Dot's visual movement. The results were interesting but not as varied as with the stick; there was more impact and less surface. We returned to Unit 5 and listened to the results, but decided not to install them. I thought it might be good to let the ambient sound of the space differ from the day before.We held a group discussion before the public arrived, giving feedback on the day before, and ideas for the day ahead. I think this was really useful for anyone who, like me, had had a period of inactivity or indecision the previous day. It re-focused the activity as a group event rather than separate individual pieces. New ideas for collaborations emerged, and we got back to work. We listened to the group recording from Saturday, and then I installed it inside a traffic bollard, and placed it outside the entrance. You could press your ear against the plastic and hear all the details of the sound. It was useful to have a ‘finished’ piece installed, to contrast with the process work that was going on.Dot planned a video piece where the camera emerges and moves through the pile of balloons, using them as a visual and sonic filter, and she wanted us to create another group soundtrack. As we had an audience she decided to link her camera to the television so that the audience could see its movements, as well as watch the soundtrack being performed. She then extended the piece by filling a car with balloons, playing the group soundtrack from yesterday through the car stereo, and climbing in with the balloons in the restricted space. Interestingly, she felt that the second soundtrack was less successful than the first, possibly because we were repeating some elements rather than improvising anew, but also that there weren’t any of the wonderful coincidences that there were in the first piece.Rachael continued to extend her thread drawings throughout the space, echoing the circular shapes that were emerging everywhere. Her work interacted well with Kate’s, whose lightbulb installations were moved around and modified for the Sunday. They were both responsible for altering the visual impact of the space, which is extremely evident when we watch back our slightly wonky timelapse video; it feels like the space has gone through twenty different variations in the weekend.Bev’s piece evolved, as visitors to the space were encouraged to record a video response to the broadcast poetry. New phrases would emerge and loop, bringing to the foreground conversational stammers, breaths and corrections, which were not part of the original text. ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [6 October 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Section Four of Four:Vicki Weitz (Weitz & Muller) arrived in the afternoon with her family. Her sons were very eager to join in with the various activities, particularly with Michael's electronics, so we turned the second half of the afternoon into an impromptu workshop. I taught them how to generate sounds from a broken speaker cone they had found, and Michael gave a brief circuit bending/contact mic demonstration, which resulted in one of them giving a short sound performance to the rest of us. I like the fact that the event was flexible in its positioning of audience and artist; when visitors arrived it reconfigured the activity and the focus of work, so that we were being visitor-specific as well as site-specific. I think the original objective of ‘opening up the process of making live/durational art’ was achieved.Michael’s work was perhaps the most durational of all the work there. He seemed to be constantly performing/experimenting , which given the preoccupation with noise in his work is quite a hard thing to be able to sustain. Likewise, he managed to respond to other performers throughout the weekend, creating dialogues with smaller sounds, and providing a ‘dynamic range’ for the space.John had produced five or six loops by the end of the second day, which were gradually taped up on the wall around him. He said he felt that a lot of the time he was “battling with technology”, but that he enjoyed working on a series of sounds for a continuous period.As people started clearing away and going home I decided to do a final sound piece using my parabolic microphone, focused on Dot’s bell (a small bell attached to a helium balloon which had been drifting around the space all weekend like a ghost cat). It amplified the tinkling, but also the scuffles and movement of people packing up, and is captured in a loop.Michael and Dot took great pleasure in bursting all the balloons, which is captured on video. Final photos were taken of the Documentation Wall (it had grown immensely over the two days). As we were just about ready to leave the clouds opened and an enormous thunderstorm threatened to flood the room. I was left thinking about how different the project might have been if we had had the thudding of heavy rain all weekend… ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [23 November 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 It's been a while since my last post, but that's not to say Dot and I haven't been busy. We've been planning our strategy for keeping other/other/other going and creating opportunities for the artists to make new work and discuss projects; so far this has resulted in a funding bid which we had to withdraw because the venue closed down, a total rethink, an imminent call for proposals, and plans for a new bid in the next two months. Fingers crossed. Our last o/o/o meeting was very fruitful, and clearly becoming a good forum. We're doing an informal performance and feedback event on the 6th December to test out ideas. Here's a photo of some wonderful Ekow Eshun t-shirts that Dot made for our last meeting. Could be a new uniform...... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [15 December 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Last Saturday we successfully hosted an informal platform event at Norwich Arts Centre. It was an opportunity for some of our collective to try out performances to a small audience, and then discuss the outcomes afterwards.Rebecca Wigmore opened, with a spoken piece about cellulite, followed by Michael Ridge experimenting with pressing his face against contact-miked glass, and then Dot and I did a new version of our piece. It's now called 'Species of Spaces' due to the slightly creature-like properties the objects acquire. For this version we explored the space under the NAC stage, crawling through girders and emerging, dust covered, in front of the audience.We had a good audience (at least 20, which was brilliant considering we hadn't advertised it as a public event), and 5 stayed for the feedback discussion afterwards. I think all the artists found this a very useful exercise, and it is one we will be repeating in the near future.In the meantime, Dot and I are performing at The Late Shift at Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, on Wednesday 17th December 5-8pm, so come along if you are in Norwich. ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [18 December 2008] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Dot and I performed our piece "Species of Spaces" at the Late Shift (SCVA) last night. We both thought it went really well, and discussed how neither of us had ever had a repeatable 'performance' before. It seems we still find the subject matter and approach in the piece sufficiently interesting to apply it to new locations and create fresh versions. This one was very different to the under-the-stage NAC one, because the room was very white and clean, and it had a wonderful semi-opaque wall of glass screening the storage area from the rest of the room. We crawled around behind the glass, and the shadows cast by our torches lit up the wall with silhouettes. It emphasized the micro/macro play on scale that runs throughout the piece. I am certain there will be a 'next time', and I'm excited about the possibilities of spaces it could explore.... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [21 February 2009] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Well, after many weeks of admin, Dot and I have finally submitted our funding applications for the big live art project we've been planning. Its working title is Live East, mainly because it is supposed to be difficult to pronounce (is it 'live' as in reside or 'live' as in not dead?), but also because it looks at first glance like a generic tourist initiative, which will be helpful in the design of our event maps. These will be distributed next to other leaflets advertising attractions like dinosaur parks and craft centres, hopefully being picked up by a non-art audience and providing an unusual alternative guide to spaces in the area. We've got Norwich Arts Centre and Colchester Arts Centre on board, kindly offering us the use of the venues for launch and closing events, with site specific work in other locations in between. Now we sit back and wait to hear from the funders...I say sit back, but in reality we are still hard at work. There is another afternoon of live performances at Norwich Arts Centre on Sunday 22nd March, 2.30-4pm, which we are recruiting for, and there'll be another push for new o/o/o members in the near future. ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [6 March 2009] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Our next other/other/other platform event is on Sunday 22nd March from 2.30pm, at Norwich Arts Centre. There are nine artists taking part this time, including a collaboration between Dot, myself and Michael Ridge. Entry is free, so please come along if you are in the area.... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [30 April 2009] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 Dot Howard, Michael Ridge and I performed ‘Longwinded in Five Parts’ at the SPILL Festival National Platform (National Theatre Studios) on 18th April 2009. Here’s a review by Eleanor Hadley Kershaw (http://www.spilloverspill.blogspot.com/):... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [22 May 2009] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 We heard on the 11th that we had been awarded our Arts Council grant for the Live East project! It's brilliant news because all the artists and venues have been so supportive over the last few months, willingly planning dates, so it is nice to be able to finally confirm everything. We have ten artists (over nine performances), ranging from sonic interventions in Norwich Castle Cafe to an eleven-hour stand-up marathon at the Hotel White Feather in Great Yarmouth. The festival launches at 1pm on Saturday 13th June (Norwich Arts Centre) with an introductory talk, followed by my performance 'Crowd Dispersal'. The rest of the afternoon will be filled with small-scale performances from other/other/other artists (around the whole venue), testing out ideas and talking to the public. Please come along to pick up a map of all the other events in the festival.The festival runs from Saturday 13th June to Sunday 19th July. ... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [13 July 2009] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 So, all of the performances have now happened, and we are compiling the documentation. Photos, sounds and videos are added to the website as soon as the artists have sent them in, so please keep checking: www.liveeast.co.uk.    The closing event is at Colchester Arts Centre on Sunday 19th July 1-4pm, and is FREE! Come along to hear the artists' feedback discussions (and join in if you like), and see the documentation.   Apart from a few (major) issues with public transport in the region, the whole festival has been a great success, and we are certainly thinking about planning another for next year...... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 [30 July 2009] http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257 The Live East closing event was a great success: all the artists had around 20 minutes each to present documentation and discuss their pieces, with questions and comments thrown in by the audience. Everyone said that they'd found the project valuable, mainly because they'd had time to develop their own practices and explore interesting places. I will eventually type up all the scribbled notes I made throughout the talk, but for now I will just put up a picture of the event, with Vicki Weitz's interactive documentation where she made the audience build an elephant in 10 minutes...... Thu, 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 +0000 http://www.a-n.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/430257