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AirSpace Gallery

By: AirSpace Gallery

The mission: to be the centre for the Visual Arts in Stoke-on-Trent and the region, providing gallery, studio, educational and meeting spaces

www.airspacegallery.org

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# 41 [21 July 2008]

 

Who Are We? Who am I?

25th July – 9th August

Preview 25th July 7pm

AirSpace celebrates its second birthday with an exhibition of work from graduating students from Loughborough and Staffordshire University.

At this time of year graduating students are asking themselves who, where and what they are; deciding what to do after education and searching for their entry into the world. A new generation of lawyers, journalists and artists are born.

Surrounding them at this time of change are bigger changes; Stoke on Trent is undergoing a massive regeneration, looking to move forward to find a new beginning and future. And within that AirSpace is trying to establish as a permanent gallery, bringing national and international artists to the city; widening AirSpace’s and the City’s audiences. These new beginnings are happening all around us and as the world evolves it is easy to find yourself asking similar questions; who, where and what am I?

The changes that we see lead us through doubt and excitement to a re evaluation of our place as individuals and groups in society. The artists in ‘Who are we? Who am I?’ all graduated from Fine Art courses this year, they each delve deep into their own concerns with this evaluation; some look to the past for reassurance and comfort and others take the future by the horns ready to run with it with eagerness and excitement.

Wendy Mayer’s work is an exploration of the ageing process using surreal self portraits to describe her thoughts.

Kate Lynch’s work is a site specific installation, highlighting the history of the gallery space and evoking thoughts of the redevelopment of Stoke on Trent.

Graffiti Artist Jack Tierney questions the identity of the artist and how they are perceived through their anonymous work.

Helen Saunders’ work sees the effects of the desires for change within a mechanical world.

Matt Smith puts the viewer in his own work, questioning the viewer’s relationship to himself.

Who Are We? Who am I? Consists of artists from Staffordshire University and Loughborough University, they include Kate Lynch, Wendy Mayer, Jack Tierney, Helen Saunders, and Matt Smith.

The opening of ‘Who are we? Who am I?’ sees a dual celebration; the introduction of five Fine Art graduates to the world of Post Education and the 2nd Birthday of the AirSpace Gallery.

For the celebrations we will be showing examples of past exhibitions, sharing cakes and we hope that by giving graduates from different universities the chance to exhibit together we will help to forge relationships and introduce artists from outside of the city to what Stoke on Trent has to offer.

For more information visit: www.airspacegallery.org or contact airspaceinfo@btinternet.com 01782 261221.

 

Chloe Butler.

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Chloe Butler.

# 42 [21 July 2008]

Look; differently

 

1st-12th July 2008 at AirSpace

 

The camera has become an item that we take for granted; I remember my first camera, a plastic case with flip up view finder that I used to hang around my neck with pride on day trips. Now I forget that I carry a camera with me everywhere, because it is hidden within my mobile phone. Complex cameras have been reduced down to simple point and click, it seems professional photography is within everybody’s grasp. And yet upon entering an exhibition of pin hole photography I feel that I am brought down to earth, immaculate detailed photography holding places and people with such sensitivity are brought here from merely a hole in a box. I find it hard to understand exactly how that pin hole can create these images but the simple contraption is able to hold my attention much more than a shot from a 7 mega pixal digital camera. It is encouraging to see that although many of us are enticed by the easy click of a switch there are still those that long for the simple and archaic technologies of our past.

 

The latest exhibition at the AirSpace Gallery is that of International Women’s Research Resource, Iris. Look; differently uses the gallery space in a more traditional sense, the simple wall mounting draws you attention to the detail held within. And you are rewarded with detailed imagery and blurry long shots with comments such as ‘feeling naughty taking a photo in the national naughty’. From what the artists say I find that pin hole photography allows you to develop a relationship with your work, instead of seeing and taking you are required to make and risk. There is no way of knowing how an image will turn out. Seeing the exhibition has inspired me to bring out my dusty 35mm SLR and an old Lomo I got free from a website in my teens. The only question is how easy is it to get hold of 35mm film these days?

David Bethell, 'Balloon tries to lift stone', animation.

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David Bethell, 'Balloon tries to lift stone', animation.

Katie Shipley, 'A Fala do Sol'.

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Katie Shipley, 'A Fala do Sol'.

# 43 [25 July 2008]

International Workshop of Plastic Arts 2008

 

Katie Shipley and David Bethell of the AirSpace Gallery recently completed a 1 week artists’ residency in Galicia, Northern Spain. The residency took place in La Solaina an artist’s foundation in Pilono, an agricultural village.

 

Together with 10 other international artists David and Katie spent the week visiting art spaces across the locality, including the Neira Vilas Foundation and the Central Galler of Contemporary Art in Santiago (which they were shown around by the director). They also spent their time making artwork in response to their unfamiliar surroundings and eating many many meals.

 

asolaina.blogia.com

 

For more details about the residency see David and Katie’s websites

www.davidbethell.blogspot.com

www.katieshipley.com

Alison Ballance, 'Plans for the Royal Albert Hall Project', installation.

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Alison Ballance, 'Plans for the Royal Albert Hall Project', installation.

Alison Ballance, 'Plans for the Royal Albert Hall Project'.

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Alison Ballance, 'Plans for the Royal Albert Hall Project'.

# 44 [26 July 2008]

Plans for the Royal Albert Hall Project

Alison Ballance

 

As part of the Dialogue Box series

 

The second exhibition of the Dialogue Box series has been and gone, but for just over a week in July Alison Ballance’s piece ‘Plans for the Royal Albert Hall Project’ came to a close in the window space of the AirSpace Gallery. The striking window piece brought a red flash of art to the streets of Stoke on Trent, catching the eyes of passers by and drawing them in.

 

‘The piece in Dialogue Box is the last piece for Plans for the Royal Albert Hall Project which has been worked on, on and off, for several years. This project would involve inflating a hot air balloon inside the main auditorium of the hall. The hall’s eccentric and rotund shape turns it into a belly-like vessel. The hot air balloon would fill up inside the hall, silently pushing up against the building’s internal skeleton. During this time the project has gone from a formal, site specific installation, a surreal never-to-be-realised proposal, a romantic tribute, a collaborative piece with emphasis on the architectural structures; an idea which was realised in many different forms but never made. In preparation for this, plans have been drawn, models made, installation experiments been carried out, and re-drafted architectural drawings. I had originally proposed to show all the work I had made for this project in the Dialogue Box space. However when it came to installing the work I felt that a site specific piece would be better suited to the space, and more appropriate for the project as it was going to be the last piece made.

 

In my other work various media is again used to present either projects or responses to the built up environment, preferring to represent the fragment and the suggestion rather than crude over explanation. The proposal, by only being a suggestion of what it could possibly be, is a fragment. I see the fragment in architectural ruins, failures or incompleteness; attention is drawn to what is missing. My work has a reductive grammar which suits my conflicting feelings of life’s limitations alongside its potential. My primary medium is collage whether this takes its form in site specific installations or time specific pieces that are held together momentarily in a photograph. I use found objects, drawing and cuttings in my work all arriving fully loaded with cultural references and I enjoy seeing the dialogue that arises within the piece. ‘

 

-Alison Ballance

 

 

 

# 45 [12 August 2008]

The final show in the first Dialogue Box series opens in this monday.

 

Diana Ali, Nottingham

18th- 25th August 2008

Diana is a British-Syhleti artist. She has worked in mixed media painting, photography and installation. She has exhibited in various venues such as, Salford Working Mens Club and Bonnington Gallery, Nottingham. She is currently exploring the visual and the verbal as an art form by involving artists’ responses locally, nationally and internationally. 

Wendy Meyer, 'Self Portrait as a Rag Doll Part III'.

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Wendy Meyer, 'Self Portrait as a Rag Doll Part III'.

# 46 [15 August 2008]

Who Are We? Who Am I?

 

This years degree show at the AirSpace Gallery came with a twist, by choosing to exhibit students from both Staffordshire University and Loughborough University AirSpace hope to encourage communications between different artists and also to deliver an even more diverse show. The eight recent BA graduates provided the gallery with just that; from freakily realistic wax figures in the window, to a loud exercise video the exhibition was filled with excitement, and yet punctuated with moments of clarity.

 

Wendy Meyer provided a distraction for the streets of Hanley with her lifelike sculptures in the window space of the gallery. Meyer made her self young by placing a wax replica of her own head in a pram with a babies body attracting attention from passers by, even some who complained on the sunnier days when the figures were removed for fear of melting; ‘I’m not sure if I like it but I still want to see it’. This was juxtaposed with an aged image of herself situated inside. Meyer here is dealing with self perception, do I look old? Do I look young?

 

Matt Smith entertained us with short videos created using a blue screen technique; to see a person trying to interact with themselves again brought thoughts of self perception. If I wasn’t me would I like me? These types of questions were consistent throughout the exhibition and remind you of what it is to embark on a new beginning.

 

Other artists, including Alishia Morrison and Joanne Mostyn, used subtler techniques to bring equally powerful suggestions of self. Morrison uses rusting metal with childhood memories to discuss the effects of physical scars and Mostyn creates delicate monochrome sculptures representative of an obsessive desire to build a safe world around her self.

 

Coinciding with the opening of ‘Who Are We? Who Am I?’ was the celebration of the 2nd birthday of the AirSpace Gallery. Directors David and Andy gave a short thanks to all those that have helped them and AirSpace get this far and then a quick pose for photographs before digging into the birthday cake.

 

Artists include: Kate Lynch, Wendy Meyer, Matt Smith, Helen Saunders, Jack Tierney, Aleshia Morrison, Ian Williams and Joanne Mostyn.

Diana Ali, 'Defamiliarization'.

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Diana Ali, 'Defamiliarization'.

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# 47 [15 August 2008]

Defamiliarization: an exploration of responses through text

 

The finale of the Dialogue Box series is currently on show and we are excited about the reactions we will receive. The artist Diana Ali has given us some words on the work:

 

'The Dialogue Box exhibition displays a stage of the ‘Defamiliarization’ project. The words exhibited are passed onto an artist in a different country. This artist then alters or re- interprets the words and substitutes it’s textual format into a visual one.  They then take a digital picture of its revised form.  The photograph must be a representation or be characteristic of the city or country it is in. All photographs are then returned to the original artist who came up with the words so they are re-introduced to the ‘defamiliarized’ version of their words.

 

The work started from local contributors and has now expanded around the globe. It questions the interpretation of someone’s creative thoughts into another’s and the visual interpretation of the written word. Who has the authorship to do this? But at the same time the project is allowing artists from around the globe to share their joys and anxieties of their heritage, language and countries to each other.

 

Artists around the world can see who have translated their words and in which country they were transformed by viewing this blog:

http://www.dianaalidefamiliarization.blogspot.com/

As Dialogue Box comes to a close this year we are hurridly planing the next series and will be updating the blog with news on it's progress. We are really pleased with the work that has been shown, we have had some great responses and have enjoyed working and making connections with all the artists involved.

 

# 48 [21 August 2008]

Tales From A Changing City

September 5th - 12th, Preview 5th 7-9pm

Darren Washington and Danny Hill

"Th' bulldozers came last wayk; thee didna waste any tarme...

Now, ow ah can see from mar back yard is a sea of debris,

red, black 'n' grey; and th' tide stretches back as far as thayse tired owd eyes of marne can see fer.

Pretty soon, ah suppose, ah'll bay the eownly one arahind 'ere that's left..." 

 

 

Tales from a changing city is the first of a series of exhibitions from the community based company of the same name. The company was formed by Local Photographer Darren Washington And local Writer Danny Hill. The aims of there company is to highlight all aspects of change from a city undergoing vast regeneration. Starting with a selection real life images from the changing city with a collection of fictional stories in the first of series of exhibitions with many different styles and collaborations of work to come.

Johanna Hallsten, 'Intercom'.

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Johanna Hallsten, 'Intercom'.

# 49 [1 September 2008]

 

Johanna Hällsten

 

INTERCOM

 

10th October - 1st November

Private view 10th October 7-9pm

 

We are pleased to present the latest solo exhibition by Swedish artist Johanna Hällsten.

 

INTERCOM continues Hällsten’s interests in translation, mediation and duration. Through two installations, different aspects of interaction occurring within dialogues will be explored.

 

The first installation situated within the window will be exploring notions of translation and mediation within the structure of a dialogue, together with the impossible task of inter-species communication.

 

A sparrow is talking to a badger and a woman. The characters involved are not visible, yet the dialogue itself can be heard through the use of vibration speakers attached to the windowpane. It is reminiscent of a science experiment, where the absurd situation somehow seems plausible because their conversation is mundane.

 

In the second installation, inside the gallery, the audience will come into contact with PA announcements. The announcements are drawing parallels to their function within the working environment, such as factories, offices and supermarkets. Hällsten is interested in distorting and altering the way in which the audience interacts with the impersonal instructions and messages. The instructions/messages are announced at intervals and fill the gallery space, changing its atmosphere. It creates an intriguing relationship between the lack of visual presence and emphasis on the normally overlooked sounds that the audience themselves produce.

 

During the private view the installation in the gallery will be interactive and the one-sided aspects of the PA system will be questioned and altered, becoming a direct dialogue between it and the audience.

 

Artist’s contact details:

07890570775

j.hallsten@lboro.ac.uk

# 50 [9 September 2008]

Tales from a Changing City

 

Danny Hill and Darren Washington

 

The opening of the current show at the AirSpace Gallery saw many familiar faces; it’s great to see so many people supporting local artists.

 

The artwork is a collection of photographs showing the all too familiar scenes of derelict buildings and building sites across the city. Many of the photographs on show are accompanied by a passage of text, highlighting parts of the city and giving a taster of the people within it. The passages vary from discussions of next door neighbours to local barbers, colourful and fun, yet with a harsh reality emphasised by the use of the familiar Stoke on Trent dialect. For me the dialect is hard to take in, I find that reading it out loud helps to confirm a few sentences.

 

The images themselves have an eerie quality, bulldozers lurking down small back passages and empty shops; one series is taken at different angles giving you the feeling that the photographer has taken the images as he flees from something else.

The images have enhanced shadows and highlights, clarifying the image, almost making them a window into a fantasy world; as if you could reach your hand in a pick up the brick in the image.

 

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AirSpace Gallery

The first Artist led Contemporary Art Gallery in Stoke-on Trent. As a newly formed arts organisation, our initiative is to help develop the contemporary arts culture within the Stoke on Trent area. Exhibiting professional and developing artists, aiming to engage with the local community.