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Artothlon, Summer 2009

By: Fiona Flynn

Vilnius is a 2009 European Capital of Culture and Artothlon, a reality show for artists, will run for six weeks over the summer. I'm in it, along with 15 others from Lithuania and abroad.

Here's a record of the project, the work and the adventures...

Meanwhile, Emily Speed is on a residency in Linz, Austria, another Capital of Culture.  Here's her blog.

click to expand/collapse 

Fiona Flynn, 'Breathe out, breathe in', balloons, ribbon and helium, 2009. Photo: Michael Curran. Breathe out, breathe in at Hovel

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Fiona Flynn, 'Breathe out, breathe in', balloons, ribbon and helium, 2009. Photo: Michael Curran. Breathe out, breathe in at Hovel

# 1 [1 July 2009]

So what does one pack for seven weeks in an unknown city where you expect to eat, sleep and make art?

Apart from knickers and t-shirts, my list, so far, is as follows:

* kg graphite powder

* a small amount of aluminium powder - like half a jam jar - a little goes a long way

* graphite crayons

* small stanley knife

* camera

* a couple of posh frocks

* one pair of whore heels (all I own)

* copydex

That's as far as I've got.

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Comments on this post

I'd definitely be up for that - will be trying to keep track of my experiences and the whole Capital of Culture thing so it should be interesting to see how the two cities compare! Coveting your catapult. When do you start? I go to London Tuesday and fly out Wednesday - I have to be there as quickly as possible and the train just took too long (also I get horribly travel sick), although I want to come back in as convoluted way as possible...so train it will be, hopefully with husband in tow.. Happy TV-ing.

posted on 2009-07-03 by Emily Speed

Excellent. It looks like we'll have some parallel experiences. I was hoping/intending to craft a feature from the project for AN or one of the broadsheets. Maybe we can collaborate on that if there are comparable experiences... Meanwhile, I'm adding to my suitcase the human sized catapult I made for my access course final show last year - I reckon that's a must.

posted on 2009-07-02 by Fiona Flynn

Of course string!! I have now been reviewing my suitcase contents for Linz and will be adding some white tack and grey and red electrical tape. I keep forgetting there are two Capital of Cultures again.. will be good to read your blog and see how they compare! After Liverpool last year I am also curious to see how another city handles it (hopefully with less bombast and more long-term planning!), but yes, it may just be great fun in which case you can think about all that culture stuff when you get back...

posted on 2009-07-02 by Emily Speed

Thanks Emily! Toothbrush and scotch tape - absolutely. I was wondering whether to take a ball of string too... string can be a bit difficult to find when you want some, can't it? Glad you agree on this high street stuff. If you didn't see it but you have an hour to spare, watch Mary Portas on the decline of the British High Street - it almost had me in tears: http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00lbsvh/Money_Programme_2009_Mary_Portas_Save_Our_Shops/ My Dad reckons they should abolish the rates for all the shops for a period - to make it much easier for them to trade. Dead right. One of the things that should be interesting about this project is the European Capital of Culture bit. Will I be taking part in an exercise to attempt to bring economic regeneration to Vilnius, or will it be purely an opportunity to have some fun? If it's the former, I'll have to try and critique that - but if it's the latter, six weeks of eating, sleeping and making art should be an adventure...

posted on 2009-07-01 by Fiona Flynn

Toothbrush and scotch tape.. Really enjoyed your article this month.. it does all seems a bit easy somehow for the government to plonk artists in empty shops and I am always uneasy when artists are brought in just to make things look good (or perhaps camouflage the situation in the case). As you said, it doesn't really give the art much credit either. I am all for spaces to exhibit in, but it seems like this may just bring mediocrity... good stuff, cheers. Oh and good luck with the project in Vilnius, sounds like it will be interesting!!

posted on 2009-07-01 by Emily Speed

Fiona Flynn, 'Catapult, Peckham', Latex, foam and bungee rope, 2008. Photo: Claire Morales. Final Show piece for the Access Course at Lambeth College

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Fiona Flynn, 'Catapult, Peckham', Latex, foam and bungee rope, 2008. Photo: Claire Morales. Final Show piece for the Access Course at Lambeth College

# 2 [2 July 2009]

Decided to include this catapult in my luggage.

I hope I'll be using it for artistic purposes, and not just for getting from A to B... trying to source a bike right now.

And trying to source a laptop is proving to be a non-starter, so I hope Vilnius has lots of internet cafes and that my team mates are better equipped than I.

# 3 [7 July 2009]

Flnally got the flight details, but not before a panicky email and phone call to Vilnius. Damn luggage restrictions mean having to decide between, say graphite powder or knickers... (the graphite powder won).

It's as exciting as can be - though I can't quite get my head around leaving my two 17 year olds in the house for seven weeks. A long list of poeple are on alert to watch out for For Sale signs, fire, or the arrival of any large sound systems...

Details from Vilnius are as follows, cut and pasted. Not thrilled about the copyright issue and I wasn't aware that there was cash involved for work made - but I'll know more when I get there.

Contract is still being negotiated with TV, but the main points are these:

   1. Not to be late for the filming.
   2. Filming is 4-5 hours a day, two-three days a week are non-filming.
   3. You cannot take part in any other reality show until at least 2010.
   4. The artworks you will make should, according to other reality shows, belong to producer, but it is still being discussed with producer, and will be presented to you in contract. Most probably the contract will be ready when you are in Vilnius, so it is still a question of discussion and negotiotion.

Other details:
  
   1. The sum of money for the artworks will be revealed each week, and may vary depending on your performance.
   2. You will get food two times a day, and dormitory is free. Transportation in connection with Art-o-thlon activities is covered, if you are keen on exploring Vilnius or Lithuania, you should bring some more money. As well money for any other personal expenses.
   3. Internet is provided to your dormitory rooms.
   4. All action should take place in Vilnius, with a few possible exeptions.
   5. Bring your towel and bedding (if possible).
6. Please bring your own instruments for creating art (cameras, laptops, any specials tools you use).

The maps, attached, have significant spots on them, but I've no idea what they represent...

An hour, now to relax and begin the book on Lithuanian customs and etiquette that I picked up yesterday in Stanfords map shop. Their site acknowledges both Vilnius and Linz as 2009 European Capitals of Culture. Yay!

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Yes, I agree on boundaries (same goes for deadline pressure, I reckon) but I wonder if intellectual property rights may prove to be an issue here... I'll keep you updated. I'm not taking bedding. I mean, ffs...

posted on 2009-07-07 by Fiona Flynn

This is scary stuff! Although I always think boundaries can help creativity sometimes so who knows! I hope you manage to assert your right to the copyright of your own work, perhaps they can have reproduction rights instead? My packing suddenly pales into insignificance when I realise you have to take bedding and towels too..

posted on 2009-07-07 by Emily Speed

Fiona Flynn, 'Stop the traffic', Old traffic sign, acrylic paint, (2008). Things I'll miss include this in the kitchen...

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Fiona Flynn, 'Stop the traffic', Old traffic sign, acrylic paint, (2008). Things I'll miss include this in the kitchen...

# 4 [9 July 2009]

My studiomate Lawrence is driving me to Gatwick in the morning, so today is my last chance to unpack and re-pack my suitcase and carry on luggage again.

The problem is, I'm wondering if I should take another reel of reflective tape and my battery operated laser (as well as the two I'm taking with me that have been adapted to mains-only?)

And I need to lose weight, not add more...

Read my two guidebooks alread, including one on customs and etiquette and scoured the internet.

Claire pointed out last night that it's important to go with an open mind and no preconceptions. She's right, of course, so today I'm going to knock research on the head and cycle over to the Richard Long retrospective and Classified at the Tate.

And then to the Hannah Barry Gallery in Peckham for a short while this evening, to say Cheerio to Peckham - after cooking something nice for the boys...

# 5 [11 July 2009]

Vilnius Academy of Arts Dormitory:
2.45pm, local time

It rains a lot in Vilnius in the summer, and that's exactly what it's doing now. After breakfast at 11am in the dungeon-like restaurant who have the contract to feed us we're wondering how we'll manage it for seven weeks - soup, curd cheese pancakes and sour cream were delicious, but a bit heavy when all you want is tea and toast.

After making our way back to the dormitory, I think it's quiet, post-travelling time. Who's us? Next to me on his own laptop, non-wi-fi, like mine, is Pavel, German, Berlin-trained, currently living in the Czech Republic. Lovely chap, smokes like a loon, painter.

On the sofa to my right, reading about static electronics is Justin: he makes moving things and seem, so far, to be able to make and repair anything. Working in Halifax, Nova Scotia, from Florida, just spent five days in Glasgow. He brought many tool bits with him.

Erro lives and teaches in Tallin in Estonia, comes from New York, performance artist. He brought two ancient cats with him from NYC to Estonia. That's committment.

Nathan and Tom, who's from Brooklyn but napping (I can't for the life of me find him online) applied together, having collaborated before.

A girl from Portugal is coming today, another from Moscow is set to arrive as soon as her visa is sorted and that completes the "foreign" contingent.

The Lithuanian artists will all be here by Tuesday and that's when we start filming.

While I'm pretty sure I'm the eldest in years, I think I'm the youngest in training - which is a fantastic place to be - learning from everyone else.

After being picked up from the airport by the lovely Paulius, who waved a banana for recognition, we ate and then went on to a party in Vilnius' new loft area - ex-factory spaces which, having been squatted in the past, are now being bought up by architects and the like, with artist studios and loft living spaces. It felt like many parties in Hackney, Shoreditch or Deptford, but much fresher, loads grimier and with way, way more charge and energy. <p>

Artists playing music is often not good, and it wasn't, but the place was packed and the beer was cheap - equivalent to around £1.20 a sizeable bottle of beer. 

We didn't last long beyond one in the morning (knackered) but apparently the cops turned up around four, to shut the joint down.

I took some pics, video and recorded some sound with my phone, but of course, this laptop isn't, as Justin pointed out, bluetooth enabled. I won't go anywhere without my camera again.

Tried to find it online for a link and a pic, but other than the fact that it involved a very rickety warehouse lift, I've not got much to go on.

Now off to see a man about a bike.

 

11 July 2009. Pagan metal gig in Uzipis. Full on.

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11 July 2009. Pagan metal gig in Uzipis. Full on.

Nate rode my bike back, since we couldn't fit it into the back of his minibus. He's wearing the soviet goggles he bought for 2 litas.

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Nate rode my bike back, since we couldn't fit it into the back of his minibus. He's wearing the soviet goggles he bought for 2 litas.

# 6 [12 July 2009]

Dorm, ten minutes before breakfast.

We went into Uzipis last night, en famille. Uzipis was declared a seperate republic but artists who lived there, in 1997 or so. Here's their constitution.

Needless to say, there are now developers signs around. As it was ever thus, the world over.

We watched a couple of pagan metal bands in this fantastic little outside venue and stage, right by the Uzipis Kavine (cafe) and the river, which gurgles like something from a fairytale.

Lithuanian rasberry vodka had to be tried, and while it's a cross between mouthwash and cough medicine, it's strangely moreish.

Andrea arrived yesterday from Faro in Portugal. She's in her last year at art school, after taking a year out to work on a nationwide arts project involving artists from all over Portugal. She was one of them. 

Here's Brooklyn Tom. He's looking for playing fields around Vilnius.

After breakfast we went to a flea market and I got an old 70s soviet bike for 90 litas. As Erro said, it's built to withstand a nuclear war.

Lithuania's first female president was inaugurated today and we caught a glimpse of the ceremony - complete with snipers and, apparently, knights in armour.

On our way to Lithuania's first ever Art Fair, we passed a housing estate that won the Order of Lenin in the 70s for excellence is design. Everything is reachable within 15 minutes from anywhere in the suburb. Right by the gorgeous forest and just as gorgeou TV Tower. . Paulius grew up there and told us that the flats were given to rural people to encourage them into the countryside. And when the Olympics went to Moscow, alcoholics and neer-do-wells were re-located to another estate around Vilnius. Thanks Moscow.

Interesting chat with Nate on the way up the stairs on the business of Art Fairs. He pointed out that while they're obviously about galleries selling stuff, they can also be quite supportive to young artists, offering residencies and funding, allowing more interesting stuff to be made.

Nate thinks art should be funded much more. I said I didn't think I agreed with that, since with funding, you've got to dance to someone else's agenda.

He countered that that's always going to be the case, and that good artists can negotiate that and make something interesting out of that negotiation. Point taken.  

 

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Sounds like you're having a great and interesting time! It's funny, I just wrote something about funding/dancing to other people's tunes on my 'Getting Paid' blog.. but resolved to just try and enjoy these weeks in Austria without putting too much pressure on myself. You've got me wondering about the pace of our experiences too, seems like you are much more 'en famille' as you put it; there are now just three foreign artists living here and no timetabled activities. It will take me longer to dig places out I expect.

posted on 2009-07-12 by Emily Speed

13 July 2009. The producers tell us indulge their Big Brother fantasies while re-assuring us that we're all one big team and on the same side. Are they hoping for a freak show, and will that be what we give them? 

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13 July 2009. The producers tell us indulge their Big Brother fantasies while re-assuring us that we're all one big team and on the same side. Are they hoping for a freak show, and will that be what we give them? 

The studios are fantastic big rooms but we get concerned when we spot this collection of stuff on one of the window sills. We hope it isn't our first assignment...

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The studios are fantastic big rooms but we get concerned when we spot this collection of stuff on one of the window sills. We hope it isn't our first assignment...

Nathan and Justin, 'Radiohead', Mixed media. Discussions are taking place on how Radiohead can be developed...

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Nathan and Justin, 'Radiohead', Mixed media. Discussions are taking place on how Radiohead can be developed...

'Eero calls'. In the park.

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'Eero calls'. In the park.

Yayoi Kusama, 'Dots Obsession: Infinity Mirrored Room', Mixed media, 2008. Lovely big yellow balloons - this one you can walk into. Part of the Big in Japan exhibition. 

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Yayoi Kusama, 'Dots Obsession: Infinity Mirrored Room', Mixed media, 2008. Lovely big yellow balloons - this one you can walk into. Part of the Big in Japan exhibition. 

# 7 [13 July 2009]

Introduced to the producers and the poeple who are working on the project at the university today. Nathan wore the radio mask that Justin made this morning.

They decided that Nate had a face for radio so they made one.

They told us that, because of the last minute change of producer, that details were being finalised and that weºre being filmed tomorrow meeting Anna, whoºs coming from Moscow. Then weºll meet the Lithuanian artists who are in the project with us. The first assignmentºs on Saturday.

Renate is our "Mother" who will facilitate for us with the production team. After a post«meeting beer-coffee chat with her, we tried out the catapult with a few things and played the first ever Wiffle Hurling game in Vilnius. Probably.

Itºs one of Tomºs games ' he invents them. Sports as art. www.aesthletics.org

We went to the launch of a new show at the CAC, the contemporary arts centre. Itºs a great building ' and the shows have loads of space ' and the curation is excellent. Lots of Japanese people there for the Big in Japan show. 

Hereºs Andreiaª

www.myspace.com/andreiafilipe 

 

 

 

 

Meeting Anna outside our studios at the Arts Academy - in front of the camera.

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Meeting Anna outside our studios at the Arts Academy - in front of the camera.

Discussing contracts and stuff with Ruta and Renate. We asked Ruta about herself and she's a successful songwriter and sometime presenter and participant in reality shows.

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Discussing contracts and stuff with Ruta and Renate. We asked Ruta about herself and she's a successful songwriter and sometime presenter and participant in reality shows.

Nice little homage to the Baby Metal kids we keep seeing in Vilnius. One we've seen a couple of times is no more than 14 but he's the spit of Sid Vicious.

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Nice little homage to the Baby Metal kids we keep seeing in Vilnius. One we've seen a couple of times is no more than 14 but he's the spit of Sid Vicious.

# 8 [14 July 2009]

Any way you look at it, having a cameraman and sound man catching your every move is horrible. Especially when we're sitting around trying to say hello to Anna, who's just off a really terrible flight from Moscow. 

They did the intro footage today - in different locations (mine was on the Fluxus Bridge) with us, in first person, talking to camera about ourselves.

What is your art like, what do you want to get out of the project, what kind of human are you - were just some of the questions we were prompted with. Yoiks.

It finished with a shot of us all holding hands around some big metal pipe structure, as the camera panned around us. It doen't get much cheesier than that.

How we play Monday's press conference is up to us, but the team were happy for us to do one of Tom's games - maybe inviting the press to join in. Justin's pushing for a pool party and I must be seen as the journalist of the piece, since I've been designated with the job of introducing all the non-Lithuanian artists to the assembled reporters and photographers. I'll draft something in the next day or two.

Who, by the way, we still haven't met. It's the question we ask more than any other and we never get a straight answer.

Nate continued to wear the radiohead today, as it's developing into a critique of media and control.

We've gotten into trouble with the supervisor at the dorm for dismantling the radio - even though it hadn't been working. Paulius had to deal with the flack so Justin whizzed it all back into place - AND got it to work.We might be a bunch of twit artists, but we're good people.

If we were a jewellry heist team, he'd be the one hunched over a combination lock and devising the explosives.

I want him on my team - trouble is, so does everyone else. We might have to hire him out by the hour...

Belarus is only 40km away from Vilnius but I get the impression that Vilnius as like New York in comparison.

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Belarus is only 40km away from Vilnius but I get the impression that Vilnius as like New York in comparison.

# 9 [14 July 2009]

I was undecided about whether to put on record the conversation I had with a young Byelorussian I met last night.

But after this and this came to my attention, I feel bound to add this story to the whole sorry UK immigration shame.

He'd promised to try and find us some more Soviet bikes (he's a bike punk) so I invited him to join us for our traditional Lithuanian dinner.

This guy in his mid-20s is studying here in order to keep away from Belarus - during the protests after the President was re-elected with 80 per cent of the vote, my lad was arrested and spent 10 days in jail. He's been avoiding the Byelorussian KGB ever since. It's only 40km away from Vilnius, but it's like (according to another young Byelorussian who's staying in our dormitory), a different world. A dictator state: the young people are desperate to leave and make a life for themselves in the 21st Century as there is, for now, little sign of change.

He tells us that a pal of his, same age, is a trained designer and wants to get some experience abroad. He has a job offer from someone in London who he knows, who vouches for him and will pay for his flights and his accomodation and generally ensure that this ambitious young man is looked after while in London.

It cost him £100 to apply for the visa. This is, for Byelorussians, is a phenomenal amount of money - a month's average salary.

He was turned down, with no reason given and no return of the £100.

He's stuffed. And all he wants to do is go develop his skills and make a better life for himself.

It stinks, doesn't it.

July 14 2009. A mix of old and new in Vilnius. 

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July 14 2009. A mix of old and new in Vilnius. 

See the TV Tower in the backround. 14 people were shot down by the soviet army during the Lithuanian struggle for independence from the USSR. 

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See the TV Tower in the backround. 14 people were shot down by the soviet army during the Lithuanian struggle for independence from the USSR. 

A box of old cigarette packets containing electronic bits in the Electric shop. Here's one of them. 

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A box of old cigarette packets containing electronic bits in the Electric shop. Here's one of them. 

# 10 [15 July 2009]

Staring at an empty browser window is never good for the soul, so I've de-camped to this excellent little internet cafe round the corner. 

After the filming session yesterday it all seems to be getting even odder than it was before.

We still haven't met the Lithuanian artists, the "home team", and with no assignment until Saturday, we have nothing to do for three more days. We're getting tetchy - not with each other - but to get working. 

A couple of the guys thought it'd be good to get some publicity going so we're going to set up a session to draw each other and use the results as publicity for the project. 

They've set up a facebook group too. 

A group of us took a long walk around the city this morning, to a) find an electric components shop and b) find the city beach by the river. We found both, eventually. 

It's an interesting time to be in Vilnius. The city's changing rapidly and radically, and the pic I took on a bike ride illustrates this - a mix of medieval Old Town in the foreground, corporate capitalist shiny tower blocks to the right and soviet-era apartments in the backround. 

If we can capture a sense of that energy in our work, we'll be rockin. 

 

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Fiona Flynn

Just coming to the end of my first year fine art degree at Chelsea College of Art. I'm a part-time student there and I pay the mortgage through freelance journalism and teaching.

Day-to-day art work: fionaflynn.wordpress.com

Email:
fionacflynn@gmail.com