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Art Allotments

By: Heather Prescott

 

Art Allotments is our collage exchange project where we regularly send each other envelopes containing our rejected art work of drawings, roughs, prints & abandoned ideas together with interesting emphera and text.

One extra condition that we made for ourselves is that once a package is opened the contents must be used to make a collage as quickly & intuitively as possible.

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# 5 [7 March 2010]

 

The grand opening has happened. No time to update this blog before hand as too busy making cakes & seed packets. It was great to welcome 50 or more people. We can’t be sure of the exact numbers because we had forgotten to bring a number clicker & at some point fairly early on I lost the pen & list I started & gave up.

In order to have cake everyone had to first make a collage. We handed everyone a seed packet – an envelope full of random collage scraps - for the task. We didn’t make it compulsory but even so, half way through we needed to put out more tables.  Many people made one or more collage postcards and some took extra packets home.

Gradually as the cakes disappeared, the notice board was filled with small pieces of Allotment Art.  The results ranged from exuberant to restrained, witty, abstract, figurative and even a 3D thank-you collage bouquet.

 

The feed back has been so positive. Everyone found the gallery despite some of the posters/directions going astray. The whole event felt relaxed and everyone said it was fun. As fun was one of the aims from the very beginning we now both feel exhilarated & inspired.   Several visitors want to join the project & so it will now move into the next phase but first we have a family workshop to run next week. ‘Art Window Boxes’.

 

# 4 [2 March 2010]

 

Last few days have been hectic. Publicity is now distributed, framing done … It seemed odd to be framing ideas & unfinished work including pages ripped from sketchbooks. By Saturday lunchtime the exhibition was up.  Thank you to helpers. Questions still surface. Is the work any good? Is it worth exhibiting?

I give myself the answer. It has to be yes & yes, but there remains a sense of apprehension & unease.

 

So we have to remind ourselves again that this is an exhibition about a process.  “Finished” work will be for a future exhibition.

 

Next task is to plan for the “official opening” – Next Sat. March 6th.

 

 

# 3 [23 February 2010]

 

Art allotments started as a weekly swap of images and ideas, like packets of seeds. We posted and received A4 envelopes of collage materials made up from what came to hand, a mix. The idea was to have an artist¹s conversation through something different, accessible and spontaneous.  The focus was on doing. It has grown over a year and so now it is time to see what this looks like in an exhibition and find out what other people think. The exhibition space is a long gallery connecting two buildings with windows on one side and zigzag walls on the other. Outside is rough ground.

The thing about the art allotments and growing ideas is that it is about seeing what would come up. It has also been about working on an idea with another artist and friend. This has given two different perspectives in our choices of materials, the collages and the effect all this has on our other work. The exhibition is itself another collage to sort, place and build. There are narratives that appear accidentally, cumulatively and the ones that, for me, reappear.  What I love about collage is that its like a puzzle without a picture on the box. The activity is about space and placing things, shapes, colour, noise, creating sets, and movement.  The exhibition is a process in progress.  I can be wary of process but in this case, it¹s key.  Its great to see work recycled and returned and images have started to resurface such as  figures as part of the furniture or moving through it. The process has made new images and new work to develop and grow. I find it hard recycling some images sent to me and it is hard to rip up someone else¹s images! 

Ok now I am starting to worry as one of the other things is that the strength of this conversation is that it has persisted in the face of many other demands of everyday lives.  I am clearing the path for this week and keeping my animation (work) sessions at bay. 

Angela

 

 

# 2 [19 February 2010]

The gallery space is essentially a long corridor and viewers will enter from either end giving two starting points to the exhibition.  We met yesterday and quickly looked through all the work seeking possible formats or order for the presentation.

 

There are themes emerging, a figurative narrative is appearing which was probably predictable we both make figurative work.

 

To help me think, to “play” with the images & to see where such a narrative could be taken I made a very quick ‘book’ folding & cutting an A4 sheet.  It changes the scale of the work and has become a collage of collages.

 

Pleased with the results I print out one or two but I am no further on with a definite plan for the presentation yet.  I need instead to start sorting out frames & mounting card.

 

# 1 [18 February 2010]

 

We have arrived at the point to reflect, evaluate & curate!  In just over one week we put up our first exhibition.

This blog will document the curating process and exhibition outcomes.  

 

 

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Heather Prescott

 

We are Angela Martin an artist and cartoonist & Heather Prescott a print maker. We use our artists compost piles to create new ideas ... hence our name Art Allotments. After several months, four exhibitions and a break the project continues .....