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Firstly I reckon it is important to explain what it is that I do and why I choose to do it that way:

I call myself an artist, and mainly I work towards relatively large projects with institutions that I find interesting or places where there is an area of unresolved debate around knowledge or history. I go on site visits, arrange meetings with key people and try to secure their interest and participation(which is often the most difficult part of what I do). Then I tie everything together into a proposal for a place and locate funding for it. So as well as artist I am also my own accountant, researcher, funding officer and personal secretary!

It certainly isn't the gallery based route that many of my peers are taking, but I like being in complete control. I also don't have a lot of interest in showing work in a white cube, a place that tries to situate itself out of time and space but which is pretty laden with historical and curatorial baggage. I know dozens of artists who are currently exploring this very thing within their practices.

A friend of mine said "You should be trying to build a mystique", and I suppose that by working like this I am subconsciously trying to do a bit of personal myth-making: "That artist who went round repairing broken road signs, then hid out in museum archives and library catalogues, appeared on a remote Scottish Island recently and did some strange performances…" -kind of thing. Though I am not sure what one does with mystique once obtained?Seems to do wonders for the likes of Marcus Coates, Adam Chodzko, and Matthew Barney though…


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Blogs have the interesting quality of being both intensely personal and exposing and yet also being largely overlooked by the majority of the planet who has access to them. This duality has drawn me back to create my second blog for Artists Talking, the first being the project Gaps in Archaeology posted some time last year. I think it is going to be mainly just a fence post to which I can tack the occasional notice of delight or despair about the project that I am currently creating. I think it would be a suitable way of recording the process even if it is only me that goes back to it in the future.


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