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I went to FrenchMottershead talk about their latest project commissioned by The Photographers’ Gallery – they are working with residents of Soho to highlight the pleasures and challenges of living in this compact area of Central London.

Rebecca and Andrew shared their strategies for engaging residents of Soho. Strategies used by the artists range from hand written postcards inserted into postal boxes of people living in the area, mobile phone picture sharing, to meeting people on street or by the gate of the local school, attending local resident’s meetings, inserting adverts into local newspapers, drinking teas and eating biscuits with strangers and being given phone numbers for people their should meet by the people who they have just met.

The artists openly shared their working process and ups and downs of the work created with community. They emphasised the importance of live event that is usually present in their work. The social aspect of the live moment, ‘togetherness’ is for the artists a critical element. However the importance of ‘final’ outcome of the project – in this case photographs – and quality of it has also been raised. During this commission FrenchMottershead are going to be working with a professional photographer, to ensure high quality of final photographs.

When asked about the methodology that is closest to their way of working, the artists distanced themselves from the ongoing theoretical debates surrounding shared/ engaged / relational ways of working. And said: ‘we use very practical methodology’ and mentioned Stephen Willats’ work as a reference.

The final work will be available on The Photographers’ Gallery website.

More about the project:

http://www.photonet.org.uk/index.php?pvid=1251

More about the artists:

http://www.frenchmottershead.com/

And if you have a minute visit Stephen Willats show at Chelsea Space before 9th April.

http://www.chelseaspace.org/


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I have a new haircut. All thanks to arts. Hair was cut whilst dry. And i thought I was going to wear the hat afterwards till early summer – but actually it is a pretty awesome haircut. Have a look yourself. I paid for it in words. I talked at Richard, artist/hairdresser while he was trying to tame my locks.

Time in hairdresser’s chair is an important one for me- it is is not simply ‘make me look better’ time. To me the haircut is as important as conversation that goes with it. I go to have my hair sorted when i am down, when i am in the need of change, gossip, coffee, looking into mirror and pulling faces at myself. I enjoyed myself, i talked a lot.

Haircut is a social interaction built on trust. I arrived earlier to see if artists/hairdressers knew what they were doing or if the haircutting was an experiment involving radicalism in form i was not prepared for. As I was leaving the chair both Richard and I nearly got a round of applause from people watching :) Has this ever happened to you before???

Richard – I will be back!

Interested? Visit:

http://www.artsadmin.co.uk/events/00000002870/

>>>

The hair cut before the party have set up shop at Meanwhile Space Whitechapel for a long weekend of cuts, talk and talk about cuts.

In exchange for a free haircut they’re asking you to use that time to talk to them, sharing your social and political views and ideas about community and belonging in order to build a map of new political and social networks.

http://thehaircutbeforetheparty.net/


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