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Temporary Diary by Kevin Boniface

Preview

We were a bit late as usual. On our way over Tom began to speak about himself in the 3rd person. He kept it up for the entire evening which was deeply amusing and, perhaps surprisingly, never wore thin.

We had to melt an entire glue stick with a lighter to get Milk, Two Sugars' pesky mannequins in place but it worked and they didn't fall over unlike Jared's egg which only made it to about half-seven thus fulfilling its temporary brief all over the gallery floor.

There were quite a few people there including – ourselves excepted – Steve, Ann, Taome, Eden, Steve, Steve, Gus, Julian, Pav, Jenny, Joey, Christoph, Molly, Edie, Liz, Bob, Jared, and some other people who's names have either escaped me or I never knew. Everyone was, of course, very nice.

I think the show looked good, I was a bit worried about how we were going to reconcile such a diverse range of stuff but I think we just about pulled it off! Several people said very complimentary things about it (which I guess they would, but hey?) I love Natalie's drawings – I think they're amazing, I think the bunting/streamer thing also worked really well. Also, in the end I think the diversity of stuff really worked in the show's favour. People initially engaged with the larger pieces but then stayed on as they kept discovering more at different levels and scales; quite a lot of people stayed for the duration. I was talking to a man in a winter coat with a furry hood who kept interrupting himself by saying things like "oh look! another one – over there, look!" and when his companion asked him the time and he noticed Francis Elliot's clock, he wigged out!

I met Jenny (one of the volunteers) who used to work as a writer for the Huddersfield Examiner and still knows some of the staff. She said she'd read Compact News so I apologised profusely but she said not to worry as she really likes it. I thought she was going to kick my head in but she didn't – in fact she seemed nice and not the type to have kicked my head in at all, so that's definitely good.

All in all I think it was quite a good do. I always get nervous at these sorts of things; I'm not comfortable talking out loud to people who might actually listen to what I've got to say. Conversing, being insightful and shedding light on things aren't my strong points. I generally prefer drinking wine and going off on one about something I probably won't give a shit about in the morning, but I think I may have actually enjoyed myself last night. And Kevin Boniface keeps laughing involuntarily when he remembers the things Tom said about himself in the 3rd person.

Kevin Boniface, March 2009


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Huddersfield artists host free exhibition at Halifax Piece Hall

Mar 13 2009 Huddersfield Daily Examiner

HUDDERSFIELD artists are bringing art for art’s sake to the people – without funding or any interest in selling their work.

The Temporary Art Group’s second show is a riot of Sellotaped sticks and tiny wheelchairs.

Plenty of artists whine about not being offered lucrative exhibitions or lavish grants. Not Paddock couple Kevin and Georgia Boniface, though.

They decided they weren’t going to wait to be invited to show off – and didn’t expect to make any money from their art, either.

The pair and their pals – Alice Bradshaw, Bob Milner and Tom Senior – staged their first three-day Temporary Art Show at Bates’ Mill in Queen Street South, Huddersfield last May, covering costs between them.

And they were so staggered by its success that they’ve gleefully set about doing it all over again, only this time in a six-month slot in empty units at Halifax Piece Hall – now up and running.

Their credit crunch-ignoring, DIY ethic is an industrial-strength blast of fresh air for West Yorkshire’s art scene.

Read the full article here: http://www.examiner.co.uk/leisure-and-entertainmen…


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Visitors have admired the skill and ingenuity, whizzed round the space with children in pushchairs – amazingly close to Rachael Allen's carefully damaged miniature models, drunk tea with the staff (thank you Yorkshire Tea), and asked some interesting questions directly to the people co-directing this project.

We're currently not only scheduling meetings with artists involved and potentially involved in the project, but also welcoming visits from schools, colleges, art institutions and individuals who are interested in what we're doing and want to drink tea and talk with us.

We're also looking for reviews: we'd love to hear your opinion whether that's a one-liner or an essay, an art-historical referenced thesis or simply an outline of what you like and what you don't. Send us your thoughts to [email protected]


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The launch didn't go without incident.

The professional photographers who had kindly offered to photograph the preview had all their gear stolen whilst on a shoot a few days before. They still turned up and celebrated with us despite this! Fantastic people.

Jared's Untitled got trodden on about 2 hours into the night. Jared and the team decided we quite liked it as a temporary preview piece.


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We are now open!

The launch went swimmingly well and our first weekend open to the public has seen over 120 visitors appear delighted, inquisitive, surprised and sometimes confused.

Initial feedback has been fantastic and it felt such a come-down to close for the first half of this week with real life and responsibilities kicking in.

"I came to the show on Friday. I really enjoyed it. All the work was very entertaining, which to me is the first duty of art. It was clever, inventive, skillful. The actual presentation was excellent I will definitely come to the next event and will probably revisit the current one. I am a photographer and would love to see this sense of fun and entertainment more in contemporary photography. Thank you."
Robert Norbury (08/03/09)
www.newnaturalphotography.com


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