Even after all these years I still feel that every time I make a piece of work or undertake another project, I learn something new… about myself, about my practice, about the way I make my work.

Now at the end of the Once In A Universe project I’m attempting to address those pithy Arts Council activity report prompts:

– what you achieved, compared with the original aims of the activity

– what you learned, and how the activity has helped you develop

– any longer term impact the activity has had

though I’m not sure that some of the answers are necessarily what they want to hear. Of course I can write about the practical skills I’ve learned, the new partners I’ve made, how I’ve scaled up my work, increased my networks, built my audience…

But what I feel has actually happened is that I’ve finally managed to find some sort of balance between research and making, between content and process. In the past I have struggled to reflect my research in my work, grappling with the question “but how do I make artwork about this?” Now, a happy thing seems to have happened – I’ve come to understand that I can allow the artwork and my instincts to lead the way and my research resources are deep enough and broad enough to be able to draw out content and context that will attach itself seamlessly to new work. In the past it’s been a painful process – trying to conjure up work and wrestling with it until it somehow “fits” the research.

Is this making any sense? I’m sure that many artists probably experience this problem too: the issue of “content”, so stimulating and productive when it naturally evolves, so paralysing when it doesn’t.

So happy days. Could this be a breakthrough for a slow learner?

Below: some images of work made during the Once In A Universe residency, some of which have been waiting to be brought to life for far too long.


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Glancing back at my “Day 1” blog post, it was strange to see the beginnings of my plan for the Once In A Universe residency and compare it with this much more developed section of the plan which eventually acted as a record of my progress during 10 working days at DC1.

More than 12 years ago I embarked on my first ever residency, Watch This Space at Phoenix Brighton, working for six weeks in the public gallery spaces with people popping in to see the work as it progressed. It’s always been a productive way of working for me: a fixed amount of time, an empty space, and opportunities for conversation about the work – it all adds up to a stimulating experience. My two week residency at Devonshire Collective has been as productive as expected and with the support of mentors who have advised me throughout the whole project, it has been an opportunity to make a real leap in my practice.

Skills and strategies learned during all of those 12 years and more have re-surfaced in interesting ways during the last two weeks. Old mapping and drawing techniques  with sticky tape on the walls and floor are echoes of that residency in the Phoenix galleries.

Other features of previous installations have crept in to this new work too: the merging of wall and floor based works into a single installation, grids and lines which navigate or define the space, light, sound and movement: these are all devices I have used before. They  now feel like tools, resources I can draw upon to make new configurations, part of my growing repertoire.

Yesterday photographer Jonathan Bassett came to photograph the work before I took it all down. His precision and painstaking approach was fantastic and his enthusiasm for the work was encouraging. Now I can’t wait to see the photos, and over the next few days and weeks film-maker Anna Winter  will be editing the footage she has captured throughout the project to make a series of short films for me. Time to Watch This Space again.

 

 

 


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Day 3, Wall Drawing 1.

Days and people have come and gone with some successes. Our Day 3 event, How to Survive and Thrive in the Age of Machines, co-organised with Amy Zamarripa Solis and featuring my interview with complexity scientist, Dr Alex Penn and guest artists Shardcore and Chris Parkinson was a great success with a packed house and a lot of hilarity. It’s a real talent I think to be able to approach serious subjects and big issues with a real humour. Here is Chris in full flow (captured by friend of Devonshire Collective, Brian Booker).

Day 4 was a tricky one with an uncertainty creeping in about some of the work and decisions to be made, though it was great to get the projector out and watch through all my video clips and begin to see exciting things happening.

Day 5: another day, another wall drawing, though it couldn’t be more different from Wall Drawing 1. Instead, Wall Drawing 2 is a large,slightly frantic pencil mesh formed by trying to map the speeding objects that cross the projection of some of my video clips.Interesting… but hard to photograph.

Day 6 tomorrow…

Here’s a particularly happy accident: my iphone somehow managed to turn one of the clips upside down so it now looks like these purple balls are hanging in clusters from a silver sky : )

 


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Really enjoying developing this work which, although grounded in my research around science, technology, evolution and change in the Anthropocene, now begins to take on a life of its own – both physically and metaphorically.

Today’s progess:

2 x Letraset drawings (here’s one – I love the way this old Letraset cracks on the paper)

2 x ink drawings

lots of exciting video footage – it’s really useful to be able to play it on the big tv monitor in the gallery space and leave it running through in the background to catch glimpses of it unexpectedly – here’s a still

the beginnings of a wall drawing

a bit of reading

quite a lot of thinking

oh yes… and some framed work on the cafe walls

Tomorrow, film-maker Anna Winter is coming to record my progress so far and then I’ll be preparing for our evening event – How to Survive and Thrive in the Anthropocene.

That’s it for today. Looking forward to seeing what tomorrow brings.

 

 


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Here we go!

The culmination of my year long development project, Once In A Universe, begins here. It’s the start of a two week residency at the Devonshire Collective’s DC1 Gallery. I’ll be working in the space every day and hosting a number of events including, this week, How to Survive and Thrive in the Age of Machines. I’m really looking forward to hearing how my co-presenting artists Shardcore and poet Chris Parkinson approach the evening and am thrilled to be able to present excerpts from a conversation with complexity scientist, Dr Alex Penn. It was a great pleasure to talk to Alex last week through the magic of Skype which connected us between Eastbourne and Tokyo.

So today was a settling in day. Priorities were:

  1. make a plan
  2. get some work on the walls
  3. try out some ideas I’d been waiting for the space to experiment with

Looking forward to day 2!

 


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