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The audience came through a dark and very wet evening to get to our UFO East Anglian Archive talk last Wednesday evening. Dominique and I had an opportunity to show images from the Space Exchange process, talking about our experiences of what we did and what we found out. We thought of this a closing event to the project and so organised a video screening to accompany the talk. UFO related video works from Paul Graham http://www.paulgrahamphoto.co.uk and Erica Eyres http://www.ericaeyres.com/ in addition to our own video’s produced during the Space Exchange project rounding off the evening.

When we presented the talk in Liverpool the questions from the audience started with associated accounts of UFO sightings or friends sightings. The second set of questions then come in relating to the process we have undertaken and the research methodology. This talk followed the same pattern. In response to a question from the audience question: What is the work? For me the work is the site visits, the dialogue, the blog of the process, the sending in of information to Aid & Abet and the artist talks that result. The work is also the collaborative dialogue between Dominique and myself, how we decide what to do and how to do it. Our developing collaborative shorthand is also something I particularly welcome, how we talk to one another about ideas and our responses to those ideas.

The subject matter for this project is completely outside of our own practice interests. This project was a refreshing opportunity to be playful within a research process. Within being playful, our approach was congruent with our immerse approach to our own practices. We were, during the space exchange project completely absorbed with what we were doing, talking between ourselves, posting things to Aid and Abet, blogging and researching.

The last question of the evening concerned a possible scenario of what would happen if we were asked to go and research we something we didn’t want to. This is was interesting and Dominique and I both said we hadn’t considered this, of course we would have done if this had arisen. We have a list of three artist spaces to approach to see if we can offer this remote research service again. I think our methodology might change somewhat but above all its a process and one that is open to change. The unknown is an important factor, exploring sites in East Anglia we wouldn’t otherwise explore has been a real eye opener.

Our pre Christmas gathering might give us an opportunity to reflect and consider what we will do next both in terms of Touring Territories and Satellite as a whole.

Thanks to both Paul and Erica for providing video work for the evening.

Nicola Naismith


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The U.F.O Project books have been delivered, looking splendid with their low-key, understated white covers. They provide a useful contrast with the busy, colourful content inside covering the main body of this blog.

We plan to launch the book at our Touring Territories East Anglian U.F.O Archive discussion at The Queen of Hungary Project Space next Wednesday. www.queenofhungary.co.uk

Following the talk, we will send a copy to the instigator of the U.F.O archive, Dave Evans (The Royal Standard) as he now holds the original archive.

On Friday morning I am meeting Nicola at her loft-space studio in Norwich, to reconstruct our talk from the bones of the talk we gave in Liverpool earlier in the year. Shouldn’t take too long??

Dominique Rey


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Touring Territories No.1

East Anglian U.F.O Archive: Book

I made the final amendments to our U.F.O Archive Blog Book today – a permanent and physical distillation of this very blog. We’d had a proof printed last month and there were comparatively few changes to make (compared that is to my usual print efforts).

We’re going for a very limited run at present of 4 copies. Hopefully, it will arrive in time for the talk Nicola Naismith and myself are doing about the project at The Queen Of Hungary Project Space on the 21st November.

www.queenofhungary.co.uk

To get into the right frame of mind I watched the Ed Wood classic, ‘Plan 9 From Outer Space.’ Budget shooting, but sincere. There were lots of nuclear weapon /cold war references as you might expect, but quite haunting pathos from the aging Bela Lugosi (I was told his footage was actually shot for a different film). Whilst finishing off the book I rediscovered these images from a set I took at the Radar Museum – they remind me of some of the futurist technological machines in the film.

After that I think we might meet up for a review of the group and thoughts about any future plans.

Dominique Rey


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