Currently viewing the tag: "exhibition"

We just returned from our annual trip to the Goat Milk Festival, in Bela Rechka, Bulgaria after having the time our lives and making a very beautiful intervention in response to this year’s theme ‘abandonment’.  Abandonment is something that affects everyone, one way or another, and was a great subject to respond to.  In context, in a tiny, possibly dying village in the North West of Bulgaria, it is something that is perhaps more evident than ever.  Someone told me that the average age of the inhabitants was 70, after having met several 90+ years olds and only 2 people under 16, I believed it.  Like many countries, particularly on the edges of Europe, Bulgaria is suffering from the effects of rural emigration.  The young flee the villages in search of opportunities, leaving behind an ageing population and rapidly-decaying infrastructure.  In Bela Rechka it seems every third house is a crumbling ruin, and the sense of abandonment is palpable.

So, how to describe Goat Milk?  It’s a unique festival, kind of the anti-Biennale. You’re not there to show off.  You’re not there to sell anything.  You’re there to meet other artists, thinkers, poets, photographers, musicians, you name it, and to participate together.  There’s not that much ‘art’ on show, there’s a linear programme of workshops, talks, discussions, film screenings (followed by more discussions), and a very long dinner queue at the only place to get food, staffed by incompetent, hungover Bulgarian local lads.  I guess I’m not selling it well, because I think it’s the best art festival I’ve ever been to.  It’s all about the conversations.  Artists from all over the World gather there, unpaid for the most part, so engage in such a wonderfully open and uncompetitive way (for the most part) that the experience becomes a great source of energy, a revitaliser.  Our friend Murat, a drummer and activist from Turkey put it best, ‘we all come together from our different ‘war fields’ and we rest and talk, and realise we are not alone, then we go back, energised, to continue’.  He is pretty dramatic sometimes, particularly after a few rakias, but you get the picture.

So we went over mob-handed, accompanied by Si Walker, as always, Nicky Getgood and her ‘man’, Carl along with Soesen Edan.  We’d decided before we went that we’d try to make an artwork of some kind and had been considering the abandoned houses which were the focus of the festival this year.  We hooked up quickly with Iranian artist Gita, who had a microphone permanently clamped in her hand and was recording everything, and with our friend Antina who grew up locally and had made a beautiful installation, mapping the abandoned houses and interviewing locals to find out their stories.

We looked for a house to respond to and settled pretty quickly on a pretty dangerous looking blue house, which was due to be demolished in a month for safety reasons.  Sandra and myself designed a process for the group to respond to the house.  Working in silence, we would investigate the house, inside or outside. We would respond to a set series of themes, using our sense of smell and touch, noticing patterns and movements.  We would then go and have lunch, without talking about the experience, letting it sit for a few hours, before coming back together to feedback to the group.  It’s harder than you think, you really want to go ‘did you notice, so and so?’ and the resultant feedback sessions produced a series of amusingly arm waving pixelations.  So, much discussion about the house, and the context ensued.  One of the things we had found was a ‘necrolok’ – a poster with a photograph of a deceased person, displayed annually on bus shelters, lamposts, walls, in an effort to remember the dead – we also found the original photograph. I should say at this point that there was much debate on the voyeuristic nature of what we were doing – ‘going through someone’s knicker draw’, as it were, but we trusted ourselves to take a respectful approach and to replace everything where we found it.  At times the house felt like a museum, at others like a mausoleum, and this related directly to the issue at hand.

Bulgarians, we were told, particularly the old, fear being forgotten more than they fear death.  As long as they are remembered, they are somehow still alive, and the necroloks are an obvious example of this.  And here we were in a village, with a population of the old, surrounded by decaying and crumbling houses, all at risk of being forgotten.  We started to formulate a response, a way to commemorate the situation, and an intervention began to take shape.

We made a series of announcements around the festival – ‘look for a sign at 9.45, and bring something to leave behind’, we told people.  There was soon a sense of intrigue, particularly amongst the more adventurous festival goers – though some people clearly wanted to know what was going to happen.  So at 9.45, some of our group gathered with Murat, the drummer, near the Kazan (rakia house – ‘party central’ at the festival) and began to lead an impromptu procession up the lane towards the house.  Swinging lights and lanterns, drumming and dancing, a party atmosphere developed, as we passed the ‘pub’ (the only bar in the village) a bunch of local people joined, to see what all the fuss was about.  As we reached the house Murat’s drumming became softer and the whole ‘audience’, turned to look up at the house.  We’d lit a single window in which we had placed the necrolok poster, the original photograph and a jar of preserved peaches we had found inside the house.  After a while, one of our group stepped forward and laid an object down into a small circle of stones we had made in front of the house.  Then stood up and looked at the house for a while.  The audience needed no more instruction and for the next ten minutes object after object was placed in the circle, each audience or group member then paying their respects to the house, and it’s history.  When the final object had been placed in the circle, the eight members of the group, until then part of the audience,turned around, made eye contact with someone in the audience, then walked towards them slowly, before cupping their face with their hands and leaning forward to kiss them and whisper the word ‘goodbye’, then disappearing into the darkness.  The audience were left with the house to make their own way back.

So that was our response, a simple, beautiful act, yet interrogated constantly over the 30 hour development period in the most complex way.  We made an intervention that respected and responded to the theme, whilst giving ‘entry points’ for the audience to ask their own questions.  We don’t proscribe what these questions may be, and rarely provide ‘interpretation’ or artist statements to explain what the work is about – it’s either obvious, or there’s enough going on that telling people what it is would seem limiting.  This unnamed intervention worked incredibly well – more than one audience member was in tears (we had to administer rakia to one young lady, for medicinal purposes) – in fact, when I demonstrated ‘the kiss’ to our group, out of context, one of our group began to cry uncontrollably.  Everyone understands abandonment, or has been abandoned at some point in their lives, so the theme resonates with us all.  In Bulgaria, the fear of being forgotten is so real that people try and get remembered through leaving traces of themselves.  Our experience in Bela Rechka taught us that we need to remember what has gone before, but perhaps sometimes, we need to learn to let go more readily.

Will post some photos when we get the time.

And in other news

This Friday 3rd of June at the Edge, it’s Sonic Asylum 4 – whoopee!  The usual triple bill of  live musical performances, weird stuff, sonic installations and cake.  And a return visit from  – The Auctioneer!  From 8pm, 3 quid on the door.

Thursday at  the The Edge, Fierce are showcasing work from the Platinum programme, set up to develop live artists in the region.

We are beavering away all week to install our exhibition ‘To You from Super Me’, at the Public.  We’re dead excited about this, it”s a video triptych featuring life size projections of 8 of the young people with autism we’ve been working with for almost a year now.  We love working with these extraordinary young people and wanted to find a way to share what we have learned working with them, so image-maker Chris Keenan, Marvel comics artist John Macrae and ourselves have put together this fantastic installation.  Show opens this Friday and runs for a few weeks in the lower gallery at the Public in West Bromwich, try and make it over.

Just before we head off to Goat Milk, we just wanted to update you all about ‘To You From Super Me’ . We’ve been working with young people in Sandwell for almost a year, developing this project and it’s been an amazing journey for all involved.  We’ve got as much out of the process as the young people we’ve been working with, who are autistic.  Early on, we realised how special they are as people, and wanted to reveal what we’d learned to others.  The young people operate in the world in very different ways to others, aloof in some ways, incredibly free in others and it has been a pleasure working with them and seeing them grow as people over the last year.  We wanted to celebrate them, and their individuality – anyone who is defined through a condition, e.g. ‘autistic’ becomes framed for others through that label, and we wanted people to see through that, to enjoy the incredible individuals who might be hidden behind.  So we created ‘To You From Super Me’.

We’ve been working with comics illustrator John McCrea and image-maker Chris Keenan, to create a series of intimate and revealing portraits of the young people and their super ‘alter egos’.  From 3rd to 26th of June 2011 we will be exhibiting TYFSM at the Public in West Bromwich.  Life-sized projections of the young people will surround the audience and, for once, give them a chance to really see these very special individuals behind the label.

We’ll see you there

We’ve been working hard on our3 Minute Heroes (3MH) project, and we’re very proud of what that work has achieved.  Si, Soes, Sanj and the team have been working with some great people to find out who inspires them, to reveal the extraordinary in the ordinary.  Please go to 3 Minute Heroes and take a look at some of the material they’ve created and feel free to nominate your own hero.  The stories people have told us have ranged from the heartwarming to the heartbreaking and we have responded to them in a whole variety of ways.

On Saturday 16th April, at the Edge, we will be launching 3 Minute Heroes with an exhibition made in response to the stories we have collected through the project. To help to celebrate the unsung, a series of sonic installations, projections, performances and sculpture  have been created by a team of artists using the stories and voices of the people we have worked with as inspiration.  We’ve worked with extremely diverse groups on the project and it’s been wonderful hearing their tales of the people who inspire them, local heroes and people in their lives who make a difference.  You’ll see in the exhibition just how extraordinary the ordinary is, the hidden gems that you walk by everyday – and that everybody can be somebody’s hero.  Now, how did that song go? ‘You’ve got to search for the hero inside yourself’.

See you there or on the website

Another action-packed week for Friction and the Edge.  First up, we’re launching Residuum at the Back to Backs, in partnership with the National Trust and Dreams of Tall Buildings. See below:

Residuum-eflyer-1

Residuum-eflyer-1-2

If you come to the launch on Thursday, it’s free, otherwise usual National Trust fees apply.  It’s well worth a look around, this is living history, with the added layer of Dreams of Tall Building’s interpretation of the space through a series of sound installations.  Having heard the work in situ myself I can say it is powerful and moving work which really brings the sense of time and layers of history in the B2B’s to life.

PHD show is still at the Edge, with investigations continuing into the Darknosis project and nightly performances by Harry Palmer in his investigation laboratory/cage.  Another top show if you haven’t been yet, and worth seeing again as it develops.

Finally we are off today on our adventure to Johannesburg, South Africa on Visiting Art’s ‘Square Mile’ project.  We’ll be back at the end of November, meanwhile things continue almost as normal at the Edge.  Zara will be looking after all things Friction for us, and Happy Artist will continue, the last Friday of the month.  Wish we were  there!

We’re delirious (in more ways than one) to announce a forthcoming exhibition at the Edge as part of our ‘Close to the Edge’ programme.  PHD will feature work from the Darknosis project. In their own words:

Peter Harry and Diane (PhD) will bring their varied talents to this project.Diane and Harry, both from a fine art background will do a bit of that.

Peter will move a lot of furniture about.  Diane is a brilliant drawer so there’s going to be brilliant drawings.  Harry is a well established (misplaced) humorous performance artist, so there will be curious performance artistry.

Peter will do something.

Diane has a firm grasp of her brief, so expect some of that.phd

phd

Check out their website for further details, but be sure that they’re not lying when they say it won’t be just another art show, see you there.

Tagged with:
 

bomb-peck

We finally, and sadly closed the show on Monday (after a 9-day extension and 12 extra shows).  Last through exhibition were a group of local chinese residents, complete with interpreter, despite language barriers, they had a great time.

The show has been a great success, not only with audiences (wonderfully diverse and enthusiastic), but in developing this and future projects.  The after show talks have allowed hundreds of residents, artists and stakeholders to discuss their thoughts, memories, hopes and fears and to begin all kinds of dialogues.  The Saturday dinners have been incredible, and we will be continuing these soon with regular opportunities for people to develop the conversations further – all with delicious ‘pot luck’ food.

Echoes From The Edge will continue, so keep checking back for how you can join in as we create dialogue through art.

pubhome

photographs: Chris Keenan

We’re over half way through the exhibition now, the response has been amazing.  Last week we had a group of women, many of them asian, performing an Irish jig in one of the installations.  We’ve always enjoyed making art you can dance to, rather than treat reverentially.  There are fewer chances every day to book yourself onto a tour, so don’t prevaricate, book today, before it is too late!

post show dialogue in action

post show dialogue in action

The after show conversations have been omniportant in the show, the ‘alchemy’ of each group of visitors have meant we’ve been having extremely wide-ranging conversations.  Topics have included: young people’s rites of passage, past and present, treatment of the Irish community after the pub bombings having similarities with Muslim communities post 11/9 and 7/7, pubs as social centres and their alternatives and, again and again, how to engender a sense of community and how to learn from the past, without forgetting it.

Some audience comments: ‘The show has expanded my view of what art can be’ – ‘I’ve never felt so comfortable at an art show’ – ‘amazingly well-presented and organised – and fun too!’.  for an independent review of the show, see Nicky Getgood’s review here.

So don’t delay, book today, while you still can.

See you at the Edge.

Tagged with:
 

After weeks of hard work (not to mention the 18 months of development), the Echoes From the Edge show is now open.  Its been extremely rewarding to see everything come together and how audiences are reacting to what is a very different way of experiencing an exhibition.  The show works as a tour through a series of rooms containing interactive artwork, with a continuous soundtrack using the voices of residents of Digbeth and Highgate.  The group is led through the exhibition by these voices into a journey to discover the ‘hidden’ stories of the area, past, present and future. The show resembles a performance, yet there are no performers, a contemporary art exhibition, yet the work is very accessible, and a celebration of local history, yet there are layers of meaning to every exhibit.  Last out of the first show was a seventy five year old woman!

Pub Installation detail

Pub Installation detail

It has been great to see the show work so well for both arts audiences and people who wouldn’t normally go to a contemporary gallery, and engendering the discussions and storytelling we always wanted .  If you would like to come to the show, please leave your details here or call us on 01217726160.  Echoes from the Edge continues until 30th May, £4 entrance fee, free to community groups and residents of Highgate and Digbeth.

installation construction crew at work

installation construction crew at work