Author Archive for Gaynor Evelyn Sweeney

Abstractions by Lily Cheung

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Abstractions by Lily Cheung
Written by Gaynor Evelyn Sweeney.
14 June 2008
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London based Chinese UK born artist, Lily Cheung, whom grew up in Liverpool, has recently exhibited a series of new work for her BA (Hons) Fine Art at the London Metropolitan University End of Year Exhibition.

This is a collection that has been two years in research on the concepts and processes of mark making and printing techniques. Inspired by the visual dialogue of Jean Dubuffet and Jackson Pollocks in their rhythmic and random approach, she allows the innate energies of her creative expressions to transcend and evolve. This approach realises organic structures, lines, textures and forms of various depths and intensity.

The abstractions entice the viewer to dissect these almost quite biological and primordial metamorphous annotations, which seem to multiply like cellulous visions to encapsulate the senses.

Cheung stated: “Private collectors have already expressed an interest in buying part of this new work”.

Now she has completed her studies in Fine Art, her future plans are two fold. She explains: “I intend to work in the contemporary arts market to learn more on the business front of gallery practice. In conjunction with this, I wish to expand on this work further of organic abstractions in various forms of print making and in sculpture”.

The exhibitions runs from 10-20 June 2008 at London Metropolitan University, Central House, 59.63 High Street, London, E1 7PF (nearest tube: Aldgate East).

For further information on the art of Cheung go to:
e: lilycheung93@hotmail.com
w: http://composite-online-gallery.webs.com/

Al & Al ‘Eternal Youth’ at FACT

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Review on Al and Al, ‘Eternal Youth’, Exhibition and Screenings at Fact.
Written by Gaynor Evelyn Sweeney.

10 May 2008.

Al and Al is the first solo screening in the UK. This has been defined by Fact, as ‘forming a vital part of Liverpool’s Year of Culture celebrations and Fact’s Human Futures programme’. The work includes a new video installation ‘Eternal Youth’ (2008), which was commissioned by Fact and presented with two existing works and a blue screen interactive studio.

Al and Al are two UK artists who produce computer generated videos that take popular culture through the means of celebrity icons, live action performance combined with animation special effects. The work takes the very media and technology in post modern visual culture from gaming, iconic references, cyber and alternative realities with an array of other items of prevalence and fuses them to realise a discourse with the self in the temporal and spatial realms captured, explicated and exploded on screen. The art explores the power popular culture and mediation. Interstellar Stella shows a child model who enters a journey into a labyrinth of her advertising images.

This digital work looks at the origins of ‘paparazzi’ from a study of Fellini’s ‘La Dolce Vita’, not only but the concept and experiential demonstrations of morality gauged by the economy and the emerging mass-consumer lifestyle, as is with mass media, concept living, alternative existences in the 21st century. ‘Perpetual Motion in the Land of Milk and Honey’ adopts and reforms the artist’ grandfather’s lifelong aspirations to produce a perpetual motion mechanism which will generate free power. This work incorporates characters from Britney Spears, the Lamb of God and more to critique through visual dialogue the mechanisations of capitalism and the possibilities born from technology.

Al and Al’s ‘Eternal Youth’, their most current work, alludes to the killing of one of the city’s icons, John Lennon. The film references urban space undergoing a renaissance, a rebirth, while in conflict with old orders from the past. The story is one relative to the youth of place and the mediation technology formulates.

Winston Glory’s assassin, a character from the film, similar to Mark Chapman whom shot Lennon in 1981, is fixated with the idea he has formed of his hero. Both these works are cognitive by J. D. Salinger’s book ‘The Catcher in the Rye’. In contemporary society’s culture infatuated with romantic ideologies of celebrity status, new media platforms in cyber space, mobile video and more permit the audience, the everyday person, to access, interact, manipulate and redefine our own image and sets numerous possibilities to transform the individual self to something other aspired.

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Al and Al’s exhibition installation allows members of the public to become part of this narrative and intervention where their own being becomes the performer.

The films by Al and Al capture and entrance the viewer in a sense of gaming with an implicit association formed with the characters. The surreal embodied in digital techno-colour trigger the imagination to follow the journey and believe.

I would strongly recommend to view this exhibition and screenings of the work by Al and Al, as it takes the visual dialogue experienced in modern technological lifestyles and mass media consumerism and jettisons you into another world – the world of Al and Al.

The exhibition, runs from 18 April to 08 June 2008 at:

Fact, 88 Wood Street, Liverpool, L1 4DQ.
t: 0151 707 4444
e: info@fact.co.uk
w: www.fact.co.uk

sk-interfaces at FACT Review and Interview

sk-interfaces and Jens Hauser

Interview and Review by Gaynor Evelyn Sweeney

02 March 2008

sk-interfaces, an exhibition at the FACT (Liverpool, England) and curated by Jens Hauser, is an extraordinary and thought provoking cultural analysis of arts, science and philosophy. It takes skin as the media for interface, where seventeen international artists have explored through various creative and scientific technological processes the concepts of liminality. Those very shifts and transitions of the inbetweenness of the current socio-cultural climate. The extensive creative overview captured by the different artists is equally explored in the curatorial parameters of the gallery setting and public spaces by Hauser.

The exhibitions encompasses the work by Orlan; Julia Reodica; The Tissue Culture and Art Project by Oron Catts and Ionat Zurrr; Art Orienté objet by Marion Laval-Jeantet and Benoit Mangin; Stelarc; Jun Takita; Zbigniew Oksiuta; Maurice Benayoun; Critical Art Ensemble; The Office of Experiments; Zane Berzina; Eduoardo Kac; Kira O’Reilly; Jill Scott; livier Goulet; Wim Delvoye; Yann Marussich and others. Plus, a full extensive programme of seminars, lecturers, films and more.

Hauser provides further insight to his professional involvement and curatorial objectives of sk-interfaces and contemporary arts and culture.

Sweeney: How did you become professionally involved in arts and science, both as a writer and curator?

Hauser: We are living in a world that is, on the one hand, shaped and deeply interpenetrated by our contemporary technosciences. On the other, art increasingly conquers new terrains, and aesthetics‚ evaporate everywhere into society. Art in our highly mediated age can be seen as an ‘incubator’ in which the technologies of our age make new aesthetics and models of self-understanding breed and hatch. Especially in the field of what is often called ‘media arts’, the integration of contemporary knowledge has modified a certain view of art as being primarily guided by intuition or the quest for the sublime. It is not surprising that these FACTors have influenced my own development: I passed my higher education entrance qualification with a focus on biology, then studied aesthetics, film and psychology, and ended up with a degree in scientific journalism, before working as a cultural journalist and founding collaborator of the European Culture TV channel ARTE since 1992 – and then adapted myself to this stimulating cultural environment by becoming an art curator and writer. But we should not see sk-interfaces as a ’sci-art’ exhibition. Its aim is not to illustrate knowledge or scientific methods but to subvert them to primarily non-utilitarian ends, in order to make us think about how our technologies and media have taken over the role of our skins through which we relate to the world.
FACT-Tissue2.jpgSweeney: How did the concept of the sk-interfaces exhibition come about?

Hauser: sk-interfaces explores what was once believed to be the limit of our bodies and identities, the external boundaries, but which are currently being perceived as more and more unstable. Launching FACT’s 2008 Human Futures programme, sk-interfaces emphasizes the growing importance of the liminal state of ‘inbetween-ness’ which we encounter in the age of technological extensions and bio- and nano-political changes, even beyond the consequences of the digital age. Its focus is on the process of becoming, rather than on snapshots of what we think that we are. Materially and metaphorically, artists explore trans-species relationships, xenotransplantation, telepresence and permeable architecture. The exhibition presents ‘victimless’, tissue cultured miniature ‘leather’garments or designer replacement hymens, video-, interactive- or haptic installations.

Sweeney: What are the core objectives to this exhibition?

Hauser: The exhibition asks how to replace borders that tend to separate by membranes which need to be negotiated. How do we relate not only to each other but to the other in an increasingly technological and mediated environment? Will distances and distinctions still be felt the same way? Generally speaking, the art works reflect on our relationships we not only have with other humans but also toward other living organisms. Let’s think of biotechnological satellite-bodies which bridge gender, ‘races’ and species, or architecture which tends to escape earthly gravity. The works critically engage us into a deep questioning of whom and how to inter-face with, and whether our identities still stop at our skins.

Sweeney: Why did you select the ideas imbued to skin as the interface process in the exhibition? Hence, the title sk-interfaces.

Hauser: The exhibition does not simply deal with ‘skin as interface’, this would have been much too literal. sk-interfaces is a trompe l’œil concept for the exhibition and the publication. While skin and interface can be readily identified as solid words in their own right, tempting us to make the immediate association of ‘skin as interface’, it is the title’s hyphen that demands our attention. The intrinsic quality of the hyphen to change its position allows it to take up the position of in-between, exploiting its potential to modify our perception of a given word. As a mediating material signifier, the hyphen is more than merely a link; it dynamically induces an ability to become into the very ‘body’ of the concept sk-interfaces. It is designed to emphasize the growing importance of this liminal state of ‘inbetweenness’, as a period of transition between two states of being under the fluctuating socio-cultural climate.

Sweeney: Why did you select the artists to represent the theme in this exhibition?

Hauser: After the exhibition ‘L’Art Biotech’ I curated in Nantes in 2003, it was becoming obvious that many artists using new expressive media, including biomedia, were rediscovering ‘skin’. A five-year empirical study of why and how artists have recently developed an interest in the material properties and functionalities inherent in the notion of skin as a physiologically mediating instance then revealed common patterns of motivations. Put succinctly, art came first and cultural theory followed. What these works share is their liminality within which major shape-shifting transformations can occur. In the ambiguity, openness and disorientating indeterminacy of these unstable transition zones, ontological crises and epistemological doubts relating to our ever-expanding identities are given material form: from trans-border, -gender or -species issues and mixed ethnicity to the fascination of growth, self-experimentation, infection and healing, to matters of the living and non-living, such as the status of foetuses, stem cell research and tissue culture.

Sweeney: Who do you believe the contemporary audience is for this exhibition?

Hauser: sk-interfaces is designed to provide a locus for debate for all audiences, including less art-, science- or philosophy- ‘literate’ audiences. And the large number of visitors reminds me a similar phenomenon we had observed in Nantes in 2003: people often spend a very long time in the galleries experiencing the displays, and obviously the show attracts audiences beyond the typical contemporary art lovers. An exhibition of this type is not a capitalist spectacle whose aim is to please absolutely everybody. But it is a very sincere and profound offer from the artists to everybody to ask existential questions of our times. It is an exhibition that proposes visceral matter and escapes an elitist conception of how the contemporary arts are sometimes protected behind the rules of their own milieu.

Sweeney: Do you believe there is an educational or enlightening value to the exhibition?

Hauser: I hope so. But there is no centrally intended ‘message to learn’. The exhibition is designed in way which not only gives the visitor the opportunity to concentrate on each work independently but also establishes subtle links between the pieces: from apparently playful interactivity to political art and uncanny encounters with psychopharmacological self-experimentation; from the tiny level of cultured cells to the perspective of growing large structures in outer space. In other words: There is not just one linear way through the exhibition, no one-way-reading of added meanings, but a circular situation by which many combinations become possible. This may make the pieces mutually enrich each other, and stimulate the viewer to ask new questions even to works that he or she has already seen. The space design tries to echo the underlying questioning of our logocentric cultures in which we tend to ‘add up’ words to form sentences like pearls on a cord. Instead, the scenography tends to create singular encounters with tangible and questionable scenarios that are presented rather than represented. We see viewers experiencing the pieces more than once, and the design has been done avoiding guiding audiences too directly through the space, so that they can build their own story and interpretation of the whole.

Sweeney: The exhibition moves throughout the main foyer to the principle gallery areas of the FACT Centre, why did you adopt this approach in variable spatiality of the building?

Hauser: The FACT building is multi-functional, and many people come there only for the movies. We wanted to attract all kind of audiences. Also, the idea of sk-interfaces implies to go beyond the skin of the gallery spaces; therefore we use the foyer, the outside surfaces of the building, and several offside venues. As an example, the SkinBag shop by Olivier Goulet has been temporarily installed in the International Gallery run by The Arts Organisation. This asks the question whether art always needs to be sanctioned and confined in a white cube or whether creative energy isn’t almost emerging out of the grey area between disciplines and labels.

Sweeney: How do you deem the balance between the aesthetics of the art in the exhibition against the scientific content? Do you see both as integral and an equilibrium achieved both by subject and visual dialogue?

Hauser: I suggest that we need to prepare ourselves not to try to argue with an anachronistic art/science dichotomy every time technoscientific tools are being appropriated by cultural players. sk-interfaces is not a so-called ‘bioart’ show. Only some of the artists here use various kinds of biotechnology in collaboration with scientists, and work in controlled conditions while respecting and complying with regulations and ethics approvals. Artists in sk-interfaces have not been chosen because of the medium they use but according to how they expressed this idea of permeable boundaries – which may be epistemologically induced by scientific discoveries. For this reason we find artists here who may come from such different backgrounds as body-, digital media-, tactical-, conceptual-, ‘classical contemporary’ or ‘bioart’ as well as from architecture or design, thus overcoming the borders that cultural institutions often establish.

Sweeney: Why did you select the FACT Centre in Liverpool to platform this exhibition?

Hauser: There could not be a better opportunity for sk-interfaces than to happen at FACT within the framework of the European Capital of Culture, whose initial idea was to move beyond national borders – the exhibition’s theme of ‘inbetween-ness’ fully hits the very concept of the European Capital of Culture itself. And after having been working and presenting similar topics mainly in France, Germany, Austria, Spain, Italy, Australia and the USA, I have been attracted by the specificity of the UK context: examining the influence upon the national identity of being an island, questioning whether it affects how people might consider the concept of a changing border. It is also a country in which politically and culturally there is a determination to ‘integrate otherness’. More specifically, Liverpool as a port is historically very much a symbol for international exchange – be it for trade or slavery – but also for important and sometimes painful mutations the city passed through. sk-interfaces is about the liminal, the phenomena that start at the margins, and thanks to risky contact rather than through safe centrality. Therefore most of the European capitals would have been much less appropriated to present this art than Liverpool actually is.

Sweeney: Do you intend to tour this exhibition and where?

Hauser: Such an exhibition is very difficult to tour. The infrastructures have been developed over two years specifically for the Liverpool context, and the art at display does in majority not consist of such plug-and-play installations that can go easily from one place to another. Nevertheless, the Casino Contemporary Arts Center in Luxembourg will stage a slightly modified version of sk-interfaces in 2009, and other venues internationally have confirmed their interest.

Sweeney: What is your next cultural initiative planned?

Hauser: I’m working as a co-curator with Hege Tapio on the Article Biennale in November, as part of the exhibition programme of Stavanger in Norway, the other European Capital of Culture 2008.

TakitaLight-200.jpgThe exhibition is a challenging and provocative on the subject of scientific intervention and indeed those very ideals of what constitutes art and the fluctuating and merging parameters of arts and science. Some of the work which attracted my attentions included – but the overall collection is inspiring and enlightening:

The Harlequin Coat by Orlan is commentary on cross cultural breeding from the potential of hybridinng origins and species. The skin coat takes as its point of departure Michel Serres’ book The Troubadour of Knowledge, in which the Harlequin figures as a metaphor for multiculturalism. It relates to modifications previously achieved by the artist, on a digital and virtual level, in her Self-hybridation series. A fusion of combined media and biological processes pervade the viewer senses and entice and nurture the analytical propensities.

Stelarc presents the Extra Ear: Ear on Arm. The projections and photographs present the documentation of the surgical process by which the artists has constructed the ear-sharped scaffold and communication device implanted and constructed on his forearm. The additional ear is meant to have a microphone and Bluetooth transmitter built-in, and, through wireless technology, it effectively becomes an Internet organ for the body, representing the dual reception and transmission functions of the skin. The extra ear is, in the artist’s words, a prosthesis that is not seen as ‘a sign of lack but rather as a symptom of excess’. This intriguing implant sturs the maccarbre curiosities in the viewer.

hymNext Hymen Project by Julia Reodica are unisex ‘designer hymens’ are sculpted from the artist’s own vaginal cells; they are designed to symbolically re-virginize repeatedly. It establishes an enquiry to the traditional value of virginity in certain cultures at a time when the symbolic tissue can be easily re-created and implanted. Each hymen or set has a specific motif or symbolism and each intended for sale to art collectors as novelty items presented in a ceremonial box. Adjacent to this collection of quite ornamental boxes with the perceptibly fragile sculptures within, there is set on view the sterile feeding appliances, nutrient media and flow hood, which serve as the the creative ritual. These intricate and ritualistic objects become the commodification in societal notions of the precious and collectibles.

The work by Jun Takita, titled Light on Light is a magnetic resonance scan of the artists’ brain has been 3-dimensionally printed and its surface covered with transgenic, bioluminescent moss, developed with a technique similar to biomarkers that are routinely used in science. Presenting us with a plant that emits light, Takita presents through this technological sculpture the possibilities of transforming the innate traits of living human creatures through the scientific intervention. Through transgenic process of the human brain it enables the creations of plants to illuminate expanding those parameters of natural order and the possibilities of science, art and imagination. It a strange disturbing sense it touches on the sentience of the self, the temporal awareness in human evolution and significantly with those very implications of intervention on existence by science and philosophy.

The Tissue Culture and Art Project by Oron Catts and Ionat Zurr, Victimless Leather, displays three garments on as ‘semi-living’ sculptures in the form of miniature jackets. The concept by the artists is to ironically consider the utopian ideals of leather without need to kill animals. These are shown in growth incubators, as they are essential to the art to enable them to continue to grow and form. The structures are supported by biodegradable polymers of minitature stitch affect coat shapes. The art looks at the ethics in society of clothes manufactured from dead animals for aesthetic and protective purposes. The Tissue Culture and Art Project is an award-winning artist group hosted by and centrally involved in SymbioticA, the art and science collaborative research laboratory at the University of Western Australia, which received the prestigious Ars Electronica Golden Nica award for Hybrid Art in 2007. The work is cultural commentary on those very moral implications of clothes, indeed stimulates discourse on the fashion industry and significantly the extent for aesthetics and trends we are willing to exploit and on a similar note those very ethical boundaries of experimentation for scientific advancement.

The exhibitions runs from 01 February 2008 to 30 March 2008 at the FACT Centre.

FACT, 88 Wood Street, Liverpool, Merseyside, L1 4DQ.
T: +44(0)151 707 4450
E: info@fact.co.uk
W: www.fact.co.uk

Local Legacy at LCAD a Success

newyorkliverpoolparty.jpgLocal Legacy a Success
Written by Gaynor Evelyn Sweeney.
Image by George Lund
11 December 2007

Artists Jo Derbyshire, Rob Davies and George Lund, associate members to Transvoyeur, have took part in the ‘Local Legacy’ exhibition curated by Peter Worthington. This is currently held at Liverpool Centre of Arts Development in association with the South Bohemia Gallery, which Worthington is the Founder, Director and Curator.

The exhibition opened on 14 November 2007 with the private on the 15 November. The collection of art displayed included a selection of diverse talent from the local arts community in the city of Liverpool and surrounding regions. This has been an ultimate success with artists selling their art to private and public collectors, including Lund and Derbyshire.

Derbyshire’s unique abstract expressionism was bought by the Liverpool Centre of Arts Development itself for their permanent collection.

Davies contributed to the exhibition his take on the iconic of American western cinemagraphics transformed into paint on canvas.

Lund’s vibrant naïve renditions in figurative and abstraction were purchased by Prof. Peter Roberts OBE, part of the Academy for Sustainable Communities, to be displayed in their organisation premises.

Lund has further been commissioned by Liverpool Centre of Arts Development for a series of murals. These are scheduled to commence early 2008 and to tie in the run up to Liverpool European Capital of Culture 2008. These will be to the external of the company premises and to advocate art in the urban space.

The exhibition continues through to February 2008.

For further information on the artists and organisations:

Artists:
Jo Derbyshire: www.joderbyshire.co.uk
George Lund: www.lundart.co.uk
Rob Davies: www.robertdandavies.com
Peter Worthington: www.freewebs.com/southbag
In association with Liverpool Centre for Arts Development: www.cadt.co.uk

Artists in affiliation to Transvoyeur: www.transvoyeur.com

Sarah Townsend New York Experience to Brighton Horizons

(Ed. says – A somewhat tenuous link to Liverpool but an interesting interview. I love the idea of being able to go to an area of the city every Thursday knowing there will be openings to see.
And, as a fan of the Boredoms, I’d love to have seen that gig!)

Sarah Townsend New York Experience to Brighton Horizons.
Written by Gaynor Evelyn Sweeney.
Photography (c) of Artist
15 September 2007

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(Above) From New York to Brighton by Sarah Townsend.

Sarah Townsend, an independent artist and member to Transvoyeur, has spent the past three months in New York (US) to research the arts, culture and scenes of the city. In her recent return she has settled for the time in Brighton to check out creative energies there. Although, one can never tell when she will be inspired and spread her wings again.

Townsend discusses more in experiences is New York and this new transition to Brighton back in the UK.

Sweeney: Why did you decide to go to New York? How long was your stay?

Townsend: I have always wanted to visit New York since a little girl, mainly for the big city buzz and for the visuals. It is a brilliant city and everyday can be totally different, 3 months is no way long enough once you have got the ball rolling but visas have their horrid rules and regulations. It’s kind of nice to leave wanting more though.

Sweeney: How was the art scene in New York?

Townsend: Every Thursday night from 6-9 Chelsea has openings between 10th and 11th, 22nd to 28th Street. It’s a great way to see what’s new and a start to meeting other artists and making connections, it also brings across a sense of community in the NY art scene to some degree. There’s also heaps of free booze for those who feel a bit shy about meeting new folk and talking about their own work. I liked the areas of DUMBO and Red Hook in Brooklyn for the mass of young and up and coming artists, they somehow come across a little bit more real than the la-di-da side of the city which can get a tad w@nky and stand offish at times. A lot of money circles the art world of NYC and a lot of shit can slip through the net and get far too caught up in the publicity or promotional sides of things which I encountered on a few occasions. In my experience I never saw anything that I was floored by in terms of in the galleries but the city is thriving with art and its an ace place to have hope and feel any is possible. There are also a lot of artist studios, workshops and groups to join which is always welcoming in such a diverse city.

Sweeney: What experiences do you take away with you as an artist since being in New York?

Townsend: One of my best NYC experience was the free one off ‘Boadrum’ performance by the Japanese avant-garde band The Boredoms under Brooklyn and Manhattan Bridges at 7pm on the 7th day of the 7th month 2007; a mind blowing encounter with 77 New York drummers playing simultaneously for 77 minutes, with the Manhattan sunset skyline setting the scene behind, and thousands of people, who had queued for hours, crossed legged on the grass in the sunlight in between. I also enjoyed floating on my back during the opening of a large floating outdoor pool-barge whilst helicopters zipped over and American voices over the tannoy made me feel warm and more than welcome. I’ve fallen deeply in love with New York and will cherish all my experiences
there, both those which were daunting and those which were simple but precious. I cannot wait for my return!

Sweeney: What would you recommend about New York, both as an artist and visitor?

Townsend: www.freenyc.com and www.myopenbar.com. Great sites for ace free events, openings, festivals, all sorts of things all over the city night and day. Friday 4.00pm-8.00pm, when most of the galleries are free of charge (because you would be skint if you had to pay $20 each time which most of the museums charge!). Above all I’d definitely recommend not attempting to cram too many things in and just to let the city do it’s thing.

Sweeney: Did you develop any new work or research for new work from your experiences in New York?

Townsend: Not directly from my experiences no, maybe in time they will seep in somewhere along the line but I did do some drawing at my place in Greenpoint. I discovered the artist Henry Darger at the Folk Museum, who’s naive, delicately drawn and somewhat harrowing children have proved an inspiration to my series of ‘daddy’s taking me to the zoo tomorrow’ drawings. Regarding my experiences though, I have learnt that self promotion is of great importance to surviving as an artist. New Yorkers have a great air of confidence to them and I was often flabbergasted at how uninhibited they came across.

Sweeney: How come you returned to the UK and are now settling in Brighton?

Brighton: As mentioned before visas are only three months for tourists, it’s difficult to gain a working visa but easier if your minted which unfortunately I am not (yet)! I would love to have stayed longer but there is still the rest of America to explore when I return. I tried to live in London but at the moment I am allergic to it. When I can be distracted by school I may choose to live there. I feel better by the Brighton seaside, the city is small and it feels settling to find a nest and get my head down drawing here. I feel like its a resting and developing period for me now.

Sweeney: What do you hope to realise in Brighton?

Townsend: I hope to realise what more I want to learn.

Sweeney: What are your future professional objectives as an artists?

Townsend: I intend to sell some paintings to support myself before going back to school again.

Sweeney: How long do you anticipate staying in Brighton and your plans thereafter?

Townsend: My partner is starting a degree in wood, metal, ceramics and plastics here which will be thee years so we shall see. We will see how long it is before I start to itch … I want to visit Iceland next. I like to know that soon I will be visiting somewhere exciting and new.

For more information on the independent activities of Townsend go to:
www.myspace.com/skatshat

Affiliated to Transvoyeur:
www.transvoyeur.com

Interview With Brendan Byrne

transvoyeur_brendan_byrne_p.jpgInterview with Brendan Byrne: Art – Byrne the VJ Theory is Art.
Written by Gaynor Evelyn Sweeney.
Photographs c/o of the Artist..
01 September 2007.

Brendan Byrne is a Multi-media Artist, Co-Founder of VJ Theory and Lecturer at Falmouth University. He has exhibited and lectured internationally on the digital and multi media and an activist in the research, development and theory of this field. A published writer and innovator he is a passionate visionary to the alternative realms in computer technology and cyber space.

He is Editor to ‘VJ Theory and Real Time Interaction’ with Ana Carvalho, Paul Mumford and Lara Houston and formed ‘Art in Hidden Places’ with Magda Tyzlik (Poland), Ana Carvalho (Portugal) and Ben Carver (Canada). From the virtual reality of Multi-media space, he has extended other the diverse project to other initiatives, such as ‘Conversation Drawing Machine’ with Emma Churchill. A robotic wireless drawing machine using CIA ‘truth and lie’ detector circuitry to draw a conversation and ‘Landings’ with Stephen Page, local school children and pensioners; representations of the experience of evacuees to Cornwall.

Byrne talks further on his diverse professional roles from Editor to Artist with Gaynor Evelyn Sweeney.

transvoyeur_brendan_byrnes_.jpgSweeney: When did you first become interest art and recognise yourself as an artist?

Byrne: In some ways it depends what you mean by art. I remember walking round the Walker with my mum and deciding this is the sort of work I wanted to make. In common with many people on Merseyside, I was brought up in an Irish catholic revolutionary tradition (not quite the same as South American Liberation Theology but with some similarities). This gives a real sense of the need to produce change, particularly an ontological change as a way to produce a new social point of justice and equality. Gender and equality was always in my remembered life a part of this, having seen and witnessed the effects of that and the ‘end’ (it’s still going on in a big way) of the war for gender equality. This in turn leads to an interest in philosophical, ethical and political strategies and tactics. The conditions for those interests were present from birth. I don’t remember a point of change, it was, as far as I know, always like that. In that respect I always felt as though I was an artist but at the same time that everyone was an artist and every transformative process, an element of art (if you take that as a definition, then there is a huge amount of non-art being produced out there, which self-consciously describes itself as art).

Sweeney: Can you explain your art work?

Byrne: Not entirely. The work goes through many stages, some of making and incremental problem solving and some of thinking. Generally, there has to be some kind of reason, in some way attached to the motivations mentioned in the answer to the last question, to give enough impetus to start making the work. Through those stages, the work transmutes in its making. In the end, it has to have a potential to produce a change of some sort in order for an idea to be transformed into a work. I’ve worked across media from film to sculpture to the more recent digital interactive work. I started working in Max/MSP about 7 years ago and then later in Pure data and Gem but never showed any of these works until the last year or so. The reason for that was based on a mistaken assumption from traditional fine art practice, which had always worked, as a rule, with sculpture or even film works. The assumption is based on the ‘finishedness’ of the work. It’s only recently that I’ve realised (after risking a few exhibitions of this kind of work) that interactive work is only finished by the viewer. A recent piece, called ‘History Mirror’ was shown at ‘Live Art Falmouth’ just in the last couple of weeks. This work shows the room as it is now but mixed across this is an image of the past. The past image goes back in time as the viewer approaches the screen causing everything including the viewer themselves to move backwards in time. ‘Live Art Falmouth’ was a performance art show and the idea of this work is that the viewer themselves becomes the performer, that is, they can act upon their past selves and others who where in the room earlier, causing the earlier presences to move forward or backward in time as their present selves acts with the past people. This produces a perceptual dissonance, which is also amazingly enjoyable for the viewer. Having stopped myself from showing this kind of work for so long I have a large collection of material now pretty ready to show. Linked to this is the idea of giving up control; in this case to the viewer, but also in the work I produce collectively with other artists, such as the work with ‘Art In Hidden Places’ and the theoretical VJing and real time interaction community www.vjtheory.net.

Sweeney: Your work explores different creative processes through digital media and technology. Can you explain how you develop an idea from onset to the end?

Byrne: Digital media have allowed me to develop ideas that I’ve wanted to make into work for many years before the technology was available. The series ‘Police Yourself’ had its first outing in a show curated by Denny Long in 1990 and involved two cameras and monitors and a nineteenth century technique called ‘Pepper’s Ghost’. The viewer walks into the space and sees themselves on a monitor in gold. Simultaneously they walk towards themselves and look at themselves from the side, this second figure is blue. The second monitor is four times the size of the first and placed at right angles to it but reflected in a sheet of glass at 45 degrees to the first. The viewer has to physically pull focus between the two images of themselves. Even then, I wanted to introduce a slight time delay in the two images but short of sending it to a satellite and back or buying a 10,000-pound delay line this wasn’t possible. The work remained analogue but still worked, according to the response of the viewers. Even more pronounced was the way in which Christopher Saunders and myself always re-edited the 16mm film ’12 Stone 4’ each time we showed it. This was in the nineteen eighties. It also metamorphosed in form when Chris showed elements of it as an installation in the Pompidou, Paris and I showed it in a relatively unmodified way, as a video, at the Tate, St. Ives.

With digital media these manipulations become much easier, what is important is to use the potential of the media productively rather than do something just because it can. Similarly with the work with vjtheory.net; many of us were effectively ‘fjing’ using super eight and sixteen millimetre film at venues like Heaven in Charing Cross (that’s the Charing Cross in London not Birkenhead, as far as I know, tell me if I’m wrong) in the 1980s. Jamming with visuals (in a sense) goes back to the eighteenth century with similar questions (with many additional ones) about why, where (club, street, gallery……), what; being asked and explored.

Sweeney: You have applied different media through your professional and creative practice. Can you extend on this and explain what other creative ventures you have done?

Byrne: The locus of the work is essentially in people. From this comes a questioning of relationships of power and in this of economics. Outside of the media already mentioned is my work with collaborative and participatory art and activist groups. These are as broad as helping set up Lewisham Unemployed Action Group (‘LUAG working for nothing’) to ‘DIY Arts’ when we took over the Elephant and Castle shopping precinct. Very much more recently (a week last Monday) we set up a group called ‘Falmouth Wharves Community Development’. Falmouth wharves has recently been bought by a millionaire Norwegian ex-public schoolboy. One hundred and twenty men and women work on the wharves in mostly marine light industry, some of the businesses have operated here for generations. Imaginatively, the site is to be converted to luxury flats. It is also the home to many artists’ studios. There has been, in the past, a degree of disagreement between some members of these two groups. The unequivocal statement by the new owner that (nearly) all of us will be thrown out has successfully (with the help of a certain Kimberley Stone) managed to bring everyone together. The next phase is to buy out the developer and create our own plan to organise the wharves organically and ecologically respecting the needs of the present users and the surrounding community.

Sweeney: What artists have inspired you and why?

Byrne: Jean Luc Godard and Guy Debord both influenced my earliest work (despite the latter describing the former as ‘just another Beatle’. Beyond that, the ideas of Giordano Bruno and his 500 odd heresies also influenced me at a quite early age. On a visit to the Walker Gallery the ideas and work of the Boyle family still influences the work I make. In the eighties, I met with Tracy Emin and Mark Wallinger. Tracy was living with Chris Saunders and working with Chris for many years still has a presence in the work I make.

Sweeney: What subjects shape and influence your work and how?

Byrne: Pretty well as said before. I’m interested in the way that the idea of beingness, of being you, is constructed. This is part of the reason for my interest in astronomy and how people can work against themselves and their own best interests. I already mentioned Giordano Bruno who my grand ma introduced to me (not personally) when she bought me a book in Beaties in Birkenhead when I was about 5 years old. It became very important, living on the Leasowe estate where the sky was always a better place to look than the ground. Obviously, up is a good place to look, to get things into perspective. I joined Liverpool Astronomical Society when I was about seven. I was proposed and seconded by good men in tweed suits in the basement of the museum. My mum took me to the next meeting I attended in the old Liverpool Poly Lecture theatre and we listened to a lecture on the albino quotient of images of planets in this solar system. It was largely based on an interpretation of image data. Stuff I’m still doing now, along with the theme of getting things in ‘perspective’, for example, ‘Just Weight’ which I showed on buildings all over Belfast City centre in the Belfast Festival a couple of years ago.

Sweeney: What motivates you to create in this mode of expression and media in your various practices?

Byrne: When I lived on the Leasowe, in the middle flat at the end to the nearest block to the ‘precinct’, on the Cameron Rd. As a tiny boy I tried to escape, with a sandwich, to somewhere else, in a peddle car Angia (Ford). We moved to Raleigh Rd. on the same estate and into a flat above the Patterson’s. Mrs. Patterson used to take me to school in the morning and Mr. Patterson gave me free reign of his library. The grey orange of Penguin books didn’t encourage but the way our neighbours behaved did encourage me and the potentially Marxist /Leninist texts came back to me later. That mixed with my mum’s books, largely about magic and mysticism, led to reading a footnote, which said something like ‘never read Aleister Crowley’. I quickly found out that the best collection of Crowley was in Birkenhead library. It did take two buses to get there. This does explain the previous question in the sense that we now live in Crowleyanity and it’s time we worked together to stop the absurdity of how we live. To expand, we can now respond to the constructed subject and make ‘it’ think that it thought itself and make it take action. The oppression is still expanding and we need to make work, which disrupts this. Strangely, I’m working collaboratively with Tim Crowley. Tim’s great uncle is Aleister so we will be seeing how that goes. Tim saw my ‘History Mirror’ and approached me about a collaborative work as he makes interactive audio work using ‘Super Collider’ as an authoring environment. I’ll be using pure data to produce imagery and also incursions into the physical world. The reasons for using this mode of expression is the apparently direct relationship between the virtual and the material and physical. The precursor of this was a number of neo-Marxist models of the ideological subject (there are other models and they need to be examined too).

Sweeney: Do you use any other media as research source or in production of your art?

Byrne: Hopefully, as discussed, this will make use of eruptions of reality. Using the material and the physical there is a possibility of a new eruption of reality. By ‘material’ I mean the economic ‘reality’ by the ‘physical’ I mean the table in front of you. The rest is a type of theology. Strangely, they are my materials.

More mundanely, I work sculpturally and in film and video.

Sweeney: What do you plan for the future as an artist in your professional practice?

Byrne: By expanding on already being a human being with other human beings. That’s not just a multiple me but a hybrid; making, in real collaborative and participatory work, along with the loneliness of no one really knowing what and why you make what and why and how you make but accepting what is already the beingness of that way of making.

Sweeney: What are the positive and negative experiences of being an artist?

Byrne: n= institutions. p=humans

Sweeney: What do you want to be remembered for?

Byrne: It worked.. We humans stayed and late capitalism really doesn’t know how to do that.

love,

b.

Try the collective beingness of:
www.vjtheory.net
That’s all.

For further information on Byrne and his art:
Website: www.anotherday.org.uk

For future events Byrne is involved with Transvoyeur:
Website: www.transvoyeur.com

Bagism on Bold Street

Bold Street and Bagism.
Written by Gaynor Evelyn Sweeney.
Photographs by Tony Knox.
18 August 2007.

bagism_2007-230.jpgOn the close of the unveiling of the Transvoyeur Legacy 2007 art collection in the Emergency Department of the Royal Liverpool University Hospital, Tony Knox and I went up towards Bold Street to make our way home.

Outside the Oxfam Charity Shop were two bags on the floor with a guitar case next to it with a pile of papers and loose coins in the bottom. Families walked by nearly stepping on the bags. The bags then moved and guitar music sounded from one bag and followed by citations of poetry form another. Then it was realised these were artists in the bags and doing a live art intervention on ‘Bagism’. Whether the artists were aware they had drawn a crowd, they had an audience confounded and curious to this strange manifestation of incongruous bags resounding prose and music.

A man, somewhat worse for wear, stopped and moved around the bags like an inquisitive cat ready to pounce. He moved further in, stumbling, and tried to lift the bag from one reading poetry and asked “I want to get in with you!

Interview with Gary Sollars

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Interview with Gary Sollars: Art – Caravans, Compositions and Dollman.
Written by Gaynor Evelyn Sweeney.
Photograph Tony Knox 2007 and c/o Artist.
Monday 09 July 2007.

Gary Sollars, is an internationally established and recognised painter, who work expands to more diverse and innovative creative explorations from his Fine Art practice in his extraordinary compositions to his more elaborate projects of new media, live art and installation.

His art is inspired and influenced by personal experience giving it a twist in concept from the autobiographical. He has exhibited internationally at many festival, biennials and events from London to Berlin and more. The visual dialogue in his art imbues a social commentary from his own immediate experience and contemporary issues. From the High Art of his paintings, such as short listed in the prestigious John Moores Painting Prize, to the eccentric performance initiatives of Dollman.

Sollars discusses in an interview with Gaynor Evelyn Sweeney his concepts and experiences that shape his art work.

Sweeney: When did you first become interest art and recognise yourself as an artist?

Sollars: As a child, I would design, make, paint, explore everything, as much as possible. I recognised myself as an artist in 1994, aged 36.

Sweeney: Can you explain your art work?

Sollars: My artwork began through expressing very personal feelings, as in the death of my partner. I was able to capture this in an image I believe to be my very first piece of art before it evolves into the style I do now. From the moment I created that work I knew it was possible to believe in myself and for others to take me seriously as an artist. Being gay has a massive influence on my imagery. The lack of queer emotion in art was my springboard and my initial interest as an artist, where both gay political and personal themes are combined into my work. My art continues to be motivated by personal experience. I look inside myself for inspiration through my emotions hoping to keep whatever uniqueness I have.

Sweeney: Your work has a strong interest in social commentary of your paintings. Can you explain how you develop an idea from onset to the end?

Sollars: My work includes worlds I inhabit, my interests lie in off beat places and people I have empathy with, larger than life characters from the ‘working classes’, pretentious actions and people are totally interesting to me. I begin with an idea or a feeling and from that an image develops. I usually wait months to test the strengths of the idea. Eventually the image will evolve and become stronger as a visualisation and when it is clear as rough sketch I will then sketch it onto a compositional grid. From this add tone and the art forms to realise the end piece. Obviously these are changeable, but are great guides to establish a strong base fir a work, which may take six months or more to produce.

Sweeney: You have explored different media, other than painting, including performance element through Dollman and related events. Can you explain more about your performance work, how this was first conceived and since developed?

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Sollars: Dollman, as a performance event host, is loud and brash, clumsy, drunk and more and more out of control, as the vodka take effect throughout the evening. The events are extremely well planned musically and it is important all who attend feel safe, have fun and feel part of something verging on chaos. Dollman is derived from characters observed in Liverpool.

Sweeney: What artists have inspired you and why?

Sollars: I am inspired by anyone who truly believes in what they do. Francis Bacon, Hockney, Warhol, Norman Rockwell, Jan Van Eyck, Holbein, Peter Blake, Roger Van der Weyden, Rowan an Martins Laugh in, Andy Williams, Oliver, Sweet Charity, the sixties, the seventies, Discotecque, queers, gay pride marches, flowers, films, A Taste of Honey, the Knack, Up the Junction, Pulp Fiction, Pedro Almodovar and much more.

Sweeney: What subjects shape and influence your work and how?

Sollars: Influences are emotional responses to person situations around me. The top imagery hit list are men, because they are beautiful things. I may use parrots, ice-cream or cake. I like caravans and smoking in pubs now since banned and sunsets and plus a million other things.

Sweeney: What motivates you to create in this mode of expression and media in your various practices?

Sollars: Motivation is the fact that I cannot stop thing about creating stuff.

Sweeney: Do you use any other media as research source or in production of your art?

Sollars: I use anything that effect me. I have recently gone into digital video, installation and sculpture in my work. It is now 2007 and I am returning to my first practice of painting.

Sweeney: What do you plan for the future as an artist in your professional practice?

Sollars: My future plans are to do more video, a huge installation (if funding is available), entering some high profile exhibitions in 2008. Dollman Disco is to continue with more chaotic rawness maybe.

Sweeney: What are the positive and negative experiences of being an artist?

Sollars: The positive experiences about being an artist is that kind of give yourself permission to be a step away from medication at all times, to be different, to not work in a factory, to indulge in fantasies and create mental-ness that others sometime recognise as art. The negatives, would be great to sell work, financial uncertainty it the only negative.

Sweeney: What do you want to be remembered for?

Sollars: To be remembered for the creations I have not thought of yet!

Further information on Sollars work can be viewed at:
E-mail: dollmandisco@hotmail.com
Website: www.garysollars.co.uk

For future events Sollars is involved with Transvoyeur:
E-mail: transvoyeuruk@hotmail.co.uk
Website: www.transvoyeur.com