Archive for the 'Interview' Category

Mike Badger – Reformation Man

Mike Badger and his Hot Guitars artwork

Mike Badger and his Hot Guitars artwork

Story and Photographs by Minako Jackson (for Scousehouse.net)

Mike Badger is well known by music enthusiasts as a founder member of The La’s.
After leaving The La’s, he formed the band Onset and currently concentrating on his solo work as well as a collaboration project with musicians from Nashville. Alongside his own musical career, Mike has been a running an indie record label called Viper Label, releasing music of his own and other musicians/bands from Liverpool such as Tramp Attack and Edgar Jones. The label also releases compilation albums of cult classics and hidden masterpieces by Liverpool bands as well as American bands and guitarists from 1920’s to 50’s.
Viper Label: http://www.the-viper-label.co.uk/

But Mike is also well known in the art world, he has exhibited his amazing metal sculptures for many years and runs workshops in schools and galleries.

We visited Mike’s home and studio situated in a lovely suburb of Liverpool.
We had met previously at the private view of “Junk Shop Revoloution” at the Bluecoat Display Centre. This group exhibition features artwork by using recycled material and Mike was there as he was one of the artists in the show and we had a chance to speak with him.

I said to him “I am a big fan of the Space’s ‘Tin Planet’ album cover which you designed. I have a limited edition tin package one but it’s a shame that I left it at my parents’ place in Japan.”

Mike replied “Are you from Japan? I had an interview with a Japanese music magazine recently. Have you heard of “Cookie Scene”? It was a 4 page long interview and the magazine was sent over but I have no idea what it says. Can you translate it for me?”

I did the translation, he was pleased and he invited us to his studio once he had finished his tour.

Tin Planet - Mike Badger

Tin Planet - Mike Badger

When you enter the art studio/recording studio, first thing you notice is a collage of “TIN PLANET” installed on the ceiling, it was made with tin, of course. I was very excited to see this and Mike explained to me that when Tommy Scott, the leader of Space came to the studio at the time he was trying to come up with a name for the band’s second album but once he saw it he decided to name the album “Tin Planet”.

Mike produced not only the tin model kit (instead of the plastic model kit) on the album cover but also his tin cars and angel are playing a major role in the single “Avenging Angel” promotion video!
Space ‘Avenging Angel’: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NaxipnPS96M

The whole decoration in his studio is a work of art and very exciting. The material for his sculptures is mostly found objects (waste; items picked up on the street or in everyday life). Lucky rubbish and neglected material picked up by Mike will come to life again with his magic hands full of affection and playfulness.

Mike's first ever robot. A broken valve is used for the head.

Mike's first ever robot. A broken valve is used for the head.

"Yellow Submarine" made of mustard powder tin cases, loaded with the music box of the same song.

"Yellow Submarine" made of mustard powder tin cases, loaded with the music box of the same song.

There’s a bright red double-decker bus, originally a tin of biscuits. When he was making this, he was absorbed in the colours and the patterns, he only realised later that there were pictures of the tourist attractions in London such as Trafalgar Square and Westminster on the roof of the bus. He enjoys finding coincidences as a result from something he picked up instinctively.

In addition to the sculptures, there are countless paintings and drawings, flyers and posters come out from the drawers one after another. Many of his artworks bear the dates and it was as if we were looking at his diary from the 80’s to the present time.

From his self-portraits, sketches of people around him, repeatedly appearing Sci Fi, giraffes, American Indians, Africa to the handmade board game he drew when he was on tour etc, etc.

Mike is often asked if his main occupation is a musician or artist. He does not really recognise himself as just one of them. For him, it is simply a matter of how his creativity takes shape – sometimes it comes out as music and sometimes it becomes art.

He loathes excessive manipulation and his belief to let his flowing sensitivity and creativity come out naturally with the rawest possible energy to produce something that reflects his art work as well as his music and way of life.

It might be an anti-establishment attitude but it must have been a natual course of action that he set up his own record label to give him freedom to create music as he wishes and release what he wants to release without fawning upon the major record companies which would lead to his passion being restricted or distorted. Perhaps he may even feel uncomfortable about the idea of dividing the genre classification between music and art.

In that sense, it seems to me that his studio is a perfect space for him to let his creativity swim across music and art freely.

Mike Badger: http://www.mikebadger.co.uk/

PS: After our visit, Mike sent us an image of his collage piece “Re-cycled Liverpool”!

mike-badger-1

Re-cycled Liverpool c. Mike Badger

National Museums Liverpool’s Amy de Joia opens up to How-Do

Amy de Joia talks to Laura Spence about her inspirations, present projects and future developments. De Joia is executive director of development and communications for National Museums Liverpool and featured in How-Do’s Public Sector 100.

What projects are you working on at the moment and what’s the thinking behind them?

National Museums Liverpool runs eight museums and galleries in and around Liverpool – so there are always lots of projects on the go! We’ve had a three-fold increase in visitor numbers over the past six years, with a record-breaking 2.7m visitors in 2008, and we want to continue to build on that success.  Our biggest project at the moment is the new £72m Museum of Liverpool, due to open 2011.  It’s the largest newly-built national museum in Britain for over a century and the world’s first national museum devoted to the history of a regional city – so it’s a big deal for us and for Liverpool.  We’ve had fantastic funding support from the North West Development Agency, European Regional Development Fund, and the Heritage Lottery Fund, and more than 10,000 local people have been consulted on the museum’s themes and content.  We’re also in the middle of revamping all our cafes, restaurants and shops – they are an important part of the visitor experience.

So what’s the favourite aspect of your role at NML?…

…continue reading at National Museums Liverpool’s Amy de Joia opens up to How-Do – North West Media Features – How-Do.

David Lloyd Interviews Kerry Morrison

Liverpool Biennial – International Festival of Contemporary Art – What We Do – Urbanism 2009 – Commentary.

An interesting article on the Biennial website..

A Hidden Place

We spend the day with environmental artist Kerry Morrison, one of six artists currently engaging the waterside communities of Bootle and Litherland, as she reveals the city we thought we’d lost…

Call up a Google map of your nearest city. Switch to satellite view and pull out. Look closer and you’ll see, etched in its matrix of motorway and rail track, canal and ring road, the city’s battle scars and stretch marks.

Over successive generations, many of our great industrial cities’ arteries have become bypassed, silted up, and forgotten. But, for the artists commissioned to explore the Leeds Liverpool canal as it cuts through the communities of South Sefton and North Liverpool, the view from the ground is far more colourful, and complex, than any overhead snapshot could ever reveal. Seems even Google can’t know everything.

By decamping to the banks of the canal, the artists are contributing to a groundbreaking project.  Liverpool Biennial has devised a range of interventions, projects and installations  exploring the regenerative potential of the canal, using art as a catalyst.

More

Dazed Digital – International Festival at Tate Liverpool

Dazed Digital | International Festival at Tate Liverpool

Dazed Digital interviews Tor Lindstrand at Tate Liverpool.

Interview with Julian Brain, JM25 Visitors Choice Winner

You can now listen to my interview with Julian Brain on our podcast site

Julian Brain wins the People’s Choice Award for Special Relativity, at the Walker Art Gallery

David Blandy Interview

Mingering Mike

David Blandy Interview

David Blandy is exhibiting at the Bluecoat as part of the Liverpool Biennial, his work is entitled “The search for Mingering Mike”. Mingering Mike is a real character, a real person Mike Stevens who back in the 70’s created his own records and designed his own record sleeves.

David discusses this piece, the search for authenticity, the humorous of his work, alter ego’s and the way you should create yourself everyday. Paul Tarpey got the pleasure of interviewing David. Catch the Search for Mingering Mike at the Bluecoat until 30 November 2008.

This is possibly the best exhibit in the Liverpool Biennial so if you haven’t seen it yet then see it now.

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

townsend_newyork_to_bristol.jpg
(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