Archive for September, 2009

Artpoint

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Breathing Space

Monday, September 7th, 2009

B Arts

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Multistory

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Ixia

Monday, September 7th, 2009

RegenWM

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Andrew Jackson

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Andrew Jackson is a photographer and lecturer. His practice is photographic based but has increasingly explored a range of new media. His work has been published both nationally and internationally and is held in both national and private collections.

Anna Francis

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Anna Francis’ practice explores the impact of arts and culture on the regeneration of the post-industrial world, through a series of events, interventions and site specific investigations.

The work examines private histories, public space and civic languages; using forms of intervention, mapping, performance, consultation and photography to investigate the impact of art and culture on the regeneration of cities. Much of Francis’ work requires a viewer or participant to ‘do something’ even if that something is simply looking in a different way.

In 2007 Francis initiated and curated ‘Indefinable City’ an exhibition at AirSpace Gallery, where she is a trustee and current studio artist. The exhibition focused on the changing nature of cities in the context of globalisation.

2008 was for Francis ‘The Year of Finding Spaces in the City for Art.’ This was a year long project, which started in January 2008, which saw the artist set up one investigation per month. The project examined the impact that art and cultural activity are having on our cities, and the problematic nature of finding adequate and appropriate research methodologies which can measure that impact. This has lead to the recent projects, ‘What This City Really Needs,’ a public consultation which involved finding out what the people of a city feel about their environment, and the ‘Official Tour Guide’ project, in which Francis became an ambassador for a city.

Ongoing participatory project ‘There is Beauty in the City’ is an online project, where participants apply for a magnet, which they can place anywhere in their respective cities that they find beauty – they then photograph the location and send it in to the project blog. This is resulting in a catalogue of images from around the world, forming a consensus on the beauty to be found in urban space.

Other projects see Francis becoming invented characters in order to test the boundaries of the city and its situations. The artist has variously become a dating agency director, a tour guide and a market researcher to investigate the city.

Francis also sets up situations which enable other artists to push the boundaries of their practice in various ways. This includes co-running a series of artists talks and discussion spaces under the title ‘Headtalk’ and organising Pecha Kucha: Stoke-on-Trent. Under this banner of professional development for artists Francis designed Interrogation: Walsall with Longhouse – A PAD residency which aimed to bring artists, the New Art Gallery Walsall and the public together to explore the public realm space around the gallery, test boundaries and start conversations around the role of art and culture in a post-industrial town.

Anna has taken part in a number of Longhouse and Multistory projects during the past couple of years. To find out more about these projects please click on the links below:

Katie Shipley

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Since graduating from Staffordshire University in 2006 Shipley has exhibited across the UK and abroad. She has worked extensively within the community and is part of AirSpace Gallery, an arts organisation in Stoke on Trent.

Anthony Boswell

Friday, September 4th, 2009

My initial idea for the action research project came directly as a result of my previous practice, which had taken the form of an isolated working environment, and a general creation of ideas that stemmed mainly from within my own existence. I had experimented within the genres of the nude, abstraction and landscape, not without success, but all based around my own interaction with these subjects. The result of this was a much narrower, concealed practice that affected both my work and my relation to other artists. My aims were to portray the relationship of the figure to their surroundings, telling a personal ‘story’. However, this was only feasible by creating work from imagination, from my own thoughts. The action research project led me to investigate how to broaden this idea and so I went back to an earlier degree project called ‘Urban Poetry’, but based the theme on my local community, linking in the story theme. Old factories, streets, windows, canals, people’s memories, all made up the idea to get the traces left by people and places into artworks.

Up to the point of the project, I worked only with drawing and painting. I wanted to broaden this by adding photography and the written word into the package of working methods. I did, however, want to re-visit sketching on site, something I had not done for a long time. I felt that the project might suffer in content by only working with a narrow set of media and I would not be stretched in regards to my own abilities. Physically going out into the environment would also bring a true sense of place, a feeling of the reality of being there into the finished work, something I had been missing up till now. Going out would open my eyes in terms of searching for the hidden places, the small details of what remained of people and places, bringing the past into contrast to the present. This was again something I had done many times, but had forgotten over the years, and was a process I thought I may struggle to get back with. In terms of people, this required an actual interview and this was entirely out of my comfort zone. The entire research was also much more concentrated and in-depth, again a barrier I had to overcome, something new to just working on a single, one-off painting.

The initial method was to walk around the area, look for anything that would be suitable for the idea and spend time out sketching; this to be done throughout the entire length of time spent on the project. Whilst doing this, I would look for a more specific place where I could go back and make a photographic record. I would make reference to myself earlier on and bring my own story into the project, to give the idea of it being my environment. This I eventually ignored. A folio of images would be built up, words written to go with some; and then talks with local people to write and illustrate stories would give the final bulk to the material. I had ideas on experimenting with the photographs digitally and also overlapping word and image. I found, however, that the sketching was still within my skill yet it began to have less importance to the project because I found it was still too broad, it didn’t tie down the ‘story’ enough. I found I stopped this part of the idea after just a few sessions. I also felt that digitally experimenting with photographs took away the personal and so I kept to a more direct, basic image that had no need for change. One photograph I had taken gave me the idea of making a detailed drawing with a story to it, to be framed as one piece. This I tried and I produced four very detailed drawings that I felt ‘soaked up’ the moment, using hard pencil that gave a ghostly, old photo album feel to them. Concentrating on the detail made me feel that I was really getting into the whole life of the subject, just what I had been missing in my work. Finally, one person showed me an old community newspaper that gave me the idea for the final form of my stories – to re-create one that contained my drawings, photographs and stories. This was something I could give out to the community, an answer to my question of how I could benefit the public realm with my project.

The research project has fed in to my practice by showing me that working more directly within the public realm can have unexpected moments that can generate ideas that I may well have never engaged with. It also broadens the working methods and gives added depth of meaning to the finished artwork itself. As I have said, it makes the work ‘real’. It has also removed me from the isolated practice and helped me to engage with other artists and relevant organisations.