Tuesday, November 29, 2011

AIR COUNCIL ELECTIONS 2011

The deadline for all votes to be received is
12 midnight, Sunday 11 December 2011.

Rememberance of Plants Past, 2011. Ink on paper. Detail
PLEASE VOTE FOR ME - Annabel Tilley 

The three campaigns I would like to promote in the future through a place on the AIR Council are

1. The support of new graduates
- campaigning for the provision of increased professional development opportunities in
the community for new and emerging artists: artists talks, practical workshops
& expert business advice.
- this provision, funded by the Arts Council/local councils, could also support artist-led organisations
by paying them to deliver the specialist APD programme.

2. The support of artist-led spaces
- A campaign to explain the value of these hard-working, under-resourced organisations                                to the public, government, businesses, schools etc to ensure increased public and commercial
support for these vital organisations that enhance all our communities.

3. A campaign to ensure artists get paid
- a campaign that ensures all UK public galleries and museums and RFO’s pay the artists
who work for them, and distinguish carefully between volunteers [who want to volunteer] and
artist-interns who wish to be paid,
and should be paid.
- a campaign to ensure that commercial galleries do not exploit their volunteer interns, and
actually provide paid follow-up opportunities

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Blogging versus Tweeting?

Rememberance of Plants Past (3), Ink on paper, 28x38cm. 2011

Where am I? Ink on paper, 38x28cm, 2011

Last night I attended a talk at the Peckham Space led by Andrew Bryant on the subject of blogging. The blogger-speakers were Alex Pearl and Aliceson Carter. Long before the talk, and in my own mind, and on Twitter, the talk for me had become a debate on the merits of blogging versus tweeting.
Probably, because, until this week, I hadn't blogged for 158 days. 
In reality it was a talk on blogging, with a couple of us louder audience members pointing out the merits of Twitter, not least, for sign-posting your blog!
In Andrew's Bryant's introduction it was interesting to hear some of the reasons why people read or write blogs today:
'a window onto someone's practice'
'a place for discussion & dialogue'
'a way of reflecting on one's own practice, and also as an extension of one's practice' 
I have only come to Alex's blog 'Redundant Alex' recently, and through his own sign-posting on Twitter. In it he talks about everything but art, except in an off-hand way to comment on the creation or demise of certain pieces - cress-based, and proun to life and death at the whim or forgetfulness of the grower. It is self-deprecating, humourous and, occasionally, reading between the lines of this character, Alex, as he cleans the house, and gets rejected from commissions he was personally rung-up and urged-on to take, poignant and moving.
Alex gave a really good talk: a talk he told us (without irony?) his girlfriend, Annabel, had written for him - in the third person. So, as he pointed out, it was like reading out your own obituary! I was listening too hard to write much down: 
'I don't talk about Art much in my blogs, more about my life around it ....'
'Nowadays it is quite fashionable to think about the back-room place of an artist'.
'I hide behind the pretense that it may or may not be real.'
And my favourite, on the number and variety of blogs: 'They are like me quite unsure about what they are.'
He also mentioned that he tries to end on a cliff-hanger!
Now I will now go in search of Aliceson Carter's blog, which I don't know.

Thinking about the 'me, me, me' culture and the art of self-promotion, it occurred to me that the days of an artist sitting in their studio waiting to be discovered are long gone, now there are so many artists - or would that be: too many artists? As Market Projects recently asked - that artists have been forced to take steps to bring themselves to the attention of others - artists, curators, gallerists, press etc.
A decade ago all the talk was about having a website, now that is so passive (although still necessary) then about five years ago it became about blogging and now it's Twitter.
But the irony is that each one, faster and less labour-intensive then the last, leads one with perfect symmetry from one to another and back again.
An artist makes work, they place pictures on their website, they write on their blog, they tweet a message that they have written a new blog piece, the blog piece links them to the website, and the website provides Twitter/or other links with the artist. 
More recently this has been interrupted with the introduction of pictures straight onto the Twitter site. The end of writing? The beginning of pictures with twitter-length captions - comic book/zine world? Indeed, in a recent Garageland call-out proposal I suggested writing tweet-length answers to big questions, mainly because I wanted to see if it was possible, and what would happen if one limited oneself to around 140 characters? Would ideas become such small nuggets of information, they could only be formed into questions to make any sense, and create the usual Twitter-type banter. I felt rising panic as I pressed the send button, it seems an impossible feat. 
Finally: Why do we tweet? Because it's like texting but better because you have a whole audience!
Why do we blog? Because writing into the silent ether can also be satisfying.
ends
twitter.com/annabeltilley

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

how to emerge? What has Sluice taught us - Be independent but work together!


By attending this year’s impressive Sluice Art Fair, and taking part in the Twitter/blog/pub conversations that immediately ensued, I believe many of us, including independents like Core Gallery, have become unoffical participators in an exciting, and as yet undefined, movement that heralds the beginning of a new era of generosity and collaboration between networks of like-minded artist-led spaces who are just beginning to understand the power of solidarity.
Sluice art fair is an example of how when times get hard: the sparkling rhetoric of the commercial galleries – as represented by Frieze - begins to recede, making way for the less glitzy, purer [and poorer!] artist-led concerns to present an alternative way forward. Hayley Harrison summed this up poignantly in her a-n Artist’s Talking blog: Something’s Happening*, when she suggested that we cease to talk about ‘the art world’ but rather begin to call ourselves ‘an art community’. Thanks to Ben Street & Karl England and their innovative spirit, I believe that ball is now firmly rolling. 
Indeed,  Core Gallery, is now looking forward to attending another gathering of the innovative artist-independent clans at the Conference for Emerging Art Organisers in Goldsmiths on Thursday 24 November.
The place to be!
* Hayley Harrison, Something’s Happening #25 [17 Oct 2011] www.an.co.uk/artists_talking/projects/single/1299464