Archive for February, 2012


what next?

aside from the upcoming stanza thing and yet to be confirmed festivalry in the summer it’s going to be a bit of a lean old time for poetry this next while. not because i don’t have any to work on or that i’m not writing any, just i’ll be writing less and ignoring the horror that is editing for the time being. mainly because i’ve kind of rediscovered prose partly by way of realising i haven’t done any seriously for five years! unacceptable! so, hopefully finishing one bunch of short stories and working on another.

oddly, after so long i can feel a real difference in process. it takes longer for a start! but in some ways it’s also much more involving. a poem i write and then it’s kind of done, ideal for short attention span but there isn’t much after that beyond tinkering about with the language. with the short story i’m finding i can relax into the characters, let them do the storytelling! i’m not sure the two are mutually exclusive but certainly my head has to be in entirely different spaces to do either.

so to visual work. after a couple of days off i’m back at what i’m referring to as the ‘as yet untitled drawing work’. I’m about a third of the way thru this and, despite the labour intense nature of it, still reasonably enjoying it. it is, however, entirely in black and white, so i’m needing colour the way a drunk man needs the bottle. but no colour for me until work no 3 is complete and the ideas for 4 and 5 mapped out. i’ll be doing two more big canvasses for the summer (when the studio is halfway ‘warm’ and the paint’ll actually dry.

other than that organising the next bit of swiss lounge output. new software should alight soon so that’ll be a new learning experience if nothing else. after that two multi-artist installation things are in the works, neither of which i’m planning in taking part in beyond logistics but, if they come off, promise to be really interesting.

in the mean time i’m well down memory lane as the house environment responds to a call to join the flock. it’s great!

dundee

top thanks to andy jackson for roping me in to the stanza preview thing last night.

despite being just up the road, the fact there’s an art college has just kind of passed me by. every so often we’ll see that duncan of jordanstone has its degree show on but, unlike edinburgh, shamefully i’ve never set foot in the place. edinburgh, which has a lovely big exhibition space right at the front of it, is a big staired and wide corridored affair, a place that, at festival time, is almost free of students. indeed, aside from festival visits, i’ve only been there once for an episode of quite fabulous drunken-ness.

not so, duncan’s. from the outside the building i was in is quite…of its time but it just goes to prove that it’s not what’s on the outside that counts (if i was designing an artschool i’d start at hundertwasser and work forward but hey ho, that’s just me). once i was in it was a warren of workspaces and lockers (i love those artschool big wooden lockers) and all i wanted to do was get in there and poke about rather than do what i was there for. that old adage about education being wasted on the young while not true has its moments as you wanser about and wonder just what it would be like if you had twenty fours hours of freedom in such a place.

and then the stanza crew – andy, tim eleanor et al. i blow hot and cold with stanza mainly, i think, because i’m always comparing it retrospectively. once i’m there of course it’s always a good year and, even if i’m not seeing much, there’s always people i know, places to go. the same this year as eleanor was doing her intro – i was reminded just how fabulous a thing stanza is. this year there’s seems a greater diversity of things, not less and it’s great to see creative scotland being involved in support.

but back to the art college thing. i met folk who were working at the college and students who were studying there. we blethered about all manner of things to do with words, imagery, collaboration, integration. watchwords for me! as when i was doing the poetry classes in the high school i was struck by how motivated everyone was. fair enough i’ll allow for circumstances in both cases and accept that working in education must have its moments but, by and large, my experiences with education types and the people studying, have been wholly uplifting. which, given the stark contrast with where i work, is a bit sad.

however, that wasn’t what i was talking about last night. it struck me that one of things poetryland has been really into recently has been science. while that’s not a bad thing there does, for me, seem to be a tendency to equivocation (particularly by the poetry people)in terms of its representative function that, having a foot firmly in both camps, seems a bit tenuous at times. poetry is not science no matter how much it wants to be or how much science itself can be poetry.

art on the other hand. poetry absolutely is art and vice versa and yet, despite all the science/poetry collaboration shenanigans going on and a rich but, in my opinion, fairly narrowly defined discussion around ekphrasis, there seems precious little between the (other) arts and poetry. of course this could be massive ignorance on my part! take videopoetry for example. much as it’s grand to see (and better to take part in) i find it disappointing that too often, even if the images are lovely, all videopoetry seems to be is someone reading while pictures flash by ( a criticism i’m not alone in but see here for evidence i may be wrong). coming from that time in the nineties when remixing music might mean sampling just the tiniest bit of the original track and running with it. i remember the sense of freedom and opportunity the first time i heard something and it sounded nothing remotely like the original.

something similar, i think, needs to happen with regard to poetry and its re-presentation. the word is not sacred, the work of the poet not sacrosanct – if everything can be poetry then we can make anything out of poetry. (coincidentally i was looking at a website the other days in which words are baked and eaten – at stanza it appears there will be a similar baking input!) one of the reasons i like translation so much as it’s a method of getting you inside the poet’s (and translator’s) head and right into the poem itself. it seems to me that by collaborating with artists in other fields not only can we do this but get beyond that point and into the language and the word itself.

so that was kind of the thing i found myself thinking and talking about last night. and while the above might sound a wee bit like a manifesto towards the making of more things i like (and, i say, what would be wrong with that!?) there was also that aspect, esp if you live in a wee town that, while the internet is all fair and good, actual face to face contact with real people just can’t be beat. what a joy there is in going and seeing something and coming away with your mind brimming with ideas. that, i think, is exactly the sort of function we should allow our educational institutions to have…

split screen

i’m happy to say that i’m in red squirrel’s split screen, an anthology of poems based on films. as such i’ll be at the college of art in dundee next thursday (16th) at 1800 and at stanza doing the same on march 18th. as far as i’m aware (and these are loose plans!) there’ll be a whole gamut of people reading so it should all be highly entertaining. i’d post more links but i don’t have any!

winnowing

so, the installation is finally set up in fife. of course it wouldn’t have been part fo the joy had it not had its mishaps. having prepped everything i needed my drill failed within about ten minutes. cue a dash back into st andrews and a shiny new drill. hint to self – good tools cost money because they work!

anyway, the thing itself was made around the notion of moby dick and that last bit in the odyssey where odysseus reveals to penelope that despite the fact he’s just back, he’s going to be off on his travels again on the say so of teirsias. the piece consists of six oars mounted into branches. the tallest oar, at the front is pasted with pages from moby dick. the remaining five oars are covered in leaves, painted and have both greek and english text from (samuel butler’s translation) of the odyssey as well as some more text from moby dick. for me making it i was thinking about the notion of male obsession and folly. so far, it appears i’m the only one thinking about it!

at the end of the day tho i find myself fairly pleased with it. it looks good and, esp over the last week of making, was well worth all the faff that went into the initial work on it. it’s on site from today until the march sometime. after that, assuming it hasn’t been damaged, it’ll most likely be in the studio. here’s a couple of pics (bad photography alert!!!)

upcoming and top tips!

and, finally, after much glueing, small frustrations and whatnot i’ll be off to cambo in fife on wednesday to get my installation set up. the evidence that it’s been all a bit last minute can be seen around the house in the form of leaves,chunks of wool,  brushes, bits of polystyrene and today, not least, most of the bathroom being occupied by one of t’s giant felt sculptures (she’s off elsewhere being stressed but that’s another story!).

tips for making stuff to a deadline -

- give yourself a timeline. allow a certain amount of time and then add 50%, particularly if you’re trying out ‘new techniques’. plus, for the procrastinators amongst it allows for that ever so valuable thinking time

- if you must use metal do not assume, just because you’re too lazy to go to the shop, that gesso will make do as a substitute for metal primer.

- good kit for holding the work is totally worth the manufacture (there’s a reason painterly types use easels – they’re great). as i was using oars for this, making something to hold them upright rather than leaning them against the wall mad a massive difference.

- remember that paint/glue etc has to dry. if you’re working in a studio (like i am) whose ambient temperature is just above freezing it’ll take twice as long as well as messing with how your media work. frustrating? oh yes!

and many others! as is usual every day was a learning day and i’ve still the set up to do which will have it s own problems. that said, sitting putting the finishing touches on i found myself thinking about what comes next, whether it’s the drawing, the painting, the writing or just a bit of reading (this last a bit more likely in the immediate short term as i’m feeling a bit burst!). it’s amazing what you can get done in the absence of drinking or tv (or, as has been pointed out, the absence of any form of social life)!

i do think tho, that however it might manifest itself having a big chunk of creative time in your life is, without getting too claire tomalin about it, an implicitly healthy thing. the room where i’ve been working – full of books, paper, pens, paint and a guitar. what more could you need!?

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