#FoM12 ‘The Enchanted Forest’

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The Enchanted Forest © Alan Dimmick

It has now been a few days since The Enchanted Forest was in Gallery 3 at GoMA. We (the GoMA staff and volunteers) had a lovely day in there and from the exploring, making and wide eyed response to the stories it looked like the forest guests did too.

The Enchanted Forest – exploring © Alan Dimmick

Sadly the forest is now de-installed and the technicians are in smoothing down the walls and painting a new coat of white ready for the next show: Tales of the City.

Entrance & Creature trail © Alan Dimmick

We had an enchanting day with over 350 forest guests – some old hands from the Saturday Art Club, but also a number of new visitors to the gallery and learning programme. It was fun welcoming people at the entrance and sending them to follow the enchanted creatures up the stairs to The Enchanted Forest. Once they were there we had lots of cardboard, tapes & vinyl for them to make new works to add to the forest.

The Enchanted Forest – exploring © Alan Dimmick

Most of them chose to head off into the forest first. Armed with torches they explored for a bit before head back to the making tables inspired to add their own creation.

Tables & Gold flower © Alan Dimmick

The day was busy throughout and at one point we opened up the Studio to give a little more space, however most people worked packed around the two tables in the gallery.

Scary monsters and giants © Alan Dimmick

The fantastic storyteller, Alan Steel, told several stories throughout the day. Tales of giants and monsters living and scaring everyone who entered The Enchanted Forest. He told of how small children with their imagination and wit defeated the impossible and enabled us to explore the forest without disruption. The giant was created and headed out of the gallery; and a pencil and elastic band defeated the most scary of monsters.

There are lots of fantastic photos over on Flickr and thanks to Alan Dimmick and Martin for those. Hopefully some of those by the forest guests will appear soon.

We had lovely feedback on the day but if you came and didn’t fill in the form you can still do this online through the survey.

The enchanted Forest – making and installing © Alan Dimmick

At this point a few thanks are in order:

To the fantastic Learning Assistants and volunteers who ran with the idea and began the Forest.

To Museums Galleries Scotland and the Festival of Museums for funding, support and tweeting.

To Paul Murphy from Cardonald Carpets for all those fantastic cardboard tubes he donated.

Alan Steel for his wonderful stories and Alan Dimmick for the photographs.

And finally a massive thanks to all those visitors who came along and entered the spirit of The Enchanted Forest and grew it with us.

The Enchanted Forest

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The Enchanted Forest installation

As part of this year’s Festival of Museums we are inviting visitors to help us make a forest in Gallery 3. Inspired by our Big Draw experiences and also ATELIER PUBLIC  we decided to open up Gallery 3 again to visitors to make the installation.

The Enchanted Forest installation

The idea came about from a Saturday Art Club last year, where families made a small installation from Art Straws inspired by (2011 Turner Prize winner) Martin Boyce’s work Our Love is Like the Earth, the Sun, the Trees and the Birth, 2003 upstairs in Gallery 4. The Learning Assistants then ran with the idea and have created a gorgeous starting point for the event tomorrow.

materials and birdhouses

Using the materials provided, visitors to the gallery will make and document the installation as it develops throughout the day. The Enchanted Forest will be an everchanging space to make, explore and discover. It was also be a space to tell stories and the storyteller Alan Steel will be there to inspire and support visitors to write their own Enchanted Forest stories.

There are photos of the installation so far on flickr and we will posting up photos of the day there are well as Alan Dimmick will be in to document the forest. I will update next week with more images and tales here too.

ATELIER PUBLIC – The Cure?

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‘Playing with Discomfort’ presentation in the Antiguo Hospital San Juan de Dios, as part of the ‘IV Congresson Internacional de Educacion artistica y visual – Aportaciones desde le periferia’ Jaen, Spain, 2012

“I love it when a plan comes togther’ or even a ‘non-plan’ . I attended the conference in Jaen ( nearly 3 weeks ago now & as ever I meant to post this earlier) and above is an image from my presentation. I had selected the image from hundreds connected with ATELIER PUBLIC as it resonated with a point I had about art: art not as the pill or medicine to make us better, but art as a much more complex part of our wellbeing and health and how we communicate in society.

I hadn’t fully registered the fact that the conference would be in a former hospital in the town or known that it would be in the former chapel. As it was, presentations were projected onto a screen where the altar was and we spoke to delegates and colleagues in the pews. So a number of coincidences were at play and the image was snapped up by a couple of other people and used in their presentations (in Spanish and Portuguese, so I am going to have to wait for the papers to come out so I can translate them with time – my evening class spanish was not quite up to scratch). The image below of from one of them.

Presentation by Catarina s. Martins and Catarina Almeida, Jaen, 2012

I did manage to attend a number of the round table discussions and presentations and the Spanish I have was enough to get a gist of the conversations. There were a number of really interesting papers and people and I am slowly remaking contact to take some of those conversations forward.

All in all it was a refreshing 4 days listening and thinking in Jaen with ideas which have continued resurfacing over the last 3 weeks .

ATELIER PUBLIC 29 Nov 2011

As with a number of the artworks in ATELIER PUBLIC I have no idea who created ‘THE CURE?’ but it is very pertinant at the moment. The idea of the complexity of ‘the cure’ came up in discussions on Friday following a talk by Harry Burns, the Chief Medical Officer for Scotland . A fantastic speaker and provocateur, Burns posed questions about the services we in the cultural sector offer and who do they really benefit. The conference and Harry Burns’ talk have reminded me that I need to write ATELIER PUBLIC and its offshoots up in a paper of its own to really begin to understand where this work can go.

ATELIER PUBLIC – Maria McCavana

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This is the second of the texts I received this week about ATELIER PUBLIC. Maria wrote about her plans and observations of her interventions but also how that influenced her recent residency in Sri Lanka.


The Idea – Off-cut Art


I wanted to create a series of interactive objects from other artist’s off-cuts. Those off-cuts could be anything, depending on what the artist happened to be working on at the time. I choose a pile of wooden blocks from artist Bill Breckenridge as he worked on a stage set for a new piece of children’s theatre and a pile of left over sticky-back text taken from different exhibitions at GOMA.


Once I had left my mark on the Off-cuts by sanding, cutting and drawing on them I left them in ATELIER PUBLIC for the public to respond to and documented the response over two weekends at GOMA.      


Bricks 1                                                 





Bricks

The processOver a month at the weekends I would visit Atelier Public to watch how the public interacted with the off-cuts or to track the changes in the movement and placing of them on their journey through the space as they changed location, became built up, flattened, rebuilt, set on other objects, attached to the wall, detached and eventually disappeared. 


Project 1. Off-cut blocks


I watched the Off-cut blocks start life on the floor and then gradually being scattered, rearranged, stacked and then regrouped.


Until they found their way to two different shaped plinths in the space.





Bricks moved

There seemed to be more interaction with the blocks that were placed on the low plinth and less interaction with the higher plinth with this arrangement changing only slightly.





Bricks moved

I felt that the blocks on the higher plinth were now given a certain gallery status, that the public were less inclined to play with them, also the way they had been placed looked slightly precarious, stacked like they might topple over, this also left them less open for play and rearranging.


Whereas the blocks that had been placed onto the lower more table like plinth were arranged and rearranged. I think the table shape, height and having room to move things about left the blocks much more open for movement and play, also more than one person could share the blocks.


Project 2. Off-cut Letters





Letters

I then placed individual sticky back letters into the space, this time leaving them in a pile on the making desk and waited for someone to respond to my message ‘hello’.


Soon my letters sprung into action, firstly forming words and sentences on the studio walls and then being integrated into drawings and forming parts of sculptures.


I visited the space a few more times after this and found my letters had disappeared, I wasn’t sure if the letters were just too tempting to not take away once you had found your name or if it was a bit too easy to write bad words on the walls! 





Letters in use

 


 


 


 


More images from both of these journeys are on flickr


Recent Outcome


The influence of this project has fed directly into a project in Sri Lanka where I recently spent 2 months on an artist’s residency. The project was called Off-cut Garment.


I gathered off-cut fabric from tailors from all over the Island, everything from surfing fabric, saris, jeans, and sarongs. The fabric was left in bundles throughout a gallery space and the public were encouraged to choose material to create their own unique design. The material was then placed onto bunting, which was put together and hung throughout the space.


Text © Maria McCavana


Images from the residency in Sri Lanka




Bunting

Bunting

   


  making




Bunting

Bunting

Organised Accident is Art – Rosie Gibson (& conversations with Ken Wolverton)

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Summary of Report © Ken Wolverton & Rosie Gibson

Summary of Report © Ken Wolverton & Rosie Gibson

It’s funny how conversations lead into others. When I met David Harding in ATELIER PUBLIC  earlier this year he spoke at length about an exhibition he remembered from the seventies in Edinburgh. I tried to find out more through the internet but wasn’t having much luck. Then Rosie Gibson emailed me about other things connected to ATELIER PUBLIC and briefly mentioned the very same exhibition and her memories of being involved.

Serendipity at play, Rosie then contacted Ken Wolverton, the artist behind ‘Organised Accident is Art’ and their conversations and recollections make up the following text.

1977

‘Atelier Public’ brings back memory of another ‘participatory-art-in-a-gallery-context-event’. In the dim and distant past of1977 I took part in a week long exhibition/event at  the Fruitmarket Gallery in Edinburgh called ‘Organised Accident is Art’ put together by artist Ken Wolverton.

As coordinator of Craigmillar Festival Society’s Art Team (CAT), I remember the team building a silk screen press under the direction of John Phillips from Paddington Print Shop.  We were in the middle of converting a disused church in Craigmillar into an Arts Resource Centre.  The silk screen press was  subsequently installed in the Arts Centre and had many years of happy use (perhaps enhanced by the liberal use of carbon tetrachloride as screen cleaning fluid which was standard practice at the time!).

Under the direction of CAT team artist Mike Greenlaw we also created a daily wall montage by inviting visitors to do a drawing to add to the wall.  There was a sequence of themes, for example a plan of their house, favourite food…..(eeek!). I’ve forgotten this, but from the archival material we might also have invited people to paint a brick. The bricks  were then taken back and used to build a path at the Arts Centre.

Our involvement in ‘Organised Accident is Art’ was devised by Neil Cameron, Director of Arts at Craigmillar Festival Society at the time. Craigmillar  Festival Society (1962-2002) was a grassroots organisation on a peripheral housing estate on the south east of Edinburgh. Under their slogan ‘art as the catalyst’ – a remarkable team of local activists headed up by Helen Crummy  pioneered social, cultural, educational and environmental change and improvement by harnessing people’s creativity and creative energy and by collaborating with like minded professionals.

CFS was one of the partners in the exhibition, but the project was the brain child of artist Ken Wolverton who had been awarded a grant by the Leverhulme Trust  to develop community arts in Edinburgh’s ‘notorious’ peripheral housing schemes – Pilton, Craigmillar, and others.

I skyped Ken  in his home near Santa Fe:

Organised Accident is Art © Ken Wolverton & Rosie Gibson

Organised Accident is Art © Ken Wolverton & Rosie Gibson

  When I look back I think this is at least one thing in my life  I was in on at the beginning. In the late 60’s and early 70’s the idea of ‘alternative education through the arts’ began to emerge at Theatre Workshop in Edinburgh with Neil Cameron and Reg Bolton  among others. It’s a commonplace idea in education in America now but at the time it was new.  It felt radical and dynamic. And very fluid.  Edinburgh was a great place to be in those days – so much happening and so many great people.

Ken received a Leverhulme grant for 7 (!) years from 1975- 1982 – almost unthinkable now.  He was based at Theatre Workshop in Edinburgh. It was the first time they had awarded a grant to an art project rather than science and medical initiatives.

Through his  work in Pilton and other areas he gained a sense that there was a lot of unguided energy in the kids he was working with. Through the murals and sculptures he was trying to go with their energy and make something beautiful out of it – a bit like the principles of jujitsu. He also learned that to be an artist alone is not enough in this work – he needed to be a teacher and an organiser as well.

In 1976 he  got wind of a ten day gap in the Fruitmarket programming for the next  year. He came up with the idea of having an exhibition which would be a gathering of pioneering community artists and dedicated activists he’d met from all over Britain in the course of his research travels as part of the Leverhulme grant.

He harassed the Fruitmarket till they eventually gave in, then spent a year organising the exhibition, with the invaluable help of Stella Ensdale, the administrator of Theatre Workshop. He says he couldn’t have done it without her. She transformed his  scribbles into grant applications and administered the whole thing. The Scottish Arts Council at the time didn’t recognise community arts as an artform to be funded. This project was  the first to get a grant from them for a community arts project.

He then spent a lot of time scrounging materials from factories and industrial sites – fabric, foam rubber, 100 lengths of scaffolding, two bales of woven rope, 2000ft of string, £250 worth of paint, 25 beards and the rest!

He argued for the title ‘Organised Accident is Art’ with his compadres at Theatre Workshop. Some thought ‘Art’ was elitist, some hated ‘Organised’. The only word  that wasn’t contested was ’is’ so he went ahead anyway and gave it his title. It seemed to sum up his experience of working in communities – he needed to stay flexible and open to what was happening (and there was always something happening!) and make something out of that rather going in with a game plan.  This approach resonates with that of Alan Watts, Zen philosopher, and a series of recordings he made called ‘The Art of Controlled Accident’.

It was amazing for him to gather together all these specialists he had met on his travels – and to combine them with artists and performers associated with Theatre Workshop, Craigmillar Festival Society and Pilton. They  just had enough of a budget to pay people expenses and a stipend.

Each day a main featured event happened in the open reception area and there were events all day long in the whole space – a giant climbing net for kids, designed and installed by artist, Chrissie Orr, indoor street theatre with Gerry Mulgrew, dance/mime with Christina Halliday a  spontaneous graffiti mural with Ken, puppetry, and writing and poetry. The event was video and photo documented by David Halliday.

Ken recalls one ‘accident’

  Some  “lads” from Pilton and Craigmillar  had joined in the “Graffiti mural” which in the end of the work became a very nostalgic and beautiful symbolic/figurative piece. A very pushy kind of gal came in and demanded that IT WAS A GRAFFITI MURAL therefore she was going to do graffiti on it, and picked up a big brush and started painting some obscenity over the panels… and that enraged the young lads who up unto that day had been purveyors of obscenities themselves, so we had to stop them from actually beating up the gal for messing with their ART…it was definitely the phenomena of ownership and a shared pride these young guys assumed, taking in the lesson of what we had been trying to get them doing for years.

Six and a half thousand people came through the doors in that week. That compared with 7 thousand for an exhibition over a period of four weeks during the Edinburgh Festival.

It built in momentum as the time went on.  The exhibition had visits from City leaders and Church leaders, who were enthusiastic.  Ricky Demarco was very supportive.   Lots of schools came along. They  did take some flack.  Ken reckons  the split was 50/50 between those who appreciated and enjoyed the exhibition  and those who didn’t.

Each evening they managed to organise free food as an enticement to the participating artists to stay for a seminar and discussion about the day.

The discussion started with the featured events  of the day. As the week went on, they became clearer and more confident in what they were doing. Carol Kenna from Greenwich Mural Workshop was very articulate.  One thing  Ken remembers was an emerging  understanding that working with people, people joining in was part of the work they were all were trying to make. As he says, ‘I mean I could do a painting  on my own, but that wasn’t the point of this work we were doing.’

The event also attracted quite  a bit of publicity in the local newspapers, fielded and formed by Bob Palmer, director of Theatre Workshop.

articles about the exhibition

It’s fascinating putting these two reminiscences  together. If my memory is the trees, then Ken’s is the wood. In terms of legacy, many of those involved have continued to develop their practice all over the world. A spontaneous mural was painted on the wall opposite the Fruitmarket gallery in Market Street which lasted for many years and the silk screen press was used for years to produce posters at the Arts Centre.

Looking into the archival material it looks as if the budget for the project was as follows:

Income:

Scottish Arts Council £1800

Gulbenkian Foundation £700

Total £2500

= today £14,175

In kind sponsor ship £1400

= today £8000

Plus admin costs covered by Theatre Workshop and the Craigmillar Festival Society and Ken’s fee covered by Leverhulme grant.

Looking back these did seem like simpler times. Simpler and more fluid at the same time. Not that I’m arguing against complexity. Ideally we would be in a time of complexity and fluidity!

Some links to some of the artists involved

Ken Wolverton   Chrissie Orr   Neil Cameron     John Bolton   Mike Rowan               Gerry Mulgrew    Craigmillar Festival Society Arts team  Bob Palmer                         John Philips       Carol Kenna, Steve Lobb

Text courtesy of and © Rosie Gibson and Ken Wolverton


Rachel Mimiec – Atelier Public

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One of the key aspects  I mention when I am speaking about the development of ATELIER PUBLIC, is the importance of conversations, questions and observations of others in the process. The following text is from Rachel Mimiec, who was a constant source of provocations, ideas, questions and fantastic support. Like others I had invited she was asked to write some text about the exhibition. Here is her response:

Atelier Public

A Public Studio

What would happen if you give people some space, provide a bunch of materials and then invite them to play, make and display?  What would they do?  Through Atelier Public people made the most extraordinary things and made it known, by simply making their mark that they had been there.  Atelier Public offered a non-judgmental dedicated space for everybody and anybody to make creative play.  It was a studio, an installation and an exhibition.

I wondered about a universal experience of how it feels to be in the act of creativity.  I know this experience as being in the zone, and whilst I don’t have the scientific or academic research to back up my observations I believe I witnessed people being in that zone. Individuals entirely focused on the in-between space where something becomes something else… pure magic.

For me Atelier Public responded to a sense that creative space is not afforded to everyone.  Atelier Public demonstrated that creative space, when rediscovered, is appreciated and valued not only by the maker but also by the audience.

For the maker and the audience inspiration was found in the materials provided and in what was already on display.  Connections were made through representation, abstraction and word play.  Through the materials and the space people were saying things that were important to them:  they were unafraid to just join things together and see what appeared.

Families came, they played and created together.  Others worked alone, absorbed in creative acts and intentions: many people wanted to declare their love to somebody, or just have their name present, some found patterns they liked and made them multiply. For others it was the rediscovery of plasticine or a childhood memory of freedom to experiment, to tease, pull, model, connect and stick.

For children perhaps this exploration of materials and play is more familiar and seen as the norm, an important part of learning about the world.  As we grow up sometimes these creative explorations are abandoned and become surrounded with anxiety and judgment. Atelier Public was a space where anxieties could be alleviated through a child-like fascination with materials and possibilities.

Perhaps artists, with dedicated spaces and working daily in the art of play and making artworks, are unfair models for a universal experience of creativity.    More convincing models already exist in the sewing machine on the kitchen table, the musical instruments in the garden shed, the easel in the corner of the bedroom. These adaptations all bear witness to how people value and accommodate their creativity.  Creativity and creative experiences do not have to be lost as we grow older.  I think Atelier Public helped us recognise how we could re-connect with being in the zone.

I am left with questions as to the benefits of this type of space if it was built into our education, into work and wider communities.  What personal, social and cultural benefits might there be to having dedicated public studio spaces in council housing, schools and public libraries and would these creative playgrounds become recognised as one of the essential spaces in our lives?

Rachel Mimiec

February 2012

Round Window – James Mclardy

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The thing about ATELIER PUBLIC  that I have enjoyed the most is the unexpected or people confounding what I expected.

I haven’t posted for a while. This is a little bit due to the fact I was, and am still, trying to process all those unexpected conversations, observations and documentation from ATELIER PUBLIC (and the Playable Spaces programme). It is also due to holidays ;-)

Last week I came back from a break away to an essay written over 2 pages which was carefully placed over my keyboard on my desk. On it a pink post-it note with the words.

MY TEXT

LET ME KNOW

J

To explain a little more.

I had asked those who I had invited to contribute to send me notes/text about their experiences, observations or documentation of their time in the exhibition. I expected text which literally talked about the processes, the people and the work involved.

As with the exhibition itself the this text exceeded expectations and what I got had me on the verge of tears (happy ones I might add). I really loved it and the fact that ATELIER PUBLIC inspired this was doubly moving.

Thank you James.

Scanned photocopy here for you to read as well.

Round Window – page 1

and page 2

Round Window - page 2

 

Permission

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ATELIER PUBLIC 17 January 2012

Apologies for the lack of posts over the last couple of weeks but I was de-installing then floored by a cold. 

So just a wee update ( I still haven’t had a chance to finish all the documentation from the exhibition to post up yet)

ATELIER PUBLIC closed at 5pm on Sunday 15 January and then Rachel Mimiec and I spent the next 5 days in the gallery to de-install it. A chance conversation with Peter McCaughey about *recycling the materials* led to a much more considered approach to the de-install than we had originally thought about and some exciting new works developed out of that process. Will show them in later posts but here’s a taster image.

ATELIER PUBLIC 20 January 2012

I found the de-install difficult to begin (I didn’t want to see the exhibition close and the work disappear from the space) but also enjoyable while were doing it. We discovered works that we hadn’t seen properly before, by removing work around them. Each surface had a different set of ‘rules’ for de-installation which led to a different set of discoveries and enjoyments.

Peter McCaughey and Jim Hamlyn also came in on the Tuesday afternoon to de-install, although their approach was very different to mine and Rachel’s. They continued the play that they have explored while the exhibition was open and produced some lovely new works. However, while they wore doing it Rachel and I were looking at each other wondering what we had given permission for them to do and how it had altered our plans for the space.

Permission was a key factor in ATELIER PUBLIC. I mentioned this in an earlier post where Johnny Gailey raised the idea that the permission to make in the space had already been given, so nobody needed to seek my permission to do anything there. By inviting people in to the space that was all the permission they needed.

I struggled with this for a while because as the curator I was really interested in what people were doing and wanted to do in the installation. But after this conversation I realised that this was impossible and, as I had given people ‘permission’ to make in the space, I had to let that happen without controlling it.

The same happened in the de-install - I could only observe and direct so much without letting go for other exciting things to happen.

observations from the gallery #ATELIERPUBLIC

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Young girl took ages to work out where her *finished* artwork was going then proceeded to add more mud on it when it was installed.

ATELIER PUBLIC 14 January 2012

Young boy holding black insulation tape, extending a big long strip out, then wandering around the gallery space thinking what he might do with it. A quick cut and the tape is used while the remaining roll rolls away creating an artwork on the floor. It is kicked away before I get a chance to photograph it.

Girl coming in with her friend and family to show everybody the work she made and installed. It is much admired by them (and me) before they go off round the exhibition searching for other favourites.

ATELIER PUBLIC 14 January 2012

Man working on how best to install his spider in the location he has decided on. A couple of failed attempts and then a conversation with the Gallery Assistant on how best to resolve this.

ATELIER PUBLIC 14 January 2012

A young girl goes to the drawers and rifles through with an air of certainty about what she is looking for. An adult holds back observing what she is doing and once the child is gone with her materials the adult tentatively explores the bottom drawer for a brick with a clear red side.

ATELIER PUBLIC 14 January 2012

Watching parents and children chatting and making together. Working on their own projects but advising each other what they might do next. Afterwards going to install their works and then have a shared look around the exhibition.

Works left on tables

ATELIER PUBLIC 14 January 2012
ATELIER PUBLIC 14 January 2012

Conversation with a mother who had specifically come through from Edinburgh to visit ATELIER PUBLIC about the fact that you would never find something like this in Edinburgh galleries…why? and maybe we will.

 
 
Conversation with a woman who has spent a while looking around the gallery – I was restocking the plasticine.

‘Don’t show me that ! I’ll want to stop and make something.’

‘You can if you have time’

She walks away and then comes back

‘Oh go on then’

and goes straight for the plasticine drawer.

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