yo, how's the collab group hanging??
we're giving the little colourful notes to sarah farrah, so she and her helpers can put them in the back pockets of the prospect catalog, as we discussed as a group a wee while ago.
we have only selected responses that related to the Prosect show (in any way) poetic, negative, illustrations, praise, the lot!! we thought that this would be an alright way of selecting the ones to document, and we have kept all the scores of other ones too.
i'll be sad to see some of them go, but they have all had the opportunity to be seen on the trolley or the wall or written about or collated. we have also scanned or photgraphed them all for CAMRU records before sending then to sarah.
liz and i just spent a wee while collating the responses that were still in wellington, many had just come off the trolley in the last few weeks.
can mel and tom please bring to wellington the ones tht they have been sent? we can give those ones striaght to sarrah as they've already been photographed.
word, p
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
andies response collation
here is Andies contribution that she emailed thru from the responses she was sent. please post your comments and i will turn it into a template to make photocopied exhibition notes from once we have got the go ahead. x p
“Words and thoughts are pointless”
If the above is true, then what use is any attempt to facilitate engagement and critical dialogue in an art gallery? There have been many disillusioned responses with the way New Zealand contemporary art has been presented in Prospect 2007, with the efforts of the Association of Collaboration proven to be no exception. However, self-reflexivity and evaluation are fundamental to our interests, thus every scribbled post-it note has been processed, and we’d like to share some of these thoughts, ideas and feelings with you…
-I’ve never been more bored. Prospect has become mundane, predictable, tired, blasé, indifferent, incompetent, unencouraging. This work could be from the seventies, that work could be a repetition of that work, and this work could be a regurgitation of every work ever made. You could have saved time by putting a pile of FLASHART magazines in the foyer…
The Contemporary Art Mobile Response Unit supported a profusion of responses, though some felt their words were falling on deaf ears…
-You can say its rubbish as much as you like-they will still do it again next year. Proof that institutions just don’t listen unless you say what they want to hear.
The Contemporary Art Mobile Response Unit not only encouraged responses to the artwork but also inspired visitors to engage with one another’s responses
-You are allowed to say, “I don’t like it” and not have to explain yourself
-It’s not that you don’t like it, it’s that you don’t understand it or vice versa? (as Mrs V my 7th form art history teacher often used to say)
Other criticisms centred on the didactic nature of contemporary art survey shows
-Just because you use big words, doesn’t mean that what you think about art is more important, or even relevant. Art is for enjoyment, not for being a pompous ass over.
Some felt intimidated by the pressure to make spontaneous and insightful comments on the spot
-I think my own thoughts are becoming less clear... I am fading with every exhibit
While others used humour to make sense of their experience
When I went to the toilet after seeing the show I felt I might be in an installation…
If nothing else, on viewing Prospect 2007, perhaps some left with a new appreciation for contemporary art.
“Words and thoughts are pointless”
If the above is true, then what use is any attempt to facilitate engagement and critical dialogue in an art gallery? There have been many disillusioned responses with the way New Zealand contemporary art has been presented in Prospect 2007, with the efforts of the Association of Collaboration proven to be no exception. However, self-reflexivity and evaluation are fundamental to our interests, thus every scribbled post-it note has been processed, and we’d like to share some of these thoughts, ideas and feelings with you…
-I’ve never been more bored. Prospect has become mundane, predictable, tired, blasé, indifferent, incompetent, unencouraging. This work could be from the seventies, that work could be a repetition of that work, and this work could be a regurgitation of every work ever made. You could have saved time by putting a pile of FLASHART magazines in the foyer…
The Contemporary Art Mobile Response Unit supported a profusion of responses, though some felt their words were falling on deaf ears…
-You can say its rubbish as much as you like-they will still do it again next year. Proof that institutions just don’t listen unless you say what they want to hear.
The Contemporary Art Mobile Response Unit not only encouraged responses to the artwork but also inspired visitors to engage with one another’s responses
-You are allowed to say, “I don’t like it” and not have to explain yourself
-It’s not that you don’t like it, it’s that you don’t understand it or vice versa? (as Mrs V my 7th form art history teacher often used to say)
Other criticisms centred on the didactic nature of contemporary art survey shows
-Just because you use big words, doesn’t mean that what you think about art is more important, or even relevant. Art is for enjoyment, not for being a pompous ass over.
Some felt intimidated by the pressure to make spontaneous and insightful comments on the spot
-I think my own thoughts are becoming less clear... I am fading with every exhibit
While others used humour to make sense of their experience
When I went to the toilet after seeing the show I felt I might be in an installation…
If nothing else, on viewing Prospect 2007, perhaps some left with a new appreciation for contemporary art.
Labels:
Prospect 2007 and TAC's CAMRU
Monday, April 16, 2007
The Life of CAMRU
I made a visit to the ol' City Gallery today to take CAMRU some more pads, pencils and pins and thought I would do a little report back for those of us that can't wander down the road to see it!
Since its outing with the sheep CAMRU has been parked back in the original installation spot, next to the comments wall. As always, not long after its 'denuding', I found it filled up again with comments and drawings. It was looking a little disshevelled, as sometimes happens after a busy weekend and especially in the current school holidays - I also found a heap of fantastic kids drawings both on the trolley and pinned low down on the comments wall.
Polly (the very fantastic full time security assistant) asked if she could have CAMRU in her gallery (contemporary abstraction) for the rest of the show. She tells me she really likes having something to do in the quiet times, and promised that she could keep it tidy (but not too tidy so as no one would think they could use it) and let visitors know they could write things, and where the wall is for pinning their comments up. So that's great news for us, and thanks to Polly for her care. We moved it into gallery one and she chose a park in the centre of the room, just to the left as you walk in.
I have had heaps of positive feedback from the gallery hosts, who have really enjoyed watching the comments growing and changing over the weeks. Lots of them are particularly impressed by one gallery visitor, who I am told stayed for a couple of hours building a very sophisticated pencil sculpture, which he then attatched to the comments wall with the help of a gallery host. Its quite an addition, with postit note eyes and long snaky body it looks like a stationary cupboard taniwha.
Most of the folders are now also housing relevant audience responses, and there has been a handfull of flow charts filled in, often in really lateral, sometimes insightful and amusing ways.
The TAC roomsheets are sitting on the fold out desk, looking quite the part and adding some weight (and more humour) to our orange experiment. I am now wondering whether it would be better to print your roomsheet now Tom, rather than wait for the next batch of Andies. It is a good way to communicate to the audience how we see the project rounding out and your summaries are really spot on, I can see those trends continuing with the current responses and it would be good to have recognition of that on CAMRU before the show ends so the audience could potentially respond to response themes. Prospect finishes in two weeks!!!
There is a whole lot more to be said, and a whole box of responses which I have taken away to sort through (Paula, Sian and I are catching up on Wednesday so perhaps we can do that then yes?), but I am a little bleary eyed at the end of my day and think I better stop before I stop making sense... I will report before I go that Et al. has packed down further to the national interest and turned off her gallery spotlights, leaving the gear tidily in the corner and a brown taped out border on the floor - quite a sombre composition. I must say I miss the audio track which had become strangely soothing... I really have to go now!
Since its outing with the sheep CAMRU has been parked back in the original installation spot, next to the comments wall. As always, not long after its 'denuding', I found it filled up again with comments and drawings. It was looking a little disshevelled, as sometimes happens after a busy weekend and especially in the current school holidays - I also found a heap of fantastic kids drawings both on the trolley and pinned low down on the comments wall.
Polly (the very fantastic full time security assistant) asked if she could have CAMRU in her gallery (contemporary abstraction) for the rest of the show. She tells me she really likes having something to do in the quiet times, and promised that she could keep it tidy (but not too tidy so as no one would think they could use it) and let visitors know they could write things, and where the wall is for pinning their comments up. So that's great news for us, and thanks to Polly for her care. We moved it into gallery one and she chose a park in the centre of the room, just to the left as you walk in.
I have had heaps of positive feedback from the gallery hosts, who have really enjoyed watching the comments growing and changing over the weeks. Lots of them are particularly impressed by one gallery visitor, who I am told stayed for a couple of hours building a very sophisticated pencil sculpture, which he then attatched to the comments wall with the help of a gallery host. Its quite an addition, with postit note eyes and long snaky body it looks like a stationary cupboard taniwha.
Most of the folders are now also housing relevant audience responses, and there has been a handfull of flow charts filled in, often in really lateral, sometimes insightful and amusing ways.
The TAC roomsheets are sitting on the fold out desk, looking quite the part and adding some weight (and more humour) to our orange experiment. I am now wondering whether it would be better to print your roomsheet now Tom, rather than wait for the next batch of Andies. It is a good way to communicate to the audience how we see the project rounding out and your summaries are really spot on, I can see those trends continuing with the current responses and it would be good to have recognition of that on CAMRU before the show ends so the audience could potentially respond to response themes. Prospect finishes in two weeks!!!
There is a whole lot more to be said, and a whole box of responses which I have taken away to sort through (Paula, Sian and I are catching up on Wednesday so perhaps we can do that then yes?), but I am a little bleary eyed at the end of my day and think I better stop before I stop making sense... I will report before I go that Et al. has packed down further to the national interest and turned off her gallery spotlights, leaving the gear tidily in the corner and a brown taped out border on the floor - quite a sombre composition. I must say I miss the audio track which had become strangely soothing... I really have to go now!
Thursday, April 12, 2007
Tim Wong interviews TAC here!
Consensus reached - onwards through interview process. TAC : Remember to use the association's login for commenting, and that all contributions are up for grabs for quoting. Tim: Look forward to your questions, and resulting writing!
Below is an anonymous comment gleaned from CAMRU that I thought might add something to the conversation
click on image to see larger view.
x p
Below is an anonymous comment gleaned from CAMRU that I thought might add something to the conversation
click on image to see larger view.
x p
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
New members wrapping up CAMRU
I been thinking and I reckon we should think about inviting some new members to the group. Online is good but it would also be great to have some more peeps in welly. And I wonder whether we should just be quite open in who it is or select? And when we should start looking if we decide we do want to, cos what is our next project....what more do we want to do with the CAMRU info and would new people be interested in that or should we do collating etc ourselves and then invite new people to a new project?
My suggestions are that at the end of the show we do what we have done for the room sheets; ie document the responses and sort them into groups and condense them into an appropriate format. And then they could be made into a document or part of the kit or an online thing.
Then we look for new people who are interested in researching other collaborative structures, to move forward with the kit.
RE the kit; is this still something we want to do? Who do we think the audience is? How much information do we already have which we can use for it ? ( I think we have quite a lot and that we could use making the kit as a kind of debrief session which we had discussed before ie we could all write down what we think has worked well adn not so well in our group and this could start to form part of the kit.)
Personally I have to admit I am all about the art. I am not that interested in going to talk to other groups about thier structures. i am interested in collaboration in an art context and how it works in terms of authorship, ownership, how the magic still gets to happen which so often happens in solitary confinement of the studio........why collaboration is currently important / trendy / contemporary..............all that kind of stuff. Perhaps we would be able to look at areas which interest each of us?
But I do think we have a lot of info already which we haven't put down in terms of how the process has worked for us which we could start by using.
Hmm. What do others think?!
X S
My suggestions are that at the end of the show we do what we have done for the room sheets; ie document the responses and sort them into groups and condense them into an appropriate format. And then they could be made into a document or part of the kit or an online thing.
Then we look for new people who are interested in researching other collaborative structures, to move forward with the kit.
RE the kit; is this still something we want to do? Who do we think the audience is? How much information do we already have which we can use for it ? ( I think we have quite a lot and that we could use making the kit as a kind of debrief session which we had discussed before ie we could all write down what we think has worked well adn not so well in our group and this could start to form part of the kit.)
Personally I have to admit I am all about the art. I am not that interested in going to talk to other groups about thier structures. i am interested in collaboration in an art context and how it works in terms of authorship, ownership, how the magic still gets to happen which so often happens in solitary confinement of the studio........why collaboration is currently important / trendy / contemporary..............all that kind of stuff. Perhaps we would be able to look at areas which interest each of us?
But I do think we have a lot of info already which we haven't put down in terms of how the process has worked for us which we could start by using.
Hmm. What do others think?!
X S
Labels:
Future Projects,
Kit,
Prospect 2007 and TAC's CAMRU
City gallery publication
Hi huys,
Just read the gmail account and they wanna put our popcorn room sheet in the print publication. Sounds like a good plan to me...no cost to us; they will print. Everyone keen? Sounds like we all need to agree adn let them know ( as usual ) asap
X S
p.s. a few days later Liz logged into post and uploaded new roomsheet, above. Click to view at larger size - L
Wednesday, April 04, 2007
TAC reviews
hey guys
just thought since we're constantly re-evaluating our practice i'd cut and paste a comment from (din din din) artbash!
"My point about participants using language that is concise is an important one, for Bagnall's project has relational aspects. It is makes good sense that it is part of a partnership with Enjoy Public Gallery. CSC has similarities with the current work in Telecom Prospect by The Association of Collaboration, a seven person group linked to Enjoy that interacts with visitors to City Gallery. Again the problem is what is the desired result apart from touchy-feely vibes? Having visitors sticking little memo pad notes on the gallery wall is not a super smart method of encouraging sophisticated discourse. It is skimpy and shallow. There needs to be a lot more than fragmented and unfocussed chat for its own sake. If art is now 'post-production' and moving from 'goods' to 'services', those 'services' need to be thoroughly thought through in terms of the desired results. That is the problem for TAC and CSC."
http://www.artbash.co.nz/article.asp?id=982
maybe this is something we can discuss later
xxA
just thought since we're constantly re-evaluating our practice i'd cut and paste a comment from (din din din) artbash!
"My point about participants using language that is concise is an important one, for Bagnall's project has relational aspects. It is makes good sense that it is part of a partnership with Enjoy Public Gallery. CSC has similarities with the current work in Telecom Prospect by The Association of Collaboration, a seven person group linked to Enjoy that interacts with visitors to City Gallery. Again the problem is what is the desired result apart from touchy-feely vibes? Having visitors sticking little memo pad notes on the gallery wall is not a super smart method of encouraging sophisticated discourse. It is skimpy and shallow. There needs to be a lot more than fragmented and unfocussed chat for its own sake. If art is now 'post-production' and moving from 'goods' to 'services', those 'services' need to be thoroughly thought through in terms of the desired results. That is the problem for TAC and CSC."
http://www.artbash.co.nz/article.asp?id=982
maybe this is something we can discuss later
xxA
Monday, April 02, 2007
Interview Request
hey all, a place holder post for possible discussions re interest from Tim Wong in interviewing us for a piece he has been commisioned to write, on the theme of collaboration in the Prospect show.
Check out our email for all the info including full disclosure of the very directive brief he has been given to work off by the commisioner: elecom 'Mob' publication. It makes for an interesting study in the commercial and economic capital spin off of the ol creative process'. I'm confident Tim has got the skills to turn out an interesting piece of writing (based on reading several pieces he has written, you can check out his reader www.Lumier.net.nz to see for yourself) - and it would be great to have a thoughtful response to the relationship between our collaborative process' and the CAMRU work.
I am also wary of our project being championed as an illustration for the values of the evil coca cola bottling company - ah i mean, telecommunications magnate (it costs E.T. alot to phone home these days!). Having said that - we are going to be mentioned with or without our involvement and it could be a chance for us to get something productive out of the inclusion. As usual, we would be working with a truncated time-line...
I suggest to you guys that if we want to go ahead that Mr T. Wong could post a few questions onto the blog and we could let it unfold from there.
What do you think???
Check out our email for all the info including full disclosure of the very directive brief he has been given to work off by the commisioner: elecom 'Mob' publication. It makes for an interesting study in the commercial and economic capital spin off of the ol creative process'. I'm confident Tim has got the skills to turn out an interesting piece of writing (based on reading several pieces he has written, you can check out his reader www.Lumier.net.nz to see for yourself) - and it would be great to have a thoughtful response to the relationship between our collaborative process' and the CAMRU work.
I am also wary of our project being championed as an illustration for the values of the evil coca cola bottling company - ah i mean, telecommunications magnate (it costs E.T. alot to phone home these days!). Having said that - we are going to be mentioned with or without our involvement and it could be a chance for us to get something productive out of the inclusion. As usual, we would be working with a truncated time-line...
I suggest to you guys that if we want to go ahead that Mr T. Wong could post a few questions onto the blog and we could let it unfold from there.
What do you think???
Collational activity
greetings all from merry chch,
thanks for feedback on 'negative response collation'. perhaps to avoid excessive negativity we could wait until the positive reponses have been collated from across the tasman and produce those in tandem?? this would perhaps create a better balance, and potentially get some good conversations going between the respondees (i'm making up words today).
also, i thought that the little blurb (in grey?) which was on sian and liz's collation could be transferred as a brief ending for all of the collations. it sounded quite universal i thought. how much longer does prospect even run for? i've lost track of time..........
and, um, other stuff.....HSP would love some pencils to sell down here! there is a little spot in the reading room which i would love to fill up with orangeness!!
also, just a little thing to think about. HSP is all about the off site projects this year. we even have a new position to coordinate these, and we are busy coming up with new and exiciting ideas. i realise we are all very busy, and thinking about lots of different projects. but i thought that this might be a great way to faciliate a TAC project in chch sometime in the future. whether it be talks, workshops, investigation of local art community, a publication, a discussion, perhaps even a collaboration toolkit!! i'm just planting the seed in all of your minds (speaking of seeds, one has to be careful of falling acorns in chch, they are quite sore on the old noodle!!)
hope you are all well, and miss you all heaps xxxx
thanks for feedback on 'negative response collation'. perhaps to avoid excessive negativity we could wait until the positive reponses have been collated from across the tasman and produce those in tandem?? this would perhaps create a better balance, and potentially get some good conversations going between the respondees (i'm making up words today).
also, i thought that the little blurb (in grey?) which was on sian and liz's collation could be transferred as a brief ending for all of the collations. it sounded quite universal i thought. how much longer does prospect even run for? i've lost track of time..........
and, um, other stuff.....HSP would love some pencils to sell down here! there is a little spot in the reading room which i would love to fill up with orangeness!!
also, just a little thing to think about. HSP is all about the off site projects this year. we even have a new position to coordinate these, and we are busy coming up with new and exiciting ideas. i realise we are all very busy, and thinking about lots of different projects. but i thought that this might be a great way to faciliate a TAC project in chch sometime in the future. whether it be talks, workshops, investigation of local art community, a publication, a discussion, perhaps even a collaboration toolkit!! i'm just planting the seed in all of your minds (speaking of seeds, one has to be careful of falling acorns in chch, they are quite sore on the old noodle!!)
hope you are all well, and miss you all heaps xxxx
A windy Sunday with the Baas
It was a windy Wellinton day and the trolley was about as queit as the sheep we were collecting feedback on. This was an unusual lul for what has been a very busy site of response and writing, folding, colouring and general productivity of some form or another - including inane shout-outs.
This led Sian and Paula to deduce that while the CAMRU certainly is a mobile unit, it is dependant on the gallery's supporting framework, context as place of quiet contempation to make it communicate to an audience and act out its own role within the Prospect show.
This led Sian and Paula to deduce that while the CAMRU certainly is a mobile unit, it is dependant on the gallery's supporting framework, context as place of quiet contempation to make it communicate to an audience and act out its own role within the Prospect show.
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