UNCUT TALKS: Three interviews with UK Practitioners in the World

Following the series of interviews I made with sound workers in China back in April, and since I’ve now (temporarily!) moved back to the UK, I’ve taken the opportunity to record a further set of chats with people and groups in this country. Generally speaking these people interested me because of their approach to the way a practice negotiates the social fabric. The relationship between these speakers activities and what one might call a cultural practice is perhaps quite an ambivalent one, in some cases even an irrelevant consideration for them. I point that out because such activities have in some cases been subsumed within an art practice—specifically the “dialogic” approach—but such practices may at times be seen to “work” better when kept at a distance from such a context, a choice of position which in the process calls into question the efficacy of an art-based practice in attempting to come to grips with the world.

A chat with Bianca Elzenbaumer, Paolo Plotegher, and Rosanna Thompson of New Cross Commoners:


A chat with Dr. Lynn Turner on Guerrilla Gardening:


A chat with Maurice Carlin at Islington Mill:

Memory and Misunderstanding

Last week in our Transcultural Memory session we touched on various projects which dealt with what might be seen as the performative act of memory-making. The major examples came from Salman Rushdie’s book Midnight’s Children and Charlotte Salomon’s Leben? oder Theater? (Life? or Theatre?) In the former, Rushdie’s layering of narrative memory highlights its complicated and complicating acts. For Saloman, the myriad gouaches that make up the project (some 1,000, produced over a 2 year period of 1941-43) present a story that mixes biography and fiction in a very productive and almost overwhelming way.

But here I wanted to draw out the aspect of between-ness that Astrid mentioned, something which was related to Homi K. Bhabha’s “third space,” a concept associated with post-colonial theory in that it represents, for Bhabha, the site of hybridisation between two cultures (in that case assumed to be a colonising and a colonised culture). In the context of the session, this space is understood to be between the event and the memory, and how this can be approached and expressed through creative acts. This “third space” between event and memory interests me in that it is the type of border area that globalisation theory posits as a space of productivity through the upsetting of hegemonic this- or that-ness.

The issue of influence is an example of such a border area between a source and a receiver. I have one anecdote that might be relevant to this issue, coming from my own experience in China. A few years ago I wrote a text about a Chinese artist, Cang Xin, who began his practice in the early 1990s in Beijing, becoming associated with a small group of artists who developed certain types of performance centred on the body.

From the European perspective, one could make a connection between these Chinese artists’ works and those of the Vienna Actionists, both stylistically and conceptually, although they took the acts in very different directions based on their local conditions. Indeed during my interviews with Cang Xin, he went into some detail about the significance and nature of their knowledge of such European artists and activities. He told me that he was aware of these works primarily through a particular book on performance art that was translated into Chinese at that time. From this book, Cang Xin learned about Beuys, Brus, Nitsch, etc. His knowledge then, was based on the iconic photographs that were the overwhelming evidence of the performances after the fact (and are still the knowledge that most people in the world have of them, but that is another discussion about the mediation of performance through its imagery). Cang Xin and his peers were very excited by these works, and felt that their own activities had parallels to them.

Cang Xin told me he had read elsewhere that one of the Austrian artists that were featured in this book (Rudolf Schwarzkogler) had allegedly cut off his penis as part of a performance, a fact that made a great impression on Cang. This was in fact a misunderstanding perpetuated in an article in TIME magazine by the art critic Robert Hughes published in 1972, and indeed this story still circulates. The Chinese artists’ own belief in this story can be seen to lay some groundwork for their own understanding of a commitment to an art practice, yet marks the fragile point of translation between myth and reality.

Visiting Exhibitions by Kara Walker and John Latham

“We at Camden Arts Centre are Exceedingly Proud to Present an Exhibition of Capable Artworks by the Notable Hand of the Celebrated American, Kara Elizabeth Walker, Negress.” at Camden Arts Centre, London.

NOIT Journal Launch, at Flat-Time House, London.

From Kara Walker at the Camden Arts Centre, to John Latham at the Flat-Time House; from the visceral, to the cerebral (but that’s more about playing with words than a fair assessment of the two shows – although it does tell you something fairly basic about certain features of each show; I’m pretty sure there were never so many representations of penises in Latham’s work, as there are no scientific formulae in Walker’s, to my knowledge).

The events that Walker represents in her silhouettes seem stuck in their time, by their development and exploitation of an extreme imaginary of the history of slavery as it took place in the American South; whereas Latham’s works (at least in their meaning) have no such specificity of time and event, but are all about time and event as qualities in a very scientific sense, and as these pertain to the creative act.

Although Latham’s work might be said to have a certain style of the period when they were made, a style of the British-flavours of conceptual art (Art & Language, Liliane Lijn, to name two). But this recognition of a style might be said to incorporate as much of an imaginary as the recognition of the imagery that Walker exploits.

Nevertheless, it is difficult to imagine two more different artists.

To focus primarily on Walker’s work, the way I have characterised it as being stuck in a time, I am suggesting is problematic. They have an interesting relationship to the development of Walker’s artworks. At this point it seems as if her format and imagery has been mined to exhaustion, and now to be actually self-creating its subject matter (although perhaps they always were). From work that draws attention to existing tropes and stereotypes, we seem to have reached a stage where these silhouettes are pushed to become a completely new set of stereotypes – Walker’s own creations rather than a reflection of a historical situation. Is this not problematic? Is the work not now creating that world which it originally accused history and society of brushing under the carpet?

Catalogue Essay: aaajiao – Between the Machine and the Human

[English text below]

机器与人之间 —— aaajiao个展《屏幕一代:前传》

2013.11.02 – 12.01

文:李蔼德

aaajiao "The Screen Generation"

aaajiao在《屏幕一代:前传》中呈现的作品有一种自我展示的特点——就是科技在自我利用,在它自身的存在中呈现自己。“自我展示”这一个词隐喻着一个呈现自己(或其中某些方面)给观看者的机器,虽然对于在aaajiao过往的个展中的作品来说,“自我展示”所代表的正是如此,但是在这一次的呈现中,它并不再是这种从机器向外的、不管观看者在场与不在场的、单方向的操作。这一次的操作在于与人类感官和理解的互相作用。基本来说,这些作品并不存在于它们自身之中,而在一个人接收作品所传达的感觉信息和在他从中理解到一些东西之间的互动之中。这些“东西”并不只是一种对作品的深入认识,而是深入的认知本身。

Continue reading