Monday 30 November 2009

Some stress lifted

So it's Sunday night before my assessment tomorrow. I put a lot of work into my last term and am hoping it pays of. But I'm feeling positive about my new direction of work. Now all that's left to get through is my essay for H&C which is due on the 8th December, so I better get that started this week. Anyway, just a quick update to remind myself that the horror of getting everything done for assessment has been done! YAY!

And wishing you all a very tartan, haggis, whiskey and enthusiastic dancing filled St. Andrew's Day tomorrow!

G'night.

Thursday 26 November 2009

Assessment Stress!!

Oh man, let me tell you, I'm getting properly stressed over assessment this term. God help me when I get to fourth year. I just finished writing my self-evaluation form for assessment which took me well over an hour. Grrr. Here's what I wrote on how I think I've done this term:

Before I discuss my progression in terms of the three main assessment categories I would like to clarify what has been happening with my practice this term. Initially, I started making work about a very traumatic event which happened to me throughout the summer. It was cathartic, but it was also a way in which I was able to investigate my interest in human behaviour, this time, analysing my own. However, in receiving feedback at tutorials and from peers, I felt a pressure to produce very objective work. This is when I produced the series of drawings of limbs in mass graves. With reflection I have realised that this was also a coping mechanism which I used to deal with the emotional turmoil I was experiencing at the time. A clinical and detached approach was a necessary motion which I had to go through to get to where I am now. After my group crits, the main point I took away from the feedback I received was that my work seemed tentative and unauthentic to myself. Then I had a magnificent tutorial with Victoria Morton, who encouraged me to produce what felt natural to me and pointed out the work in my sketchbooks and my drawings about my traumatic event were much more energetic and authentic. This is why my work has taken such an abrupt change of direction aesthetically, however the ideas being investigated remain the same.

Knowledge & Understanding:
My research this term has happened more through attending events, and seeing art in the flesh than through assimilation of images of work by other artists. I have tried in this term to grasp what is happening in the art scene in Glasgow by attending openings, running events with the project I am involved with, IRONBBRATZ, and by having informal crits with my peers. Part of the reason for this is that financially, photocopying hundreds of images has not been feasible, but I have done my best to do this with the resources I’ve had. But I’ve found the ‘attend and discuss’ approach to be a very accessible way for me to research and learn.
My continued and more immersive involvement with running and attending events has really boosted my awareness of contemporary practices, however I do feel I need to do more research into historical practices in order to better my practical and conceptual skills. This is something I strive to work on in the coming terms.

Studio Practice:
This term has been the most productive for me yet in my art school career which has improved my self-esteem quite significantly. I have tried to gather relevant source material to work from although a lot of it has been personal experience, memory, diaries and mementos. I am becoming more comfortable with the way in which I create work, and despite it not always being concrete, logical or consistent, getting to grips with this is giving me more food for thought in terms of generating work about my own behaviour. In focusing on my traumatic event and what that has triggered in me since it happened, I feel like my ideas are developing well. My discussion about the way in which people interact is becoming stronger, especially because my work has become more honest. My practical skills are developing further – this term I have started experimenting with oil paint – something I had rarely done in the past. I have also embraced my love for the scribble, dialect and text in my work and am thoroughly enjoying becoming more confident in working in a way which is natural to me. I spent a lot of time working on drawing as well, in addition to the study of composition and have learned a lot about both these aspects in this term.
My critical awareness of my own practice is what I’ve learned most about this term. I am finally understanding that everyone works in different ways. I am embracing my compulsive notions to work through the night – this is when I generate the most work. I have also come to terms with the fact that I work more effectively by doing things rather privately at first, in books, and then dismantling the books and displaying what was initially very private to me. I have become very interested in the notion of confession as a result of this discovery. As well all of this I’ve learned how to force myself to stay in the studio for longer (listening to music, and generally just making my space a more comfortable environment to spend time in).

Professional Practice:
My professional practice since working with the IRONBBRATZ project (since May 2009) has vastly improved. I’m learning so many valuable skills like consultation with artists and volunteers, promotion, presentation, making information clear and accessible, contact with official bodies like Glasgow City Council, the Market Gallery etc, documenting events through blogs & CV’s as well as working collaboratively with other groups such as DJ’s, Bands and events co-ordinators. Business stuff aside, I have improved on other skills like curation and installation of work. My team work skills have vastly improved in working not only with my two project partners but with everyone else involved. This is something I’ve transferred into my studio practice.
In being part of a project like this, as well as studying and working, my organisational skills have came on leaps and bounds since last year. There is always room for improvement in terms of organisation but I think my new found comfort in my creative process and the way in which I make work has helped a lot (i.e. generating art work through the night, being in the studio half the day, working the other half, then dealing IRONBBRATZ meetings in the early evening).
All in all, I’m a bit disappointed in the lateness of my revelation this term, but it was necessary for me to go through the motions I did to get where I am and now. I am now much more focused and driven to keep my practice developing and growing.


Yea, I know. Heavy eh? hehe.

G'night!

Monday 23 November 2009

Celebrate! Good times, C'mon!

Hey Hey!

So I'm in a much better mood this week after my FANTASTIC tutorial with Victoria Morton (http://www.themoderninstitute.com/artists/v_morton/index.php)

She has been an artist which has been in my research since first year and I am a great admirer of her work so it was brilliant to get a tutorial from her. She more than exceeded my expectations! She told me exactely what I needed to hear. My work recently has been very tentative and merely a clinical and emotionally detached distraction from my real feelings and my genuine creative process/product. I just hope I can explain this well enough on my Self - Evaluation form! My work this year started of being about a very traumatic thing which happened to my this summer and was, as a result, very subjective. Since first year, I had received the same criticism - your work is too emotional/subjective and doesn't address a wider issue. So you can see why I tried to be so clinical and detached this year, and to my disappointment and frustration, my work was still receiving quite a lot of criticism.

Victoria made me realise that I should embrace my creative practice and not allow my practice to be too heavily changed because of certain schools of thought. So what have I learned from all this?

1. That I have been top serious in terms of the content of my creative practice, especially seeing as I am my personality is much more humorous/sarcastic/dark/scattered. This is what I should be reflecting in my work.
2. That I try to change my work too much so that it gets good grades/feedback.
3. That when I try to change my work, I become uninspired and stop creating, or create much more dull things.
4. That I work best in sketchbooks, and that text is a big part of my work.
5. That I need to learn how to better justify my practice.

That's a hell of a lot to take away from one tutorial I think!

In other news, went to see John Doaks and Hazel Gores (4th Year P&P) work tonight on exhibition at The Vic. I really like John's work (just now focused in video installation) and have enjoyed watching him develop his ideas and skills, especially in installing the work. Hazel Gores work was fascinating as well.

Well it's a busy busy week for me ahead and I'm going to try and get a series of 7 small paintings done before Thursday night. I think I'm going to call the series: "Things you think about when bad stuff happens". It's going to be 7 portraits of all of my previous sexual partners with text explaining how I came to be involved with them. Some will be faceless, and others will be more complete. I hope my work will discuss my experience of self-reflection as well as be interesting as it will be like 7 little confessions (religion has played quite a large part in my life, making the confession part relevant). I hope they will be brutally honest, rather funny and make people question their own experience and how they judge their own behaviour.

Hope it all goes well! Over and out!

Thursday 19 November 2009

Crit - ters!

So, this week I had group crits. I was extremely worried about them since I hadn't had a lot of time to spend in the studio as I had been working a lot. I managed to get some last minute painting studies together over the weekend before my crits on Monday. But it's a bad idea to paint for painting's sake, but I did feel as though I learned something from them. Interestingly, the first painting, which I hated, went down quite well and received some positive feedback from the group and both my tutors.

There were meant to be 8 people being reviewed between 10am and 5pm but a few didn't show up so that meant more time on the ones that did. My peers had some really fascinating and beautiful work to show so I was feeling rather inadequate (not unusual at group crits!) when it came to me showing my work. I got some good advice but the tutors could see I hadn't been producing enough work and recommended I go to life drawing and do some more research. I need money to continue my research (photocopying, double sided tape etc.) and I have 0p to my name until pay day.

So as of now, I'm working on creating layers in my drawings so using tracing paper (any transparent surface really) and going to life drawing on mon and tues nights. It's going ok, will try taking them into paint when I feel the compositions and materials are right. But with assessment coming up in two weeks I feel a little pressed for time.

Will update on my work next week, hopefully with some photos!

Saturday 7 November 2009

What's up at the Art School?

So as of late, my practice has been working at a slower rate than I'd like. I am trying to play with other materials in dealing with my subject matter: the anonymous death. It's a tough subject to tackle, massive and must be treated with sensitivity due to its nature. Need a tutorial as soon as I go back on Tuesday (It's reading week this week.)

And with regards to reading week, I've been doing some reading for my essay coming up. Here's a brief summary of what's being asked of 3rd year H&C students in Term 1:

"You should choose ONE source and write an academic review of it with a word length of 800-1,000 words (this being the equivalent of a short published review).

What is a source? While this is likely to be published and text based, it does not have to be. You may choose an object-based or archival source, for instance. The nature of the source is likely to determine the intellectual approach and will be important in terms of assessment."


So I think I'm going to chose to review a political cartoon, perhaps one by david low on the run up to WWII but we shall see. The book I'm reading, "The Political Cartoon" by Charles Press has showed me a lot of other political cartoonists I hadn't heard of before. I'm also reading a book by Susan Stewart, "On Longing..." It's a good deal tougher to read than my political cartoon book but it throughs up some interesting ideas about collections, souvenirs, the miniature, the gigantic and so on.


I'm doing a lot of reading as of late. For my art practice, I'm reading a couple of interesting books:

The Bog Man and the archaeology of people by Don Brothwell (scientific and forensic investigation into the study of bog bodies)

The Rattlebag edited by Seamus Heaney and Ted Hughes (a book of poetry).


What else has been happening? Well on a late and side celebratory note, the Painting & Printmaking dept. got back a studio space this year which has been occupied by offices for 25 years. It's a proud day for us painters, and so encouraging to see the school giving its students the space they deserve. Yay!


Over and Out.




Sunday 1 November 2009

Photos From IRONBBRATZ presents 'Pot Luck'


Mrs. Dobbratz and her cupcakes

Shaun O'Donnell


Shaun O'Donnell


Samantha Ndlovo


Jack McConville


Front gallery


Front Gallery


Penny Sharp


Penny Sharp


Jack McConville


John Doak


Top Gallery


Top Gallery

The Light Display by Robbie Thomson and Collin Ferguson


Collin Fergusons Light piece


The Marching Band


The Marching Band


Guitarist from Holy Mountain in front of Light Display


Holy Mountain


The crowd





All photos taken by Anthony William Lakey