Today did not disappoint in the quantity of stuff I managed to cram into 7 hours, and I'm sure my pedometer is sitting in the five digits region I've done so much walking. But it feels good to be engaging with this city in such a rewarding way. I hope I have done these installations even half the justice they deserve.
NB: as this article was written in collaboration with Plymouth University's SU: Media online magazine, some editing has been done which I have applied (in places).
NB: as this article was written in collaboration with Plymouth University's SU: Media online magazine, some editing has been done which I have applied (in places).
As I very much predicted, having set out today with a plan
of what I wanted to see and when...nothing really permitted me to follow said
plan.
Fortunately, I was now able to return to the former sanctuary of Ric Stott and Ian Adams. Through a series of 10 paintings (Stott) and poems (Adams), a viewer was taken on their own journey of self-discovery, the former balancing warm swathes of colour with cool scribbles and scratches over beautifully simplistic black and white drawings, which the latter gave greater spiritual meaning to. By the end, only warmth and strength remained, as if ready to start the ‘story’ over, an apt method given its religious vibe.
The Truth Wall - Plymouth What's On stand |
Following
this, I thought I would be at a loss once more until The Truth Wall
began shouting its anti-politics at me from the "What’s On" stand.
Organised by the Kiss and Bite Letterpress Studio, any potential traces of old
announcements were virtually smothered by the haphazard pasting of 80s-style
propaganda. Its boldly coloured declarations of ‘Don’t Be Calm, Be Angry’ were
instantly eye-catching and subvert the typical 'Keep Calm and Carry On'
narrative. After circling this outspoken piece a few times like an inquisitive
dog, I wandered to the Hoe in search of Anita Lander; her unique decision to
sit and listen on a bench beneath a tree for seven hours intrigued me. Alas, she
too was nowhere to be seen so I turned myself back to town to continue the next
leg of my arty odyssey.
Having sufficiently caffeinated myself with an iced
Americano and picked up my constant companion in all things arty, Mark Jones,
we investigated BankRUN, a small
wooden ATM created by Lara Luna Bartley to mark the 10th anniversary
of Northern Rock’s collapse. Having ‘activated’ the machine by trusting my
finger to a small hole in the display, a magical hand provided me with the
option of three bank notations and one of three radical economists to adorn the
note. After a brief wait, the chosen note was delicately ejected through a
slot, bearing Ben Dyson’s face on one side, and a female face oddly like my own
on the other. Wishing it had any monetary value, we advanced to the bus stop in
anticipation of the Wonderzoo Bus Tour organised
by Peter Davey. Just up the road sat the number 34 Orbit bus, its top deck stuffed with brilliant pink orbs, taunting
my impatience and self-inflicted schedule, but I had stranger things to attend
to on a bus. Joined by some of last night’s Versify crew, we experienced out-of-tune group renditions of The
Sound of Music. Oddly enough, West country comedian Richard James appeared to
be more at home shouting at people on a bus (despite the unconventionality of
doing just that) than small talk. Versify’s
own poet, Nick Ingram, was looking to beat his own record for the verbal
100-metre dash, before Versify’s
organiser Marian tantalised the ears with her poem on whales, whales, whales. After
an hour, we’d ended up so far out of town, we needed to catch another bus back.
Once returned to familiar ground, we trekked out to what I
perceived to be the final location on my schedule, the Plymouth School of
Creative Arts, playing host to multiple installations for the weekender, which
included:
The Curious Cattewater Dog Cabinet (Zoe and Callum Moscrip):
a means of bridging the gap between artefact and community by bringing evidence
of one such artefact (a shipwreck) to life in the form of a skeletal puppet
dog. Despite its obviously deceased state, I felt it might move at any moment –
if only the mechanism would allow it to.
In the Air… (Jenny Mellings): a set of three aerial painted scenes
of remote landscapes – even as far as Saturn’s moon, Titan – which provided a
way to make the distant seem nearer, and the reverse, in a tangible space.
What do you see? (Janine Rook): a series of visitor-created Rorschach
inkblots intended to explore one’s psyche. Most of the images had a biological nature
for me – lungs, tree, uterus – what could that be saying about my psyche?
Paradice Lost (Stuart Robinson and Kirsty Harris): in my
quest for deeper meanings behind art, this minimalist interaction of a neon red
sign saying ‘PARADICE’ (Robinson) and a colour scene of a mushroom cloud (Harris)
said it all loud and clear. However,
that was not all there was to it. Other
interpretations emerged from my conversation with Stuart, such as the
installation’s sense of not-rightness. This derived from the incorrect spelling
of paradise and the innocuous ‘poof’ of the cloud. It was through this conversation that my [true] final stop was
mentioned: KARST’s contribution to We the
People Are the Work, I Am Your Voice by
Claire Fontaine.
In the spaces provided, we found a map of the British Isles
composed of burnt matches, signifying a ‘tragedy perceived too late’, the smell
of which tainted the air; and a set of three neon signs in red and white
lighting up an otherwise pitch-black room which smelt of fresh paint. Their ambiguous messages allowed a viewer to question the concept of morals: I do it because
it’s right/It’s right because I do it.
The signs frighteningly seemed to
communicate with one another as the individual words lit up, making me glad to
leave the room – if only to peep into KARST’s own Peepshow. Through nine installed peepholes could be seen a snippet
of the resident artists’ work, allowing the average viewer a glimpse behind the
scenes, one piece proving difficult to tear Mark away from due to it living up
to the installation’s name.
An ominous self-portrait |
Phew, and with that, day two is wrapped. Any quotes are
taken from the provided leaflets. Bring on day three!
Thanks for using my image here, it really works in a surreal sort of way! :D
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