All posts by Chris

Group Worker . Art Maker . HCPC Registered Drama & Movement Therapist

Modern Art is Rubbish

This is an old TV series about Modern Art for those interested in art history.

Ironic eh?

This is Modern Art is from Channel 4 in the UK from 1999. It is a sardonic but serious series of six 1-hour shows, and covers ‘Art’ from Picasso to the Sensation show at the RA end of the 20th Century.

If you can accept the common misconception that ‘Art’ is famous white male painters, then you will be OK. The writer and presenter is artist and critic Matthew Collings. He is very tongue-in-cheek and disrespectful about what many may call ‘Great Art’ and many more may just dismiss as rubbish. He is informative and offers a useful commentary, but is suitably ironic. It also has a good late ’90s soundtrack.

It should appeal to people who know nothing about modern art and people who know a bit more than nothing, and its content is likely to have some people frothing at the mouth with outrage.

I went to Sensations and witnessed a great bit of theatre. The Damien Hirst pickled shark The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living was the centrepiece. A father and child came in, and the boy saw the shark and ran over, shouting “SHARK SHARK SHARK” then ducked under the little rope barrier around the tank full of thousands of gallons of preservative and whacked both hands, very loudly, on the tank and triumphantly screamed “SHAAAARK!’.

Everyone jumped, especially the ushers who all charged over in horror, not least ‘cos the boy could have broken the glass and flooded the gallery, thus wrecking the whole show. The boy then, under father’s tutelage, went around pointing to every piece he liked and described them all, now quietly, as ‘A shark!’ It was at least as good as the show. It was so funny. This post is dedicated to that boy.

Collings explores modern art through six themes.

Episode 1 – I am a Genius

Focuses on the current state of modern art, and looks back at Picasso, Jackson Pollock and Andy Warhol to see how they changed the definition of art.

Episode 2 – Shock! Horror!

Revealing the ways modern art attempts to shock the audience.

Episode 3 – Lovely Lovely!

Investigates whether the once accepted view of art as merely a thing of beauty prevails today, examining the works of various artists.

Episode 4 – Nothing Matters

Focuses on minimalist art.

Episode 5 – Hollow Laughter

Examination of the jokes used in modern art.

Episode 6 – The Shock of the Now

An exploration of the authenticity of modern art and the media hype that often surrounds it, asking if it can be accused of repeating the art of the past.


At the end of episode 6, Collings talks about the state of modern art at the turn of the millennium and contemplates the future. He describes what he sees in art then as ‘Big corporate global display.’

So in this old TV series about Modern Art, ironically, we see art as a means by which to contemporaneously see what is coming down the line. We are now, 25 years later, subsumed in the world of the big corporate global display. In retrospect, we may now see that the art was telling us what was going to happen. Just don’t tell our current philosophers and politicians and academics and influencers. They will be so pissed off art beat them to it.

All art asks is that you pay attention, intentionally, with an open mind, and be objective about your subjective response to what is made as art, especially art you make yourself.

The Migrant Problem

Where do they come from

The migrant socks

Alone in the world

Adrift

Where do their partners go

Why do they fall apart

Why do they drift aimlessly around my house

I look in the dryer

Nothing there

They went in together

Now one is lost on the journey

Gone

Who knows where

Inevitably

They settle together

The singular socks

Start a community

Of those that don’t fit in

Bloody foreigners!

Oh For Certainty

An ode to the power of imagination

Oh for the certainty
Of rules in a book
Of a formula
Handed down from the Greeks
To make things explicable
Fully knowable
Things like yourself
Making you a fixture
A fixed thing
In a fixed world

The downside
No sense of humour
You would see that punchline coming
You would know the chicken
Intended to get
To the other side of the road
And indeed
You would be there to greet them
With your clipboard and badge
‘Hello chicken
I have read your file
You are Gallus gallus domesticus
A Red Jungle Fowl
You should be in the trees
Not crossing the road
Bird brain!’

But the chicken is certain of some other thing
It does not know for certain
It does not know the fact
It has not read the book
But is certain
Somewhere in its brain
That it is a Tyrannosaurus Rex
A king

It is plagued by intrusive thoughts
‘If I were bigger..’
It thinks of the man
‘I would have you mate
Or you would bow down before me
Before being eaten
Head first
You would be a mere snack
I would use your femur
To pick my teeth
This road is the simplest way
To get from one side of the road
To the other
I am not stupid
I am the greatest carnivore that ever lived
I am certain that one day
We chickens will again
Rule the world
We would tear through your towns
Splitting your bones
Devouring your children
Feeding on your
Warm blooded flesh
Out of my way
Before I kill you
I have roads to cross
And mammals to eat’

Art Can Speak for Itself

Personal Practice : Being told to move on and out into the world.

Autumn on the border between England and Scotland is approaching. Students and teachers are returning to school. It is for many families a time of change.

Over the summer, I worked on a large painting. This was in response to arts and research I had been doing locally. Our house sits at the northern limit of Brampton Kame Belt, a vast area of sediment dropped by the melting of glaciers thousands of years ago. This is featured materially and thematically in the painting. This painting was the endpoint of a long chain of outdoor experience and art making. This included imaginal walking artwork, just researching and exploring my local environs and more empirical work with conventional data, some of which is shared through links above and below.

The combination of the empirical and imaginal is very interesting. We can only know so much about things in empirical terms, and in knowing thus, we inevitably do so through entirely objective sources. Myself and the living environment have a subjective way of knowing and doing. To me, this is where art as research is useful. Artist and therapist Pat Allen suggests, ‘Art is a way of finding out what you believe’, and belief is subjective. Art connects me personally to place and process.

‘Art is a way of finding out what you believe’,

Pat B Allen – Artist and Art Therapist

The painting was an object, which was a product and record of my subjective experience of making it and an objective and subjective account of the place it was attached to. And the painting grew out of a mystery.

Background

On our arrival at our house decades ago, we had been told by a neighbour about a flood that came down the ridge above our estate and into her house as a child. There is no water course anywhere nearby, so we put it down to a confused childhood memory. Then, through my walking and art making, I found a culverted stream and confirmation of the story.

The stream was culverted in 1972, after a flood, so it was a real event, hence the culverting. Another older man on the estate saw we doing some research and told me about the flood, and dated it, and when the groundwater rises, the ghost of the stream emerges in the playing field that is now there, as unusually wet ground, and the sound of rushing water under a usually silent concrete block.

Much of my art making involves walking and creating art objects in response. It is never meant for display, just my way of exploring a place and my experience of it. I became interested in the idea of the land as the substrate of experience, the unconscious if you will, with water as a symbol of emotion or affect.

Looking on the Britice Glacial Map, I found that just north of our house was a glacial lake, and on my walks, a site where clay was abundant.

This was, I believe, the head of the lake. I took clay and made clay figures, and used the clay in paintings.

Making the Art

I baked the clay in a domestic oven and explored putting the figures outside to dissolve over time and return to the substrate from whence they came. Click the slideshow below to see the change.

  • clay figure
  • dissolving clay figure
  • dissolved clay figure

I found this very satisfying. I have an image of them as a kind of worry doll, being put out by a worried person as a way of animating the worry going back into the earth.

Then I worked with the clay in painting, mixing it with acrylic medium or just domestic epoxy to make a medium. I also put it onto a base of black acrylic paint, let it dry and then removed it with a hair dryer to see what happened. In the end, the object before the removal was much nicer, in fact, curiously beautiful. The slideshow below shows the painting before the removal of the clay, some close-ups, and the painting afterwards.

The final piece was not as I hoped. But the thing before the clay was removed was very interesting. I liked that it made itself, it made itself beautiful, and was entirely temporary. The only permanent thing was the picture of the process of it being made. It struck me as a kind of performance, and it seemed to tell me something. I see this all as work in progress. But the beauty of the moment, captured as a picture, as potentially a work of art in itself, talked to me of a way to make the process of making, the art form itself. I felt a need to show this in public as ‘Art’ or as performance.

What I took this to mean was that it was time to take my art making out of the very fruitful and rewarding realm of purely personal arts research practice and out into the world of public exposure. None of this was verbal or rational or even cognitive. I had the image in my head of the delicate and beautiful patterns made by the clay and a photograph as an objective account of this point in the process of making, now lost. It was the photograph, the image of the image of the painting now gone, and like the Pat Allen quote above, a belief that I needed to make this public emerged, that the photograph was as much art as the object itself and more than just a record of experience, it could be an experience in its own right.

With my background in groupwork outdoors and with art, it told me seek to make this experience available to other people, and that this could also be art in its own right. It could be performance.

So I found the Ramblers Association was looking for Wellness Walk Leaders, and I did the training and am doing three Mindful Art Perambulations.

Moving On

I have three walks in September, October and November. These are targeted at anyone wanting a short, easily accessible walk, including people in wheelchairs and seniors.

The link to the first can be followed by clicking the picture or the link below.

Map of the start of the first wellness walk in Carlisle.

I will post more later about the walks and what happened.