What is the collective noun for a group of art
writers?
Art Writers Group collective met with interested writers,
curators and artists at The Hestercombe Assembly in the afternoon of Wednesday
7th December 2016.
Created by Josephine Lanyon and Peter Stiles The Art Writers
Group aims to raise the profile of arts writing in the South West and discuss
with other writers, artists, curators and the general public ‘what art writing’
means in 2016, what the future of arts writing could be as well as ideas of;
authorship, context and publicity surrounding the area of, you guessed it, arts
writing. The Hestercombe Assembly featured six speakers made up of authors,
editors and/or curators to discuss, “how
texts can be produced, programmed and disseminated to create knowledgeable
enjoyment of contemporary art”.
As a non-published, bookselling, artist come blogger what
on earth was I doing there?
The answer to that question should be self-evident though highly worth mentioning that to me, this meeting presented an opportunity similar to that of the monthly book group meetings I host at Waterstones, to talk with other people interested in art, writing and reading. What a wonderful discovery to not be alone in this interest and passion of mine that I have embarked on over the last seven years. This was Art Writing in the broadest sense of the word, so included talks from editors, online writers, magazine writers, critical art writing (journalistic and subjective approaches) and art writing that posed itself more as performance art, poetry and in a narrative style more akin to that of fiction. I thought this event was going to involve much ‘clicking of tongues and stroking of beards’ as highly academic people pontificated on the merits of writing as a discourse and its significance to the visual arts themselves. Thankfully it had none of that pretention and became the ultimate fusion of the two worlds I have occupied during my career so far; that of the visual arts and the world of reading and writing learnt in my ten years working in a bookshop.
The following is a list of points I have taken away from listening
to the speakers at the event and will consider in my future writing:
·
Art Writing, as a means of ‘capturing presence
of the work’ –the function of art writing as a means of describing, explaining
what it feels like to see/experience works of art as to a literal description
of it.
·
Syntax –where the writing sits in time (past,
present, future)
·
Art Writing becomes a way of talking about other
subjects –science, environment, archaeology etc. etc. Looking for ways to make
art more interesting or accessible to different audiences. As artists we are
more familiar in working in ways similar to historians, archivists, scientists
and other disciplines but as writers about art we should also consider applying
the same. Interestingly not all of the speakers came from art backgrounds but
creative writing or curatorial ones raising the position I hold within my own
writing, as both an ‘artist who writes about art’ rather than ‘a writer who
writes about art’ an interesting one. How can I bring my own experiences into
my writing more?
·
Art writing and subjectivity writing in embodied
ways- similar to the first point, but writing about art becomes similar to that
of poetry or fiction in that it follows a less academic tone and structure and
the voice of the author is more distinctive and present in the work. The
writing style has as much to say about the work it is describing as the work
itself i.e. fluidity of writing matches fluidity of paint/brush-marks in a
painting. The description of artworks becomes less and more about the bodily or
lived experience of encountering the work. i.e. scale, weight, texture, sound,
smell, context, emotion.
·
What can art writing offer to the reader that
the viewing of art work cannot? Does it have to offer clarity or explanation or
can it raise new ideas or alternative ways in interpreting work.
·
The lie of art writing? Is art writing a lie/deception
of language? ‘art is a lie that reveals the truth’
·
What is the function of the writing? i.e.
publicity, critique, opinion, experience and where is there flexibility for
these to cross-over...
·
Who is doing the writing? Who is doing the
reading? –authorship, readership and how context plays a part in both.
Stephen Smith at Hestercombe Gallery 2016. |
After a few hours in to this event spent listening to a myriad
of wise words whizzing around the room (somewhat rebelliously at all this talk
of writing) I was craving something physically visual, ever thankful that just
outside the room we were in at Hestercombe House was the gallery that lay home
to Stephen Smith’s paintings –a welcome reminder of the importance of the symbiotic
relationship between the actual art and art writing. A few speakers chose not
to include images in their talks, opting for the language and our imaginations
to conjure up our own images of the art works being captured in words. This was
an interesting exercise, but for me only reaffirmed where I stand in being
between two camps of being an artist who creates physical images in drawings
and print and being a writer who attempts to understand those visual
experiences in words. Lizzie Lloyd was one speaker who did this and whose
writing on Peter Doig’s ‘Figures in Red Boat’ was as equally creative as the
art it spoke of and offered new ways into writing about art that are intelligently
observant but personable so that they can be imagined more easily by the
reader. Edward Hopper’s “..if you could say it in
words there’d be no reason to paint” highlights the difficulty faced when writing about something
whose mere existence is incomprehensible in words but of course that challenge
is also part of its appeal. Art writing is like being a translator for visual language though the writer and the artist may not always be trying to say the same thing.
For my love of reading and writing, I still feel as
though words alone, read or spoken plainly, are not enough in themselves and offer
less of an alternative to experiencing art and more of an addition
to enhance the experiencing of art. Reading about art makes me want to
experience it and experiencing art makes me want to write about it. What was
fascinating and reassuring is that many of the curators and artists I spoke to
at the event agreed that there was a place for both within exhibitions and that
the relationship between the two was generally a positive and pro-active one at
encouraging art appreciation. A possible difficulty to art writing for artists/curators
of ‘visual arts’ and one that I feel is evident in the Stephen Smith exhibition
at Hestercombe, is that the writing about the art can become more powerful or
convey meaning more succinctly than the art itself. This statement warrants
more explanation than what I have time to give it here, but essentially I feel
Lizzie Lloyd’s writing of the Stephen Smith exhibition attempts to rationalise
Smith’s work or compensate for the lack of meaning or substance to the context
of Hestercombe that I personally perceived in his paintings. The writing wasn’t
so much offering an alternative way into Smith’s work as it was almost
justifying it. When it works well the text compliments the art work rather than
‘doing the job’ of the artwork as I felt here which is more a criticism of Smith’s
paintings than Lloyd’s writing.
The writers that did chose to show images within their
talks such as Mary Patterson created another approach to the context of art
writing that became more performative with the rhythm of walking or thinking
aloud, the importance of how the piece was spoken evident as well as the
potential it had to reach alternative audiences and convey ideas in a framework
that was unlike a conventional approach to writing. Here writing becomes an art
form in itself.
Much was covered throughout the three hour session that could
have had more audience interaction and dialogue than unfortunately what the
time would have allowed. Though the biggest missed opportunity, I feel was, whilst
Art Writers Group had, what I am sure were many applications from writers of
mixed ability and experience, was to do something brave and use it as an
opportunity find someone new by picking at least one speaker who, maybe was at
the very start of their career and so were less established, unpublished or
completely un-paid and independent. The speakers who spoke were all
interesting, engaging and relevant in their own ways and I think it important
to have people with their experience to bring authority and a certain amount of
credibility to such an event HOWEVER, I think representation of an enthusiastic,
unpolished, committed to art and arts writing individual with only their own
motivation and ambition to support them would have been an inspiring
call-to-arms and act as an advocate of the possibility that art writing can and
should be accessible to all. It is worth noting here, that I was able to attend
this event because I applied for and was awarded a free place to attend so feel
grateful but also obligated to stress my thoughts here. There were several
other people I met on the day in the same position as me, though I feel instead
of piecemeal, Art Writers Group should use its authority to represent or give that
experience to someone like myself or those I met in the audience that day. Instead
it was disappointing that too frequently those with quantifiable or ‘institutionally
recognised experience’ were chosen when there was an opportunity to offer a glimmer
of hope amidst the unobtainable and futile nature of progressing into a paid
career in writing that only those already practicing or within the industry
were represented.
Despite some of my anarchic (but hopefully constructive) views,
the day was still, overall very enlightening and I have felt inspired in meeting
other people with shared interests in art writing. It has proved that despite
its adversities and lack of opportunities, like all aspects of the arts
themselves, remains worth doing. I am keen to develop my own writing based on
some of the ideas mentioned here, learnt from the speakers on the day, and
still have ambition that a legacy from this event, in the form of a peer-led
art writing group could form (or gain more awareness, if such a thing exists in
the South West please let me know) so that more opportunities to those outside
our cities and in our rural areas have access to art appreciation, discussion,
writing and reading.
I still do not know the noun for a collective group of
arts writers but I sincerely hope it is not a rarity.
If you attended
the event and/or would like to contact me regarding any of the above then I
would very much like to hear from you. Please contact me at:
natalieparsley@yahoo.co.uk
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