Monday 22 October 2018

Beyond Thinking: Naked Contact of a Mind Uncovered






The manuscript of a ground-breaking feminist work by Virginia Woolf has recently been uploaded online to mark it’s 90th anniversary, and coincide the opening in October 2018 of a new exhibition of the authors writing at The Fitzwilliam Museum, in the University of Cambridge. The scanned work, called ‘A Room of One's Own’ was published in late 1929, but was inspired by two ‘Lectures for Ladies’ that Woolf delivered in October 1928 at Cambridge’s women colleges of Newnham and Girton. The university exhibition, running until December 2018, celebrates her visionary writing.  It also showcases the works of more than 80 other artists, on the themes of female identity, domesticity and landscape.

Linked to this, but marking a separate 70th anniversary of the staging of the first-ever degree ceremony for Cambridge women graduates, a major new feminist artwork at Newnham College has also just being unveiled. Called ‘Beyond Thinking’, “the piece is about making a stand” says the sculptor Cathy de Monchaux, and 1998 Turner Prize nominee. She too, was inspired by Virginia Woolf and the seminal ‘A Room of One’s Own’.

Newnham College as a women-only constituent college of the University of Cambridge first began life with the early formation of an ‘Association for Promoting the Higher Education of Women in Cambridge’ in 1869. Newnham, now one of the 31 colleges of the University of Cambridge, began as an actual house for 5 students. Here, rooms were rented to young women who could not travel to Cambridge on a daily basis, and so enabled them to attend the 'Lectures for Ladies’, which began in 1871.

As a continuation of that founding principle, the premise behind Virginia Woolf’s paper was that she advocated that "a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction”. Young women, she maintained, needed the same spaces to contemplate in, that corresponding male students had always taken for granted. Her cry was simply a call to rectify that “lop-sidedness of history”. Her stated view of inter-war Britain at that time, was that creative women could only “think back through our mothers”. She argued that women writers needed both a literal space as well as figurative head space within the, then male-dominated literary industry.

Ten years after the Representation of the People Act 1918 that first gave women the vote 100 years ago, such continued sexual discrimination might seem at odds with a shifting politic, post-sufferance. However, the first votes granted for women, were just for those over the age of 30. It was to take until 1928, when the government passed the updated Equal Franchise Act, that young women over 21 were also to be included.

In a continued drive for gender equality, in 1931 Virginia Woolf conceived a controversial novel-essay sequel to ‘A Room of Ones Own’. This time her focus was the sexual emancipation of women, and was titled ‘Professions for Women’. Sadly, but perhaps unsurprisingly given her observations of the misogyny in literary circles at that time, forty years later it remained unpublished. Edited drafts were finally published in 1977, but this time under Woolf’s original working title of ‘The Pargiters’. In the work she reiterated her detest and boredom with all-pervading masculine vanities of heroism, virtue, and honour: “What I value is the naked contact of a mind” she stated.

In tribute to feminist intransigence like Woolf’s, Cathy de Monchaux has confirmed her new installed public artwork  “is about making a stand”. However, either welcomed or unwanted, this ‘stand’ has already attracted some controversy: The title of a feature by Vanessa Thorpe, arts and media writer for the Observer, described ‘Beyond Thinking’ as resembling a ‘two-storey vulva’. Perhaps an ironic, remark, or perhaps a disingenuous one to draw-in readers. Regardless, Newnham College’s commissioning Art Strategy Group objected and responded strongly to this. It maintained that the artworks repeating relief panels in fact represented ‘a tower of books’ .

Backing this stance, de Monchaux, also reiterated that: with Newnham being an eminent women’s college; having diverse cultures drawn from across the world; and the work being sited as it was on a public street; her artwork was a positive statement about women and books, and was not about sex. Backing her argument up, de Monchaux has previously cited her use of erotic reference as being metaphors for peoples angst and fraught-ness, rather than necessarily being about any sense of sexual fetish.

Given the look of the piece, and the artist’s sensual and seductive back catalogue, it must be said that both ways of seeing it could be argued. Particularly, given human subjectivity or the odd persons propensity for having a lurid imagination. Such visual ambiguity reminds one of the old psychological ‘Rorschach Tests’ for assessing schizophrenia patients. Here, multiple ink blots presented in series  were often interpreted in diverse, and often quite unexpected ways.


Practically speaking, the artwork ‘Beyond Thinking’ is simply a 35-foot high, quality bronze with a repeating motif, fixed to the wall by an unremarkable entrance of Newnham College’s new Dorothy Garrod building. Each stacked panel is clearly an open book, although the abstractness of this view is kept deliberately loose. Each ‘book’ is in turn overlaid with branch-like veins – or branches from the tree of knowledge it is said. Finally wedged into each central fold, and lying there like a figurative bookmark, is a small female icon. Lusciously clad with face hooded, she alludes perhaps to a winged sprite from universal folklore. Arguably that, or as an allusion back to the artists’ trademark interest in juju miniature, used to evoke 'fetish' stand-ins. If this is representative of a highly abstracted feminist Yoni, then this is the sculptural equivalent of 'vagazzling' the ultimate designer vagina.

In realising all her work, Cathy de Monchaux has described her creative process as being sometimes so overwhelming as to confuse her way forward. In such scenarios, she has stated she can only unravel what she is trying to create by standing back. This state of drawing-in-breath, is what she refers to as being ‘beyond thinking’. This is the state where her most creative inspiration often occurs. Hence the title of this piece.
But is this subliminal out-of-body thinking in reality more of an ulterior motive to use a heavily abstracted image to reference female gender and sexuality? Perhaps. But does it actually matter if a public artwork references naked genitalia or alludes to them sexually anyway? Strictly speaking, the short answer to anything permanently placed in the public realm is ‘no’, providing content is just about a nude aesthetic (classical or otherwise), and the art draws or directs no offence to the general public or the vulnerable. For the case of something more sexually explicit or openly provocative, the answer is different. The difficulty lies in where this defining line between the two is drawn.

Clearly, we are not talking about any blatent lewdness in public here. So it is not entirely clear why Newhham had felt the need to make any statement on its subject matter and protest too much. Even if intended artistically or not, it is unlikely many would take offense at the work – unless perhaps profiles in the press and social media continue to draw attention to its alluded content. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, and so to-a-degree, is the subjectivity of any perceived offense taken from creative risk-taking.

Talking about ‘Beyond Thinking’, Professor Jenny Morton, chair of Newnham College’s Art Strategy Group, reitterated that “Newnham has always been a College willing to take risks and put our faith in outstanding women” and that the college had trusted Cathy de Monchaux entirely. What was important Morton felt, was to have allowed their chosen artist free rein to create a sculpture to represent the College’s future, without losing touch with the past.

Eminent Cambridge classics Professorial Fellow and broadcaster Dame Mary Beard , is a scholar of antiquity and Professor of Classics at Newnham, and should back such artistic licence. Beard’s recent two-part BBC 2 series ‘The Nude Uncovered’ challenged societal attitudes about nudity and its impact on ideas of beauty and gender politics. Here she also reflected on the changing history of the way people have looked and understood the naked human form over time. She stated there was an edgy awkwardness that the classical art of the Greeks and Romans bravely faced in their everday nudes, that we as a global culture have generally now lost - unless it is conveniently glossed-over and de-sexualised.

Exceptions to this rule occur from time to time of course. Milestones of epic works of feminist art, such as Judy Chicago‘s ‘The Dinner Party’ (1974-79) and Jamie McCartney, ‘Great Wall of Vagina” (2011) have both challenged the taboo of the vulva used in art. However, the hallowed white cube of the gallery is one thing. Within the public realm, media and online, our prudish fears and paranoia often resurface:

In Paris the High Court  ruled in 2015 that Facebook could be taken to court after a user posted a picture of 'L'Origine du Monde' (The Origin of the World), the full-frontal 1866 painting by Gustave Courbet from the Musée D'Orsay in Paris, on his account.

More recently in the UK (and in fact, also in the U.S and Germany), advertising regulators refused to display a series of nudes marking a retrospective of Viennese modernism, including works by Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele. Transport for London expressed concern that the depiction of genitals, even if artistic, “could be at odds with public wellbeing”. To counter this, the Viennese Tourist Board reformatted their posters with an apology splashed strategically across Schiele’s nudes like a censorial fig leaf: “SORRY, 100 years old but still too daring today.” An added hashtag #ToArtItsFreedom, referenced the slogan of the original Viennese secession: “To every age its art, to art its freedom.”

Where all this leaves us, and ‘Beyond Thinking’, I am not entirely sure. But if I am honest, I don’t care that much for the work to be mithered one way or the other anyway. Despite all the rhetoric (mine included), I find the artistic metaphors used quite clumsy and obvious, and the 'applied arts'' set within the architecture itself quite dated – particularly in the rapidly shifting oeuvre that is today’s public art. Art by committee may not be what Newnham wanted, but given it convened an Art Strategy Group, to me anyway, it looks like that is maybe what it got.

Cambridge was reportedly the last British university to grant female students equal rights, but gven the lauded history of Newnham since, and the radical vision of Virginia Wolf that helped set it on its way, I feel so much more could have been attempted. Given even a snapshot of the great and the good of Newnham Alumni, the iconic names alone speak for themselves in terms of their originality, genius and passion:  Diane Abbott, Joan Bakewell, Clare Balding, Mary Beard, A.S Byatt, Margaret Drabble, Germaine Greer, Patricia Hodgson, Iris Murdoch, Sylvia Plath, Emma Thompson and Sandi Toksvig, to name but a few.

Wall of Women is a new online project that features short videos of other Newnham students, academics and alumnae talking about their life at the college and aspirations. To me this is the embodiment of the college and far more revealing. A tad too understated, nor taking any risks curatorially, but its diverse voice rewards our faith in the past and potential of these outstanding women.

Tuesday 16 October 2018

Fifty Billboards, Including One Outside Jefferson City, Missouri



The 2017 film Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, written, directed, and produced by Martin McDonagh challenged societal attitudes of inherent prejudice, misogyny and indifference seen in parts of small-town America. Winning an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay, this contraversial viewpoint was also fuelled here by a rather dilatory police force, where some officers exhibited lazy incompetence and casual racism. Winning the academy award for best actress, Frances McDormand starred as a grieving mother compelled to rent three billboards near to her home on the outskirts of town. A series of her provocative posted statements drew attention to this institutional apathy in the months following her daughter's unsolved rape and murder.

Similarly looking to challenge and elicit a strong public reaction to sensitive social and political issues of-the-day, 2018 has seen three more evocative graphic public artworks established in Missouri. A small part of a huge nationwide art programme called 50 State Initiative, the three state installations include two billboards by artist Jeremy Dean’s called InDivisible and Hummer Stagecoach in St. Louis, as well as visual and performance artist Christine Sun Kim’s piece called Words Shape Reality in Jefferson City. Part of a much bigger civil programme set up nationally by arts organisation For Freedoms, this national crowdfunded project called was created to encourage and engage far more public political participation and reaction. The name of their organisation was inspired by American artist Norman Rockwell’s Four  Freedoms series created in 1943. His four paintings evoke Franklin D. Roosevelt’s impassioned call to Congress from 1941, advocating a basic human need for the public freedoms of speech, worship, want, and from fear.
As a result, a mass series of 300 artist-inspired graphic hoardings are being erected throughout the 50 mainland states, ahead of the November 2018 midterm congressional elections. There are no stipulating guidelines or restrictions to artistic content. The core basis of the project is simply to embrace artists creativity as a means of inspiring civic dialogue (or arguably disobedience), as well as provoking an initiation of far more community participation.

Christine Sun Kim’s Missouri artwork Words Shape Reality perhaps sums up the graphic power of simple statements used alone on billboards to evoke deep thought and meaning. There is some irony in this, as Sun Kim was in fact born deaf, and describes her learning process growing up as being only “shaped by American Sign Language interpreters, subtitles on television, written conversations on paper, emails, and text message”. She claims to approach sound by pushing it to a different level of physicality, despite admitting to a complex relationship with Deaf culture, whilst attempting to “translate sound while unlearning society’s views and etiquettes around it”.
The power of plain language to question and shape the reality of our lives can never be underestimated – but we need to think carefully about that, and never take it for granted.

Notes:

50 State Initiative  - Is a nationwide US public art project being curated by the arts organisation For Freedoms, which by its conclusion will involves in the realisation of more than 300 artist commissions across north America. Partnering with more than 200 national art organisations, ranging from grassroots cultural centers to major museums, selected artists include J.R., Marilyn Minter, Rashid Johnson, Tania Bruguera and Theaster Gates. Each artist has designed a billboard for settings located variously throughout the 50 US mainland states.

For Freedoms  - Is a platform for greater participation in the arts and in civil society co-founded by artist Hank Willis Thomas and Eric Gottesman. It produces exhibitions, installations, public programs, and billboard campaigns to advocate for inclusive civic participation.

Christine Sun Kim - Visual and performance artist.

Tuesday 3 April 2018

Add £50,000 to the Value of Your Home in 7 - 14 Days?

Good news is that according to new research from the Federation of Master Builders  and the Home Owners Alliance (working with the The Guild of Property Professionals), it is possible to add almost £50,000 to the value of your home from between just 7 - 14 days.

The key findings from this research suggest the most effective projects that can add the most value to your home, in the shortest space of time. A range of typical locations from the UK are used for this. Typical suggestions include:
  • Removing an internal wall to create an open plan kitchen and diner can add £48,417 in seven days to an averagely priced home in London; 
  • Building a garden room or outside playroom for the kids can add £35,611 in 14 days to an averagely priced home in Surrey;
  • Investing in kitchen improvements such as new flooring, a new worktop and new cabinet doors can add £26,838 in eight days to an averagely priced home in Dorset;
  • Converting a cupboard under the stairs into a downstairs toilet can add £26,708 in seven days to an averagely priced home in Surrey;
  • Converting part of the master bedroom into an en suite bathroom can add £14,525 in 11 days to an averagely priced home in London;
  • Building a new driveway can add £13,354 in nine days to an averagely priced home in Surrey; 
  • Installing decking and lighting in the back garden can add £8,946 in seven days to an averagely priced home in Dorset.
Not included in this list, and whilst taking longer that 14 days (but costing considerably less money to achieve) would be a Full Planning Permission gained prior to selling. Plans submission to full approval would take around 30 days to achieve, and the cost of this, excluding any architect or designer fees, would be just the householder planning fee of £206 for a single dwelling. Check out the Interactive House guide to householder planning on the Planning Portal and download the RIBA's PDF guide Working with an Architect for your Home.

https://www.architecture.com/-/media/gathercontent/working-with-an-architect-for-your-home/additional-documents/ribaworkingwithanarchitectforyourhomepdf.pdf


For a full list of the FMB and HOA projects, costs and the value they can add to your home broken down region by region, click here or see table extract below.

Other commercial information and guides produced in September 2018 by the online Property Workshop portal which acts as a self-styled "one-stop shop for home renovation and repair" also details it's own suggested '31 Home Improvements that Add Value (and 7 that Don’t!)'. Their site takes you through 31 different ways to increase your property value, with tips on how to maximise your profit and make your money go further.

Monday 12 March 2018

New Collaborative Funding Models in Public Art


Bloomberg Philanthropies, the charitable enterprise of former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, earlier this year launched it’s 2018 ‘Public Art Challenge’. Part of Bloomberg’s ‘American Cities Initiative’, this is seen as part of the effort to help U.S. cities generate innovation and advance policy. The $3 million fund is seeking proposals for temporary projects that address civic issues and demonstrate an ability to “generate public-private collaborations, celebrate creativity and urban identity, and strengthen local economies”. Mayors of U.S. cities with 30,000 residents or more are invited to apply. At least three cities will be selected to receive up to $1 million each over two years.

So, is this the ultimate alternative public arts funding model that must increasingly begin to be applied in England and wider UK? Certainly, in terms of wider arts and culture spending shifts, the 2016 paper, ‘Funding Arts and Culture in a Time of Austerity’, written by independent think tank New Local Government Network (NLGN) saw such a fundamental scenario. It recognised that local authority budgets were coming under unprecedented pressures, with significant cuts being made to museums, libraries and the arts. This was seen as being uniquely challenging terrain, with shrinking resources making sustainability, and even survival, ever-harder. New ways of working were therefore seen as being mandatory. On a more positive note, the report did conclude in the end that both councils and the cultural sector were beginning to see a way forward from all this. 

In England, an ‘Arts Fundraising & Philanthropy Programme’ also backs such a new philosophy via key advocacy and support. It has been looking to transform fundraising across all cultural sectors for some time now. As a Sector Support Organisation (SSO), it's programme is funded by Arts Council England (ACE) and is led by a founding consortium that includes Opera North, University of Leeds, Cause4 and the Arts Marketing Association.
Stemming from this sort of partnership approach, several exemplars are increasingly starting to emerge. One such, now jointly funded by Department of Culture Media & Sport (DCMS), and the philanthropic Wolfson Foundation. From spring 2018, is a reboot of the Museums and Galleries Improvement Fund. Launched in England with £4 million now on offer, individual grants of up to £300,000 are available to improve exhibition spaces and increase accessibility. 

Given regional arts organisations are increasingly facing standstill funding from ACE, on top of often major cuts in local authority support, then is this type of auxiliary funding model the best way forward? Perhaps so, but a wider UK arts sector still needs to identify and energise these type of alternative sources as the arts still reportedly receive under 1% of all philanthropic giving here. Also, from this very small quota, it has been noted that nearly two thirds of it is given to our 50 largest arts & cultural organisations.
The slow evolution towards a heavier weighting of philanthropic US-style of funding is perhaps inevitable. Arguably, it is seen by many as a major way of augmenting the inevitable decline in national arts funding, as well as providing a way to engage more effectively with audiences, whilst building a broader base of financial support. However, the U.S. philanthropic model still needs to be considered within the wider context of its own public funding for the arts:

For example, in the U.S, public funding for the arts is available at both federal, state and local levels. At that national, federal level, the amount of money distributed in 2017 by the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) was $149.8 million approximately - or just .004% of the federal budget. More than 80% of this was distributed as grants and awards to organizations and individuals. Based on a US population of around 326 million, this is a per capita spend of just 46¢ - or 33 pence per person at today’s exchange rate.

By comparison, over the next four years until 2022 ACE is still committing to investing nationally across it's three key funding streams of: arts organisations (£409 million across 830 institutions); National Lottery funding (£97.3 million, including open-access funding); and strategic Arts Council Development Funds (£72.2 million). This average of £144.625 million per annum, when spread over an English population of 53.5 million, equates to a £2.70 spend per annum on the arts per capita. This doesn’t include the additional public funding of the arts coming from local authorities, and so it is argued, helps puts the England and UK arts funding models into better comparative perspective. 

In terms of imagining future public art funding and procurement models themselves, I would suggest old shared collaborative case studies like the 2004 PROJECT initiative run jointly by the Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment (CABE), Arts & Business (A&B) and ACE form an interesting case study to consider as a starting point. However, A&B has since merged with Business in the Community and CABE with Design Council, and so a revisioning and reality check is long overdue. 

The focus now will inevitably move away from a dependence on government-funded programmes, and more towards a wider range of funding partnerships. For example, these could range from research interests (like those of Arts and Humanities Research Board and NESTA) to the charitable sector (via socio-cultural programmes like those of Calouste Gulbenkian and Esmèe Fairbairn foundations).

Currently in England several new exemplar approaches to public art are already well advanced (such as Folkstone Triennial, Situations, Super Slow Way etc), although one could argue that these are more regional project based, and so not acting fully strategically. Of those movements with public art ambitions looking to advocate more nationally, there appears to be something of a power play developing. This vacuum is being driven by funding competition and arguably a lack of governance and advocacy on best practice from ACE. For example: the self-styled public art think tank ixia lost its NPO funded status from ACE in 2015, although it is currently revaluating itself and it's industry before making a renewed funding application and radical rebrand; In parallel a fledgling Public Art Network UK (PANUK) is looking to set up some form of independent membership association of public realm curators - also driven by feasibility grant application to ACE; Add to this an evolving 10-point plan coming out of the national Arts & Place Manifesto, being developed through a working group of the Place Alliance (itself a movement stemming out of the 2013 Farrell Review of Architecture and the Built Environment). The resulting dialogue and face-off between these three should be fascinating to say the least, and where ACE will position itself is anyone’s guess.

Irrespective of the outcomes of any organisational posturing over 'ownership' of any national public art strategy and direction in England, I would hazard a guess that either way, new collaborative procurement models like those being developed in Bloomberg Philanthropies Public Art Challenge and the DCMS / Wolfson Foundation Museums and Galleries Improvement Fund probably form the best funding platform to build a sustainable delivery and advocacy model going forward.

Tuesday 27 February 2018

70 Words From India






In 2018 the British Council is celebrating 70 years of working together with it’s partners in India. A wide programme of activities is planned to mark this anniversary, with an overarching aim of highlighting the positive cultural influences and exchanges between India and the UK during this period, and in future. The 70 Words from India project aims to highlight how the English language has evolved and advanced, with the inclusion of words of Indian origin.


70 Words From India’s aim of course, is to highlight how the English language has evolved and advanced with the inclusion of words of Indian origin. But, the use of English of course, is no longer just the preserve of the British and other major English-speaking countries, who use it as their lingua franca. In the September 2017 update to the Oxford English Dictionary, for example, 70 new Indian words were added to an already existing 900 entries, “identified as distinctive to Indian English“. These were drawn equally from: Telugu, Urdu, Tamil, Hindi and Gujarati. This is not a new phenomenon either. First compiled by Colonel Henry Yule and A.C Burnell, is the iconic dictionary Hobson-Jobson, which is the original lexicon from 1872, and remains a go-to source for colloquial, Anglo-Indian words and phrases.

Photo Credit: http://thedabbler.co.uk/2013/07/review-hobson-jobson-by-sir-henry-yule-a-c-burnell/
There is an ancient linguistic debt to India that English speakers, (and other cultures for that matter), have forgotten. This is owed to a common ancestry, going back thousands of years, to the original Proto-Indo-European language. However, it is the much more recent assimilation of language that has been exported to English, over the last few hundred years, that today still captures people’s imagination. There seems something far more poetic, within these often melodic words. Perhaps, this is due to the difference between English use, as a so-called ‘stress-timed’ language, as opposed to the more rhythmic, ‘syllable-timed’ ones.

Words of Indian origin, like: bazaar, curry, polo and yoga, are obvious ones to guess. But how many know of the true heritage of other evocative words, that sound so quintessentially British; Words like: balaclava, blighty, bungalow, chintz, cummerbund, gymkhana, hullabaloo and pyjamas? In modern times, familiar sounding, yet old-fashioned words are still re-appropriated: Whether it is British chef, Jamie Oliver, saying his food tastes “Pukka”; or Scottish comedian, Billy Connolly, saying everything is feeling “Tickety-Boo”. The words are reassuringly familiar, and continue to delight and trip off the tongue, but many of us have rather lost sight of their original cultural heritage, today. 

Language and linguistics specialists concede, that in English today, there is no longer any standard, Queen’s, or otherwise. The BBC long-ago relaxed attitudes to policing this, and now rightly celebrate regional dialect and diverse cultural accent. The rapid expansion of the new global workforce and travellers, as well as export of emerging business, technology and media, to and from countries like India, continues to influence a cultural shift. Notwithstanding the need to communicate, in our increased global business and media, is also an increasing requirement for people to be trained in a common language. English remains in pole position for this, a fact reinforced in India, with it having the world's second-largest English-speaking population of over 125 million speakers, from 12% of its population. With less than half that, the population of Britain’s influence on its own mother tongue is now pro-rata and will evolve organically and eclectically. With near 300 million English speakers in the United States as well, then there inevitably will be an increased adaptation of English language use, in terms of shared linguistic, and socio-cultural contexts. Indeed, with a reported 300-plus different languages now being spoken in British schools alone, this hybridisation of our common shared languages will continue exponentially, and should rightly, be celebrated.