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Showing posts with label anselm kiefer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anselm kiefer. Show all posts

Friday, 12 June 2015

Anselm Kiefer Artist Rooms Exhibition: Engage Workshop

Cutting and Sticking=Happiness!

The Anselm Kiefer exhibition has finished at Tullie House after a four month run. I've been involved in quite a few of the engagement projects around this exhibition and feel like it's just about all I've blogged about for a while! As well as being an excellent exhibition I've really enjoyed the engagement work, working with different groups on a range of activities form organising family friendly activities to working on an audio visual installation with students from James Rennie School and Beaumont College. My last activity was a short talk and workshop with Engage, which is the National Association for Gallery Education. This was a really nice way to finish up the project as the group were very interesting and interested!

We all love cutting and sticking

Making envelopes

Making folded Square books

I began by giving a talk about the Skyground project and then I ran a shortened version of the Mixed Media Sketchbooks session that I ran for Secondary school students as part of the engagement programme for this exhibition. I enjoy running this workshop as it is very accessible, the basic processes are so simple that even people a bit unsure about doing creative things are happy to get stuck in but it can also be expanded to create really interesting artworks. We focused on two main activities, envelope sketchbooks and folded square sketchbooks.

Joining together the envelopes

How to fold the squares

More envelopes

Most of the workshop was spent chatting with the participants, talking about how to adapt the activities for different audiences and projects. For example, the envelope sketchbooks are good for trips as they can be made of papers collected on the trip and can also be used to store small mementoes, such as tickets. I was a little bit stressed at the start of the session as Mark Newport (sound and digital artist) and I were putting up the Skyground installation (or rather the weather was preventing us) but it actually ended up being a good session with lots of ideas exchanged and a positive, productive atmosphere. By the end of the session everyone had a sketchbook to take home and, hopefully, had had a good time.

Wednesday, 3 June 2015

Skyground: Anselm Kiefer Artists Rooms Installation

Skyground: Installation in Tullie House garden
Interpretation panel

This week another of the big projects I've been working on has reached completion. I wrote a little bit about the project a while back and thought now would be a good time to share the completed work. The project was run by Prism Arts and commissioned by Tullie House as part of their Anselm Kiefer Artists Rooms exhibition. Myself and sound and digital artist Mark Newport worked with students from James Rennie School and Beaumont College in Carlisle to create an audio visual installation in the grounds of Tullie House inspired by Kiefer's work. The work consist of three fabric banners, two of which contain LEDs and one which when triggered creates a soundscape.

Tea bag tie dye

Tea bag tie dye

Tea bag tie dye

Having started out with paper collage, frottage and pattern making on paper we moved onto working with fabrics. Just as we had prepared our papers before collaging them we also prepared our fabrics, this meant having a go at tie dye using tea bags! I'd never done this before but as one of the activities the students had really engaged with had been using tea bags to prepare paper I thought it would be an interesting experiment. One of the themes we'd been looking at was landscape and environment so it was important to use natural materials like cotton and silk.

Tea bag tie dye

I prepared the fabrics by mordanting them with salt and vinegar to help the colours from the tea bags 'stick' to the fibres. I did this at home as there was a lot of fabric to prepare and it's quite a boring process, I wanted the students to get stuck into the interesting bits. To make the tie dye patterns we tied different types of tea bags (fruit and 'normal' tea) into the fabric. We then put them in buckets of hot water and allowed them to soak for most of the day. This meant that I went home with lots of tea sodden fabric but it did smell delicious!

Tea bag tie dye

Tea bag tie dye

Tea bag tie dye

This process worked really well, although the students all thought I was a bit crazy. The tie dye created beautiful, subtle patterns and it was really interesting seeing how the two different fibres (cotton and silk) reacted differently to the dye.

Printing with our string print blocks

Printing with our string print blocks

Printing with our string print blocks

To embellish the fabrics we'd prepared we used the string print blocks we'd made, leaves and stitch to make patterns based on the work we'd done on paper. The patterns we made were inspired by the different wave shapes different sounds make, as demonstrated by Mark, and by patterns on Roman coins and artefacts which again tied the piece back to the landscape and the site of the installation.

Leaf print

Printing with white

Leaf prints

As well as the fabric pieces we also worked on circles of embossing foil to create the sensors to trigger the sounds and create the soundscape in the finished piece. We used knitting needles to transfer the designs we'd developed on paper onto the foil. Some of the circles the students created are beautiful objects in their own right.

Embossed foil sensor

Embossed foil sensor: Detail

Once the students had made their sensors and prints and embellished them with stitch we had a collection of small pieces ready to be made into complete hangings. Similarly, Mark had a collection of sounds made by the students ready to be collated into a soundscape.

Embellishing with stitch

Embellishing with stitch

Embellishing with stitch

Because no one has really done a project like this before we encountered quite a lot of technical issues along the way, not least because the work has to hang outside so needs to be Cumbrian weather proof. It took Mark and I a lot of time to put the work together and get everything working, problem solving as we went along. We have used a lot of insulating tape!

We housed the electric in Tupperware!

Connecting everything up

LEDs sewn in

The installation consists of three fabric banners, composed of the prints and fabrics the students made and the embossed foil sensors. There are two smaller banners which hang in front of the larger banner. The sensors in the smaller banners activate a series of LED lights when triggered and the sensors in the big piece activate different sounds, creating a soundscape. Sometimes the sensors are triggered by the wind or the fabric folding in on itself which adds another element to the work. The sensors are connected to the electronics using conductive thread, I really enjoyed working with this as it is a lovely material to work with and I like the challenge of making sure the circuits work but also look good and fit with the aesthetics of the piece. I used the drawings of the students to create the patterns for the circuits.

Installation view

Small banner

Small banner: Detail

Despite our best efforts we were delayed installing the piece because of the weather. We had hoped that at the end of May,beginning of June the worst we'd have to deal with was a bit of drizzle but instead we got torrential downpours and strong, gusty winds. Luckily, on the day of the launch, despite it being very cold, the rain did hold off until after the event. We're hoping to have the work up until September but given what the weather has thrown at us so far that may not happen!

Small banner: Detail

Large banner: Detail

Triggering the soundscape

The launch was a really good event, the students came down from James Rennie and there were people from Tullie House, Prism Arts and The Heathlands Project there, probably about 40 people all together. The response to the work was very positive and even better was the response of the students who had been involved, they were really proud of their work and wanted to shoe it off and tell people about it.

Small banner LEDs: Detail

Small banner: Detail

This was a really interesting project to work on and demonstrated the importance of having time to develop relationships with the people you're working with. The first few weeks were quite difficult, we were dealing with a difficult subject matter (Kiefer's work is not the most easily accessible) and the students struggled to engage with some of the concepts. After about three weeks (so three sessions) the students really started to open up, they were much more responsive to what we were doing and more willing to contribute their thoughts and opinions.

Sensor: Detail

Sensor: Detail

I believe this was partly because they'd had time to get used to the subject and partly because they'd had time to get used to and trust Mark and I. I also think that the practical work we did with them from the start really helped because whenever we were doing something the students seemed to find it easier to communicate their thoughts and ideas. I'm a big believer in thinking through making and I think our experiences with this group support this idea.

I've learnt a lot from this project and am looking forward to doing more work combining fabric and sound, I think the two work together well and can be used to create meaningful and personal site specific installations.

Thursday, 5 March 2015

Sketchbook Making Workshop for Tullie House's Anselm Kiefer Exhibition

Making an envelope sketchbook

Another day another workshop, another workshop connected to Tullie House's current Anselm Kiefer exhibition. It really is a fantastic exhibition and I'm really pleased to be involved in so many of the engagement projects. I find Kiefer's work very inspiring and am intrigued by a lot of his ideas and the issues he addresses so it's great to be able to share that interest and explore it with other people. Today I was working with secondary school students on a mixed media sketchbook making session.

Two of my sample accordion sketchbooks

One of my sample envelope sketchbooks

This workshop, like the one I ran for Art Educators North West and the session I ran before Christmas, focused on using reclaimed and recycled papers to make interesting sketchbooks. Kiefer has made books throughout his career and also uses the book as a motif in his work. I like the idea of a book as a container (of stories, thoughts, memories, ideas, information and so on) which is one of the reasons I designed the workshop around books. Also, sketchbooks are always useful and are very personal items, a handmade sketchbook even more so.

Making envelopes

Preparing and selecting papers and making envelopes

During the workshop we focused on two types of sketchbook, envelope sketchbooks and accordion sketchbooks. Both are quite simple and relatively easy to master but they have a great deal of potential in terms of personalisation and development. Both can also be transformed into 3D pieces and I think would be really interesting avenue to explore. The use of reclaimed and recycled materials references Kiefer's multi media approach but also allows for the use of materials that are personal or have a meaning in themselves to be used, such as old exhibition guides or old letters.

Mixing different papers

Getting stuck in

The students were very enthusiastic and worked really hard all session, they got really involved in the process which was great and they came up with some great ideas and created some lovely sketchbooks. Almost all the students chose to make envelope books, which I was quite surprised about as I expected the accordion books to be more popular. One of the nice things about a sketchbook making session is that at the end the students all had a book to take away with them and work into as they were spending the afternoon in the gallery.

Some of the finished sketchbooks

Finished envelope sketchbook

A selection of finished sketchbooks

I think this was a very successful workshop as it allowed plenty of room for individual expression but was also accessible to a wide range of abilities. Having a useful and beautiful finished product was also a positive. I also think another reason it worked well was because the students could easily see ways to develop the ideas and use them in their own work. It was also a lot of fun!