A long time in the planning

meffan-model-1

It may be only a 50th of the actual size but this is the best planning tool I’ve used yet!

Having two solo shows booked for 2014, I thought I really needed to make myself a plan to guide my work and preparations.  However, the two dimensional methods I’d used before just weren’t up to the job, particularly for the Meffan Gallery show which has a flexible panel system for hanging work.  So, it may have been my three-dimensional design training or perhaps my childhood love of doll’s houses that prompted me to find some foamboard offcuts, some dressmaking pins and a calculator to translate a 2D floor plan into a proper 3D model.  I can’t lie – it was fun and I did spend longer than strictly necessary viewing it from all angles at eye level. Even made a wee person too.

Once I’d printed images of the potential works to scale it was a doddle to hang and rehang, play one piece off against another and generally visualise the exhibition as a whole. It was also obvious where the gaps might be and where I should focus my efforts with new work – it’s so easy to get carried away with exciting new experiments but I also have to make sure I have work to put on these walls.

meffan-model-2

There’s no substitute for seeing the actual exhibition space if it’s possible, so I spent an afternoon at Dawyck Botanic Garden, measuring the gallery and meeting the lovely staff.  They’d just finished hanging the current show, Remarkable Trees, which is on until the end of March.  My show ‘Figured wood’ follows it, opening on the 5th April.

dawyk-6

Now I have two little scale models to reassure me when I think I don’t have enough work, don’t know what I’m going to do, think it’ll all go wrong – those creative insecurities don’t ever go away but some practical planning really helps me to ignore them!

share:

Make yourself @ home

My newest challenge has been consuming all my time lately, hence the long absence from my blog.  I’ve ventured into the realms of curating for the ‘Make yourself @ home’ exhibition which will be part of the St Margaret’s House Open week programme of exhibitions, open studios, workshops and events, launching on Friday 11th October. 

home-poster-final

The idea has been brewing for quite some time and is largely based on my experience of running my own shows, combined with my years working to develop creative approaches to community engagement, the rationale being:

  • The conventional €˜white cube€™ art gallery environment can sometimes be intimidating to those not used to it
  • People want to buy art but aren€™t always sure how to go about it or find it hard to imagine in their homes
  • Potential buyers often like to know more about the artist as well as the work – we need ways to bring artists/makers and buyers together
  • Create an environment which suggests the domestic, which makes visitors feel comfortable and €˜@home€™
  • Set the scene with furniture, props, lighting and sound throughout the gallery, evoking different parts of the home €“ e.g. a bed you can lie on to view a digital gallery projected on the wall, a sofa to sit on with a tv to show artists€™ and makers€™ images, a dining table where you can sit on handmade chairs, displaying ceramics, textiles etc., a desk with PC to view artist/makers websites, displaying handmade books, shelves etc.
  • It€™s not the intention to create a €˜showhome€™ in the gallery, more to allow participants to show their work in an environment that hints of home but celebrates the original and the handmade
  • Be open and clear about selling and buying, make it easy for visitors to buy, easy for artists/makers to connect with potential buyers
  • To enable visitors to relate to fine and applied arts as something they would have in their homes
  • To showcase the work of some of St Margaret’s House tenants and to hopefully sell some artwork to people who will love it.

So those were the ideals I set out with and I now have a selection of works from over 20 artists and makers to feature in the show.  I also have loan of a bed, a sofa and even the toilet, which I’m hoping will create some hilarity as visitors perch on the pan to admire the ‘view from the loo’!
 

 

share:

The gallery as temporary home

As I was putting away the last of my works from ‘Wood nude tree limb’ last night, it struck me that mounting your own exhibition has a lot in common with camping.  Don’t take me too literally on this – there were no barbeques or long walks to the toilet during our show, it’s just that the ‘temporaryness’ felt the same.

wall-layout 

With both it seems that what you need to do is find a space that you like, that you feel comfortable in, then you fill it with your things, spending ages arranging and rearranging till it feels just right. Then of course you invite people to come and enjoy it with you.

show-setup

I realise this isn’t the way everyone does camping but I like to have my camp in reasonable order so I know where to find the lighter or the teabags or the midge spray in a hurry.  And I think most campers would be fairly careful in choosing their site before they pitch their tent – as the saying goes, “Pitch in haste, regret at leisure up to your ankles in water in a force 9 gale”.  These were good choices thankfully, at Blinkbonny Wood East Lothian and Big Sands, Gairloch.

the-best-pitch

camp-setup

I used to be a puppeteer many moons ago and performing in a small touring company demands many similar skills and tasks too – meticulous planning and packing balanced by a willingness to embrace the unforseen, gamely problem solving when the sets won’t fit through the doorway for instance (despite being assured by the venue that they would!).  There’s a huge amount of effort that goes into setting up a touring show in a new venue, making sure that everything is where it should be onstage and that the audience sees what you intend them to see.  Perhaps this is where my attention to the little details such as labels being straight stems from.

There’s also the short periods of intense activity contrasting with the long periods of sitting around not doing much and possibly getting a bit bored.  All that transporting, building, lifting, fixing, cleaning, fiddling about, then it’s done and we can all have a glass of wine.

me-wine

I like to sit in the gallery during the period of the show because I enjoy meeting people and talking about the work.  Their feedback and comments help me reflect on my work – it’s a rather lonely business making art so it’s always interesting to me to hear other viewers thoughts.  When it’s quiet in the gallery it’s nice just to contemplate, to look at it critically from a greater distance than usual and in a different context or light.  I tend to generate lots of ideas for new work during these times and other artists I’ve spoken to agree that can be worth mounting a show for this reason alone.

Then the show has to come down and what has felt very much like home reverts back to being just a big empty echoey space.  The newly filled holes in the wall are like the yellowed patch of grass where the footprint of the tent has been – the stage is cleared, the pitch is clean.  One last check around to make sure there’s nothing left behind and it’s all in good order for the next traveller, then we’re off.

empty-gallery

share:

First look at the latest show

Last night’s preview was very busy despite the heat yesterday, giving the four of us a great buzz.  In the calm of the morning after I’ve taken a few panaramic photos to give an idea of how the whole show looks…

wntl-panarama-1-blog

wntl-panarama-2-smaller

wntl-panarama-3-smaller

 

share:

Hanging the Wood nude tree limb exhibition

Hanging an exhibition is a task not to be underestimated.  It’s never as straightforward as you imagine and there are decisions to be made which shouldn’t be rushed, since hanging a group show means finding the best way to do justice to everyone’s work and allowing the artworks to ‘speak’ to each other.  A curator’s job is a subtle and sophisticated one – I’m only just beginning to learn how much I have to learn!  I’ll be curating my first large group show in the autumn and very much hope to be ready for the challenge.

woodnudetreelimb_hanging

There are four of us showing in Wood nude tree limb and it’s been a long hot week with some very hard work but I’m pleased to day that (almost) everything is ready for our preview tonight.  Just a bit of cleaning and tidying to be done, a few admin jobs and trying to stay cool when you’re excited about the show and it’s 27 degrees outside!

woodnudetreelimb_hanging2

We spent most of last night placing Allan’s sculpture, which was much harder than I expected – in this view it’s not quite finished but we’re getting there.  The three dimensional work really brought the show together and made me smile when walked in to the gallery with fresh eyes after going back to the studio.

I’ll be sitting in the gallery during the week so I expect I’ll notice things that could be improved, both about my work and its presentation.  I love having this opportunity to reflect and review, perhaps it’s the nature of the creative mind always looking for a better way?

 

 

share:

Next exhibition – wood nude tree limb

woodnudetreelimb poster

There’s just a month to go before my next exhibition, a joint one with three other artists who share my fascination with natural form.  It’s at Art’s Complex and opens with a preview on Friday 12th July, then runs for just over a week.  The gallery is open to the public between 10am and 6pm.

Find out more at the exhibition blog»

 

share:

Refilling the creative bucket

I’ve come to realise that creativity for me is a never ending process of filling myself up to the point where it overflows – if I don’t keep filling up with new stuff, the flow slows to a trickle and eventually stops.  So I’ve learned to make time to seek out new things to inspire me, to devote energy into research as well as production.

A bit like this, though now I’ve drawn it I think perhaps there should be a hole in the side of the bucket for the ‘work’ to flow from, rather than it coming over the top…

creative bucketThe Creative Bucket (patent pending Tansy Lee Moir)

So I’ve been out and about, minus walking boots this time, a bit more smartly dressed for visiting galleries and all that.

I met up with a friend and first of all we visited the Peploe exhibition at Edinburgh’s Dean Gallery, properly known as the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art Two.  It was quite busy and I was not able to take any pictures of course, so you’ll have to take my word for it that the paintings were masterful, striking, elegant and colourful.  I loved the way the show documented the development of his work – moving through the rooms I was struck by how different the phases of his paintings were.

Across the road at the Gallery of Modern Art One, we saw ‘From death to death and other small tales’, a show of contemporary works which were in turns mysterious, thought provoking, puzzling, hilarious, irritating and wonderful – Ernesto Neto‘s work falls into the last category, with his sculpture evoking the internal structures of the body, ‘It happens when the body is anatomy of time’, 2000.  I sneaked a photo of this one though it sadly fails to capture the fragrance of all those spices at the base of each tube-like form.

sgma-neto

The following beautiful sunny day, eager for more, I headed over to the Royal Botanic Gardens Edinburgh with the family.

I love the John Hope building, with its confident, innovative, sustainable design and its welcoming, comfortable spaces.  It’s big and busy but it makes me feel at home straight away – I’m not sure what the architectural term would be but it seems to guide you round all its interesting nooks and crannies without ever making you feel like you’re lost.

teak-rgbe1

Upstairs, through the restaurant (where we may or may not have indulged in afternoon tea) is ‘Leafing through Scotland‘, described as “A celebration of the Year of Natural Scotland with a selection of books and objects from publishers across the country.”  In the display cases my daughters spotted both books and whisky which we have in our house too!

Finally, though it made no sense at all on the hottest day of the year so far, we toured the famous glasshouses… I don’t need to say anything more other than see these for yourself (with a few photos in my next post to persuade you) – fantastic!

share:

Solo show in 2014

tansy in hammock

So here I am in my native habitat nestled amongst the honeysuckle, rewarding myself with a nice cup of tea after some drawing and feeling very pleased to have been offered a solo show at the Meffan Gallery next year.

Angus council’s museum and art gallery is in the busy town of Forfar and it’s a lovely space to exhibit in.  I’m really excited about the opportunity to think big and have plenty of time to work towards the show, which will be October/November time 2014.

I’m just starting to research some possible drawing sites in the area so that I’ll be prepared to make the most of the late Autumn drawing season – it’s all getting a bit leafy now so I’ll be concentrating on studio work over the summer and waiting for the wind to blow in October to reveal some new trees to fall in love with!

share:

Buy Design Gallery

I had my first visit to the Buy Design Gallery today and what a wonderful place for anyone who appreciates wood, art, original design and fine craftsmanship.  It’s in some gorgeous borders countryside, next to the Harestanes Visitor Centre, near Jedburgh.  Owner Eoin Cox is a man who’s been making a difference in the world as well as making beautiful furniture – check out his website to see his work. He and his team also run woodworking courses at the gallery, encouraging you to have a go yourself too.

I dropped off some drawings and pastels today and I’m really excited to be working with the gallery – I think I’ll be getting to know the A68 a bit better from now on!

Crichton shattered 360

share: