Monday, December 30, 2013

THE OLD YEAR REPORT - THE NEW YEAR LOOKING - THE INBOUND PROJECT



THE OLD YEAR'S REPORT.
THE INBOUND PROJECT,
FROM THE OUT OF BOUNDS PROJECT.
 
This year was an interesting year for work, at the beginning In January, I presented the Paint Installation Project, then engaged in a commission of a seat. Also the Sculptural Playground Project, reached a stage where we' are awaiting response from the powers that be in moving it forward in the way that I, the artist see such a project being unveiled in our society. At the year-end there was an  intensification of the actions by the community at the Orange Grove Savannah, Tacarigua against the Sport Company of Trinidad and Tobago's controversial proposal to transform the green space into a sporting complex. This has created an uproar and seems like it will be going to court.
 
I WOULD LIKE TO SPEAK ABOUT THE INBOUND PROJECT,
This came out of the Paint Installation Project and is the continuation of this work into another form of conversation.  A conversation with a community that can engage more deeply with the work or the intention of the work. So this August I was in New York where I met with several galleries, presenting them with the catalogue and holding discussions. 
 
Meeting and listening to the feedback, advice from people who sit within the centre of the art machine, was helpful, I sat there in a small galleries, in large galleries, medium sized and in a party for artists...


I was on the subway on the way to meetings almost every day, with my water bottle,
to Chelsea,
Lower Manhattan,
Harlem,
Brooklyn,
New Jersey.



man I love the subway, the other world, why do I want to be here in this space rather than at home?

WHAT IS WRONG WITH HOME?
THERE IS SOMETHING GOING ON HERE THAT ISN'T RIGHT.
THE ORGANIZATIONS, THE ARTISTS, THE STATE, THE DEPARTMENT OF CREATIVE AND FESTIVAL ARTS, THE ART SOCIETY, THE INSTITUTE OF ARCHITECTURE, THE  ASSOCIATION OF PLANNERS
All seem to be on something else other than the treatment of art or design. creativity is at risk, innovation stiff, loss of skills, loss of manners and respect for the work.
 
So it was nice to see that Chris Cozier was at Art Basel, nice to have met Sheena Rose at Sasha Dee's, nice to have met Nyugen Smith. There is a group out there making work.
 
But there is a group of artists here and thanks to them.
Thanks for the talks - Marlon Darbeau, Richard Rawlins, Sean Leonard, Alice  Yard, Studio 66, The Frame Shop, Nisha - Soft Box Studio, Y Gallery, Medulla, the Film Festival, the Bocas Lit Fest, Jazz on the Greens, Mungal Patasar, Clement Imbert, Birdsong, the University of West Indies Department of Creative and Festival Arts (I am critical of the DCFA, as they are the vanguard of skill development of the arts in Trinidad and Tobago and the wider Caribbean. They need to develop their facilities and get into the 21st Century needs for our artistic/cultural development)  and all the other groups and people that keep the information on the edge. 
 
 
What will it take?

 



IT WILL TAKE CONFIDENCE TO PRESENT WORK.
IT WILL TAKE COLLABORATION. IT WILL TAKE DEVELOPMENT. 

PEOPLE ARE WILLING.
A LOT OF WHAT HAPPENNED IN NEW YORK WAS BECAUSE OF TWO PEOPLE WHO WERE  WILLING. SASHA DEE AND NYUGEN SMITH.






 
 
WASHINGTON HEIGHTS.
UPPER MANHATTAN


THE GRINNELL - HERE THEY WERE PREPARING FOR A FILM



 
 
 
 
CHELSEA






SKOTO GALLERY

I MET SKOTO AGHAHOWA AND CARL HAZELWOOD AT SKOTO'S GALLERY IN CHELSEA. WE HAD A PROLIFIC CONVERSATION ABOUT ART IN TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO. HE ASKED ABOUT LEROY CLARKE, AND OTHER ARTISTS WITHIN THE CARIBBEAN.
 
 THE ARTIST WITH THE BIG HAIR IS FRED WILSON, WELL- RESPECTED CONCEPTUAL ARTIST. THIS KIND OF SPACE, WHERE ONE CAN MEET ARTISTS LIKE HIM IN PASSING, IS NEEDED, WANTING... A SOCIAL AND PROFESSIONAL SPACE









HARLEM
 
 





Add caption
 I MET SASHA, WE TOOK A BUS TO TARGET FRIDAY AT THE HARLEM STUDIO AND ENDED UP IN A NICE LOUNGE IN HARLEM WHERE WE HAD A FEW DRINKS, WE ENDED UP CHATTING WITH A DESIGNER, WHOSE PARTNER WAS INTO THEATER.
THEY WERE SO FORTHCOMING AND I GUESS WE WOULD HAVE BECOME FRIENDS. IN THIS SPACE THERE WHERE MUSICIANS WILLING TO PLAY, PASS A HAT AROUND.

I SPENT SOME TIME 7 FLOORS ABOVE MANHATTAN, AT THE SHERATON....









ONE OF THE ARTIST' DINNERS
ONE NIGHT WE HAD THE OPPORTUNITY TO SIT WITH A CARIBBEAN DIASPORA OF ARTISTS

 

 
 
 
THE ARTIST SPACE.
THE MAN OR YOUNG MAN (AT BACK) WAS VERY OFF PUTTING. NOT MUCH OF AN ARTISTS' SPACE, EH, I THOUGHT. 
AT LEAST HE MADE IT FEEL LIKE THAT.


I UNDERSTOOD A LOT CLEARER ABOUT THE NEW YORK SCENE. WHEN YOU WALK INTO SPACES, NOT EVERYONE WILL BE AS EMBRACING AS I MAY WANT THEM TO BE. THERE ARE MANY FACTORS THAT WILL ENGAGE PEOPLE; LIKE BEING IN THE SOCIAL SPACES. ACTUALLY BEING IN THE SPACE IS ONE OF THE BIG FACTORS.

I LEFT THE CATALOGUES ANYWAY.

 
ART


 



 
 
 
 
POSTERS


 
 
 

 
WHITE COLUMNS
  LOCATION - THE MEAT DISTRICT,
 CLOSED,
WHEN I PASSED.




THE ABOVE PICTURES SHOW THE NEIGHBOURHOOD WHERE WHITE COLUMNS IS SITUATED.



LOWER EAST MANHATTAN
 

 
 
HERE I MET THE S&J PROJECT (S). A SMALL YET ELOQUENT SPACE IN THE LOWER EAST SIDE OF MANHATTAN. IT WAS INTERESTING TO NOTED THE ADVICE I RECEIVED ON THE BENEFITS OF HAVING A SHOW IN A LARGER SPACE IN NEW JERSEY AND A SMALL SPACE IN MANHATTAN - HAVE THE SHOW IN MANHATTAN!







THE END



 
SITTING IN THE AIRPORT LOUNGE AWAITING OUR FLIGHT. REFLECTIONS ON THE TRIP, WHAT MAY OR MAY NOT COME OF IT. THE REALITY IS THAT I HAVE MADE CONTACT AND HAVE COMMITTED MYSELF TO SOMETHING... I WILL NEED TO SEE TO A FINALITY. THE REASONS FOR DOING IT...MAY BE THE SAME REASON I WANTED TO GO TO AN ART SCHOOL BEYOND MY BORDERS...A LACK OF SATISFACTION, A LONGING TO GROW, EVOLVE, BE CHALLENGED.
 
NOT THAT IT ISN'T HAPPENING HERE.
ITS HAPPENING HERE FOR DIFFERENT REASONS. ART HERE IS OUTSIDE THE REALM, OUT OF TOUCH, OUT OF SYNC, WITH THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL REALITY.
 
THE ENERGY SPENT ON ART IN TRINIDAD ADN TOBAGO TO GET TO THIS POSITION IS MUCH GREATER. IT IS TIRING.  IT TAKES NOT ONLY THE STUDIO, IT TAKES A WHOLE LOT OF OTHER CREATIVE TIME, ACTIVISM AND HARD WORK.
 
I HAVE ORDERED THE CANVASS ROLL, BUILT THE STRETCHERS AND PREPARED THE CONCEPTS.
 
SO THIS NEW YEAR, MY ART WILL BE MORE TO THE SPACE; MAYBE A LITTLE MORE ENGAGING. SO I AM BRACING FORTHE CHALLENGE... OF THE HUMAN FORM...

HAPPY NEW YEAR...

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

TALES OF THE UNWAGED ARTIST - DESIGN THEORY ITS IMPLICATIONS FROM WITHIN THE PROFESSIONAL CLASS IN THE INEVITABLE DEATH OF BEAUTY & THE SCULPTURAL PLAYGROUND PROJECT IN THE RESURRECTION OF DESIRE.







The Sculptural Playground Project -
It is hoped that we will be able to install this prototype project on the Orange Grove Savannah, Tacraigua. This project will also highlight; most importantly, how we can design within the memory of space. 

 
TALES OF THE UNWAGED ARTIST :
 DESIGN THEORY ITS IMPLICATIONS FROM WITHIN THE PROFESSIONAL CLASS IN THE INEVITABLE DEATH OF BEAUTY & THE SCULPTURAL PLAYGROUND PROJECT IN THE RESURRECTION OF DESIRE.

 

It’s been some days since the community meeting at the Charis Christian Centre, where the Save the Savannah group in collaboration with the Lloyd Best Institute; held community session, where the main parties where invited to present their thoughts on the proposed development by the Ministry of Sport, for the Eddie Hart Grounds, Orange Grove Savannah, Tacarigua. It was well attended, as people emotions where stirred, this proposal came close to their emotional centre, distressing their memory of space, economics and social life.

THE PROPOSED DESIGN FOR THE ORANGE GROVE SAVANNAH,
TACARIGUA.
 
 
The implication is the development of the three major projects on 39 acres of land.

1.    An international standard football field, East grounds, with stadium lighting.

2.    An athletics track on the east grounds, with lighting.

3.    A 900 hundred seat covered pavilion – with changing facilities for players, public toilets and concessionaire spaces.

4.    An indoor sporting facility that will contain

a.    25m swimming pool

b.    Open gymnasium area.

c.    Aerobics and Spin Class Area.

d.    Boxing and Martial arts area.

e.    Multi-purpose Court.

f.     Squash Area.

g.    Administrative Offices.

h.   Change Room, Shower and Toilet Facilities.

5.    An international Standard Cricket field on the West Grounds with stadium lights.

6.    A dedicated jogging path on the East grounds with lighting

7.    Two small goal football courts with lighting.

8.    A children play park with equipment.

THE SPACE IS A 39 ACRES SPACE.

 
The politics of design; it’s implications on the social and political direction of communities, can be investigated a little more intimately in this scenario. How it can enforce community or in this event create an emotional reaction negative to the design, due to missing elements –

a.    Lack of communication –

1.    By the designer of the project

2.    By the principal architects in the development of the project.

b.    A lack of community to own a space in real terms.

c.    The lack of empathy – both in design and in policy development.

d.    A lack of innovation.

 

 
A SOUTH  WEST VIEW

 

A : THE LACK OF COMMUNICATION.

Was highlighted in how the project was implied into the community. It came in the night, silent, in whispers, low voices amongst friends, one word whispered in an ear, another word whispered to the other ear; words spread, becoming louder. People gathered, mobilized to meet the authorities. As usual there are two sides and the rim; to a story, one group supporting the project is The Eddie Hart Group for Football; a major group in the community another against it – the Save the Savannah Group, is the conglomeration of civil and sporting groups in the community. There was a meeting and I had the opportunity to sit in that meeting; witnessing the conversation first hand. The lack of proper consultation or the alleged lack of proper consultation didn’t help the design. People were incensed at the development. Not one person saw that the project was badly designed. There was a misconnection in how design as an ethical process can affect development within communities.

 
GOOGLE VIEW OF THE SPACE -
One thing to note Is how congested the space is already. With the development that little green area will be totally covered. This is what our present architects proposed, they don't have a problem imposing that type of design on the people.

The two main and constant arguments, are: development and progress; this must be made and done on behalf of development and progress, so states the Sport Company of Trinidad and Tobago.

The other argument is the protection and preservation of the existing green space; keeping in tack memory, tradition of the present space, there is the support for soft development, through the enhancing of the existing facilities.

The question banefully in the open is; can development and progress of the state; preservation and tradition of a community space be merged, I will say yes. The equation that wasn’t done was how much development cans one space, 39 acres take before design becomes totalitarian, messy and dysfunctional.
 

 
A TERRY SMITH RENDITION
OF THE SCULPTURAL PLAYGROUND PROJECT.
I'M CONFIDENT THAT WE CAN PROVE THAT WE CAN DESIGN AND DEVELOP WITH COMMUNITY IN MIND. IT IS HOPED THAT THIS PROTOTYPE PROJECT WILL BRING TO THE TABLE A NEW DISPENSATION. ONCE THE PROCESS IS DONE RIGHT.

Let’s speak on behalf of design.

The architects of the project spoke in-adequately, in defense of their design, through their presentation, their language; the project came off as an individual pursuit to appease their client mandate the Sport Company, excluding the end users; the people of the community and the aura of the space, they adopted the new wave language – sustainability, green theology, urban bling; it’s the language of the young hip and old bureaucratic and technocratic designer. Get the contract, churn out the design, design complacency, design individualism found especially in this new Nuevo riche class of professionals.

ONE OTHER VIEW OF THE PLAY SPACE THAT WILL TAKE INTO CONSIDERATION BODY TYPES.
 

Design communication is important in how the client and the end user’s read and embraces the design, most are skeptical of art and design; one of the reasons cultural studies and curatorial studies was developed; to bridge the gaps. It is important that the artists and designer pay particular attention to this; in a country where design masculinity is a proffered stance. Designing masculine is enforced; it is physical, hard, emotionless, stoic, imperial, capitalist, violent and corrupted. Did the designers in their proposal mention the complex and fragile nature of the space, that the space won’t be able to hold much development without it becoming compromised, as a lung within the community, as a social space, dispersing some of the design elsewhere. If they did this on behalf of the ethical approach to design we would not be here. But in the “Eating ah Food” our designers sell out to just the production of a design, not the art of design.

 
RICK LOWE - PROJECT ROW HOUSE PROJECT

THE SOCIAL: social design, the communal approach has reached; designers are speaking not to the community but along with the community, with the environment, geography, language, the culture. Building aren’t as imposing, they sit light onto the space, whispering at you rather than yelling, they are inviting nature to be part of the structure, allowing space to be democratic, social, vibrant and relevant to the senses of the people, to the memory of the people.

THE SCULPTURAL PLAYGROUND PROJECT -
PROPOSED FOR THE ORANGE GROVE SAVANNAH

 

INNOVATION: The new social design has brought on new innovations, new ways of presenting design based on the theology of a society bending under the pressure of an out of control neo-capital industrial hierarchy that have placed both the environment and the social fabric at risk. There has been innovation in design from the Barefoot College, The Project Row House, the Colombian experiment, The Phoenix Waste Facility Project. They have all presented in their way how the new social designer can interrogate space in an innovative and progressive manner, challenging the old patriarchal designer.

THE PHOENIX WASTE FACILITY PROJECT

 

ECONOMICS: can design, its construction and presentation; be innovative, progressive and can come in at cost, avoiding future NAPPA’s, can HDC housing projects be liberal in the way they are presented, or how they operate, can a bridge, interchange (Curepe or the Churchill Roosevelt Highway) stand in our imagination, a beacon of inspiration for development of a people, a region, the international community. Can innovative, progressive design be part of the everyday landscape in Trinidad and Tobago, from within the state? At this point NO!, it can’t, but progressive design is happening around us in very invisible moments, soft power, in little corners of communities; little hands erecting living accommodations, vending stalls, erecting them in the national and regional space, all being done in separate, co-evolving desire for beauty to be part of their bodies. These projects are being done by notable designers, naiveté and crafts people. Internationally people have intervened in spaces where they have created indigenous models of building to get there private projects done. Some that come to mind are:

 

1.    the Project Row House: by artist Rick Low, http://projectrowhouses.org/architecture/extra-small-house/
 
 

2.    The Barefoot College: Bunker Roy - http://www.barefootcollege.org/barefoot-approach/campus-life/locations/ ,
 
 

3.    The Phoenix Waste Facility Project: by designers Linnea Glatt and Michael Singer http://www.icisnyu.org/assets/documents/Singer_public_art.pdf 
 
 

 

These projects have proven in a multitude of language and situations that radical innovation is alive; all they need is commitment from people, the artist-designer, the state, the corporate bodies and the community to believe that they need the best; understand art-design and the process that makes good art and design function proper for them.

 

WHO BRINGS GOOD ART-DESIGN TO THE COMMUNITY: “How Toronto planners ensure mediocrity”     http://www.thestar.com/life/homes/2013/10/18/how_toronto_planners_ensure_mediocrity.html#

In this article we see a finger being pointed at the planners, in the writer’s view the Toronto skyline has become stylized into a banality of glass. I’m interested to ask, who interested in defending the aesthetics of our space; Trinidad and Tobago, Town and Country, the Planners Association, The Trinidad and Tobago Institute of Architects -    http://ttplanners.org/pages/about_us/about_us.html , Trinidad and Tobago Institute of Architecture -  In their Mission statements there are words like  excellence and ethics, but when I look out the window something goes wrong, when we want to “Eat ah Food” something horribly happens to design. So the question is who will bring to our communities ethical design.  How can we present projects that will enhance life in communities? This is something that we need to work at in a serious way. One look at our community centres, our schools, offices, our cities and our homes, I see a lack of commitment to speak on behalf of progressive innovative design on behalf of the end users. This can’t be a one off but a constant dialog.
 
OVERVIEW OF THE ORANGE GROVE SAVANNAH - WHICH WAS SAID BEFORE WILL TOTALLY OBLITERATE THE GREEN SPACE.
 

 

CONCLUSION: art and design is a complex social phenomenon of politics, the social, class, art, philosophy, economics, and dear I say it again the politics of “Eating Ah Food”; artists and designers both compromise through a certain amount of editing of work to suit all parties, the artist, the designer lives within the earth, give to Rome what is due to Rome; yet at the same time protecting the integrity of design, the art. Accomplishing this, we need to take on seriously the act of enlightenment from organizations;  into the language of space; the desirous nature of aesthetics, we must thrust seriously into the hearts of the state, the elite class and community; the imagination propriety of art and design through conferences, symposiums and publications. All this must be done in collaboration with all the stake holders, the architects, the planners, the artists, UWI, UTT, Chamber of Commerce, Chamber of Industry, Artists Coalition of Trinidad and Tobago, Trinidad and Tobago Service Industry, The Trinidad and Tobago Artist Society etc.   

Design in Trinidad and Tobago, have gotten caught up in the cross roads of post modernity, post colonialism, a deficiency in art-design education, a corrupted state and political practice and class inertia that has sent design on a tail spin unleashing a dialog and a practice that has gotten corrupted, presenting a lack of self-esteem or an arrogance from within the professional class, violating our communities. The Orange Grove Savannah and the situation there could have been avoided; at first the designer of past and present had positioned art-design as a forum of philosophy; rather than a technical forum for the political and elite class. We need to infuse passion, culture, memory and mannerism back into design…into art…into people, in people not class lies the inherent power to revolutionize how art, design will ennoble the political and the social. This is where the Sculptural Playground Projects sits.

 

“Instead we should argue for a culture of design informed by archeology and anthropology, one that recognises its embedded intelligence, its philosophical and radically propositional nature. Even - or perhaps especially - when it's something as seemingly debased as a Hot Dog Stuffed Crust Pizza.”

Sam Jacob is a director of architecture practice FAT, professor of architecture at University of Illinois Chicago and director of Night School at the Architectural Association School of Architecture, as well as editing www.strangeharvest.com.

THE SCULPTURAL PLAYGROUND PROJECT -
WILL BE BUILT HERE LOCALLY, WITH THE INTENTION OF SEEKING OUT INFORMATION THAT CAN LEAD TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF A DESIGN SPACE WHERE WE CAN IN A COLLABORATIVE EFFORT BETWEEN CRAFTS PEOPLE AND DESIGNERS, RESEARCH ENGINEERS AT UNIVERSITY OF WEST INDIES DEVELOP CORE DESIGN, SCULPTURES.
 

The other position.

 How communities can truly own their space (other than cutting grass and picking up paper) will mean a proper articulation of how they engage with their space. Communities will need to be proactive rather than reactive within their gap. Art-Design can help empower the process of owning a space. It will be interesting to see if the Save the Savannah Group wants to protect “The Space”, other than the activist position of protecting just “The Space”; which is an important act in-itself. They will need to engage the space in a concentrated effort of protectionist design; this will need communities to engage in projects of re-designing space, into “Their Space”, other than the “The Space”.

 

The Sculptural Playground Project.
 
THE SCULPTURAL PLAYGROUND PROJECT -
WILL ALSO PRESENT A MODEL IN HOW LOCAL GROUPS CAN OWN THEIR SPACE.
ONCE THEY UNDERSTAND THE PROCESS, THEMSELVES.
 

How can this resurrect desire in the heart of communities? In a presentation; I was told why did I go on and on about the development aspects of the playground. They told me that I should focus on the elements of the project that will capture the imagination of the funders; which is play and children. I have always understood that, from a strategic position, the children become a selling point; my rebuttal; In a country where we lose moments of clarity, by only focusing intently on one part of the discussion; the children, without including the others; incubator industry, skill development etc., is part of the problem of development in Trinidad and Tobago. We do not sit and have specific conversations about the things we want to do. This is encouraged by all involved in creative projects. Let’s get the money and we will broaden the conversation later, which really never happens. It is hoped that we will be able to include      

 

Dean Arlen

31 October 2013