ART SOCIETY OF TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO |
Conversation with the
Elders 4.
The Visual Arts and
Design in the Twenty First Century – Quo Vadis
The Art Society of
Trinidad and Tobago.
ASTT Headquaters,Corner of Jamaica Boulevard and St Vincent Avenue.
Federation Park,
Trinidad and Tobago.
Panelist.
Chel Lovelace –
Contemporary Artist.
Tomely Roberts –
Artist and Art Educator (Tobago).Lesley Ann-Noel – Industrial Designer and Coordinator , Visual Arts Unit – University of the West Indies.
Richard M Rawlins – Graphic Designer/Contemporary Artist.
"Sites of Construction: Exhibitions and the making of recent art history in Asia" marks one of the Archive’s most ambitious programmes to date, and is presented in collaboration with the Hong Kong Arts Centre. The symposium invites scholars and practitioners to frame a broader enquiry into this expanded role of exhibitions in the reception and historicization of art in Asia. Between 21 and 23 October, the symposium will be punctuated by keynote addresses by three of the world’s most influential critical thinkers: John Clark, Gao Shiming, and Irit Rogoff.”
Asia
Art Archive Sep 17 2013.
I write this post
budget and post the Conversation with Artists Series, hosted by the Trinidad
and Tobago Artists Society, Friday 13th 2013. There was a reputable
table of artists Richard Rawlins – Designer, Lesley Ann Noel – Industrial
Designer (also head of the Visual Arts Department, UWI), Che Lovelace – Visual
Artists, Rodell Warner – Visual Artists.
First I would like
to congratulate the Art Society of
Trinidad and Tobago for hosting of this series. One thing I noticed was the
camera - cool that it was being documented, would there be a publication? That
will be useful and dynamic in a space that is becoming less and less
intellectual within the visual terrain. Postmodernity has imposed a certain
morality in art and design that has opened up the notion that all art is good
art. When all art is art and there are
self-imposed titles of artists, master artists, luminaries, master designers
etc. in addition to these titles also being placed on the multitude of
designers that have cropped up in the Carnival feather bands, then we need to
reflect on the meanings of art and design for the contemporary era.
Postmodernity has clearly set a challenge for the intellectual and
philosophical moorings of what this means for us here.
ANTHONY PAYNE - Routing a length of wood. One extension of the Studio. |
“Increase Public Engagement with Public Stakeholders”
“Help Develop”
“There is the
construction of a gallery at Fort George”
“The Wider Audience”
“Trans National Experience”
“Bad Art”
“Globalization”
“We need to
encourage Criticism”
“Commissioned by the
City of Florida”
“Propelling Artists”
“I’m a Designer not
an Artist”
“Criticism of DCFA”
“Criticism of the
Trinidad and Tobago Artists Society”
These words come in
the wake of a budget presentation that has seen the arts almost co-opted into machinery
that will direct or dictate how and where it will go, time will tell. We have
been told that there is a cabinet note for a priority listing of seven items that the Minister of Culture, the
Honourable Dr. Lincoln Douglas and his 5 supporters in the Ministry will have
to negotiate for, which you’ll be able to find in the below chart –
INDEPENDENCE SQUARE - Creole Doubles |
THE MINISTRY OF ARTS
AND MULTICULTURALISM PROPOSAL FOR THE 2013 BUDGET PROPOSAL
http://artistscoalition.wordpress.com/
NUMBER
|
PROJECT
|
COST
|
PAGE
|
0.0
|
Rationale- 4 year projections
|
|
0
|
1.0
|
The National Arts Council
|
$50 m
|
2
|
2.0
|
The Heritage Warehouse
|
$34m
|
5
|
3.0
|
La Fantasie Home for Sector Groups/ Regularised
Sector subventions
|
$21m
|
8
|
4.0
|
Panyard Tenure Regularisation
|
$3 m
|
9
|
5.0
|
East Port of Spain Heritage Project
|
$4m
|
11
|
6.0
|
NAPA and SAPA forensics and redesign
|
$12m
|
14
|
7.0
|
Refurbishing the walkpath, railings &
façade of Queen’s Park Savannah
|
$.5 m
|
16
|
8.0
|
Redesign of 12 panyards to Schools-in Pan model
|
$6.5m
|
18
|
9.0
|
Fashion Industry Warehouse and Fashion Week
|
$8m
|
20
|
10.0
|
Completion of Little Carib Theatre& Salvage of
the Beryl Mc Bernie House
|
$2 m
|
22
|
11.0
|
Fund for local programming on CNMG
|
$10m
|
23
|
12.0
|
SUMMIT.org- connecting our genius diaspora
|
$5,166,000
|
26
|
13.0
|
Commission report on tertiary level cultural
education & create a Civics cultural module
|
$.5 m
|
29
|
14.0
|
Open 1 Secondary level Magnet School for the Arts
|
$.5m
|
31
|
15.0
|
Funding for Rights Collection organisations
|
$5m
|
33
|
16.0
|
National Theatre Strategy
|
$10 m
|
35
|
17.0
|
The Arts Legislative Agenda
|
|
38
|
18.0
|
Industry trained Cultural Attaches
|
$10m
|
39
|
19.0
|
Package of Carnival Interventions
|
$8m
|
41
|
20.0
|
World Chutney Competition and World Tour
|
$3m
|
43
|
21.0
|
Pan 7s
|
$1 m
|
44
|
22.0
|
National Cultural Theme Park
|
$3m
|
46
|
23.0
|
Music Incubation Project
|
$10 m
|
48
|
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
$202,166,000.
|
|
So out of these 23
items, there will be 7 items that will
be able to pull our cultural sector into the 21st Century.
As I listened to
what was said, there is a reality of the disappearance of the work of artists
from the imagination of a community, as well as a tenseness and laziness that
exists within the artists community.
As was mentioned at the meeting there
needs to be some kind of active participation and synergy within the artists’
community and with artists and their institutions. This will invariably lead to
an enhanced awareness of the role the arts can play in the development process.
“Increased Research
Activities”
2.0
– The Heritage Warehouse – this is being proposed as one way we can evolve to a
space where research and development can happen. Research and development should
also be ongoing at the DCFA; through critical analysis and publication of
institutional and collaborative projects. The Art Society will also have to
improve on their conceptualism of their projects, develop a philosophy and
stick with it.Read the beginning statement.
PIE HEIN EEK - Show Room or can we say gallery. |
“Increase Public Engagement with Stakeholders”
The
studio without walls is something that had been happening with the artist’s
studio, Studio 66 is a fine example of that. This is the future for art. A
studio practice that will see artists working in a socially driven multi-disciplinary
simulation that will allow them to engage many constructs, materials, systems
and dynamics. The trick here is a grounded philosophy.
“Help Develop”
One
of the panelists mentioned that he like being at the DCFA, because he can help
develop the programme. Artists need to be more involved. Historically engaging
with the institutions in Trinidad and Tobago is problematic, the institutions
needs to mature. I remember well, Chris Cozier, explaining the flaws of the
Oval Mural Project in an open email to the Artists Society, they refused to
listen or even attempt to adjust the project, that is the arrogance that
dissuades participation.
“There is the
construction of a gallery at Fort George”
Tomley
Roberts, of Tobago mentioned that through their activism (Tobago Artists) they
have been able to get a gallery built on the Fort George site. Great, I will
like to think that they will get a state of the art gallery, proper wall
height, storage, office, store front, dinner (not optional).
“The Wider Audience”
Art
is still a One Percent audience; we need to develop the wider audience through
open projects which will eventually democratize art. Transnational experience normally happen at the expense of indigenous knowledge, one example of this, is in the work of artists who attempt feminist art, which reflex North American feminists constructs and disciplines, while there exist a wide body of work on Caribbean feminism.
Art is art, but there is art that doesn’t read right. When something doesn’t read right, it can be due to bad conceptualism, faulty production process and marketing. The Brian MacFarlane issue, represent something more in our society which is “ Ah Out of Timing” due to an absence of analysis and critical discourse, the artists become even more than what they are, capturing titles and awards which don’t really belong to them. The state believes that they are all that they aren’t and are given the trough. The art work will be considered bad, not because it is bad technically or he kah draw, or he is ah bad painter, (the Sugar Alloes affair), but because the work is unethical in the idea of originality. Artists are all thieves; it through a consistent work process the artist can normally find their original voice, all at the same time referencing other artist’s styles, which is imbued within the original. It’s this ability to make this line blurred or not is the skill of the artist.
http://blog.oup.com/2013/07/what-makes-art-bad-exposure-effect/
IMFORMAL HOUSING - This can be a source of design inspiration. |
As with “Trans National Experience”. But Globalization is Western.
Artists need to work on this one, especially the institutions, as we speak about our institutions they shun you.
“I was commissioned
by the City of Florida”
This
was compelling as I wanted to ask what that meant, what was the process like,
etc.NATIONAL MUSEUM TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO |
Interview with Piet
Hein Eek, Core 77
13.0 - Commission report on tertiary level cultural education & create a Civics cultural module - $.5 Million
The DCFA is 25 years of age. The future of Visual Arts will have to see the DCFA expanding their academic offering; at this point there is one Masters Programme and that is in a M.A. in Creative Design: Entrepreneurship, there should be a Masters in Fine Arts (and why not a PHD), especially in a society where painting is so beloved. They will need to expand their existing allocation of space to their student body, tools, set up an institutional frame work.
We
need to see young artists entering, gaining experience through studio emersion
– building, construction, painting, design, curatorial experience in the
gallery, project management, language and social skills (engagement in
community). Obviously there is a design push within the Visual Arts Department,
Should the Artists Society of Trinidad and Tobago question this, Yes!, at least
to find out its validity or not, have they?
DCFA’s success or failure will lie in their
institutional framework. That institutional framework should spell out the –
political, philosophical and ethical reasoning to their students and the wider artists’
community. At this point there exists a definite hierarchy of behaviour that has led the institution into
a narrow and limited agenda.
MEDULLA GALLERY |
The Art Society, will have to realize that their future will only happen if they become even more vigorous in their intentions for the artists community. They will have to align with other institutions and be critical of policy and behaviour that is damming to the artist’s communities. They will have to align with groups but at the same time be critical of the very groups; they will need to be independent. Why has the Art Society never really questioned why in 25 years there isn’t a Master’s Degree in the Visual Arts or a Ph.D in Visual Arts? At the Department of Creative and Festival Arts at UWI, there is a need for more PHDs. Why haven’t they registered their discontent for the art education or the creative education model in our schools nor had discussion on the proposed Magnet Schools for the Arts, 14.0 in the chart above.
Here
are some thoughts to consider.
1.
First the expansion
of the existing facilities, a more developed gallery, office and shop.
2.
Voice their opinion
on issues that affect art, start with the Pat Chu Foon Sculpture. Budget,
Ministry of Culture, Ministry of Planning etc
3.
Develop and produce
proper ethical, critical and beneficial projects, for both their community and
the society that we belong.
4.
Develop linkages,
with local and international organizations.
5.
Support artists.
6.
Make up their mind if
they want to be Sunday School organization or a international organization –
One example of an organization to emulate is the Toco Foundation. http://tocofoundation.org/
Both
the UWI/DCFA – Visual Arts Programme and the Art Society, suffer from the same
thing a historical quietness that needs our voices once they will accept us.
Conclusion.
The
future of art will evidently and eventually sit within the discourse of
national state agencies in charge of development, Ministry of Trade and
Industry, Ministry of Planning and Sustainability. With this in mind it will
mean that artists should be involved not only in the development of their own
studio practices but also in the development of projects that will challenge
the walls of the studio, gallery and state agencies while at the same time
seeking the wider audience. To make this operate in a developing society,
evolving, insecure with it status in the international market; will mean
activating projects, while in real time analyzing data, developing dialog
through symposiums, conferences and publications. The future of art will be in
a innovative space, dedicated to the investment, the development of ideas and
form, conceptualization and intellectualism, philosophy and aesthetics.
The
future of art will lie first and last, in the development of the artists.
Dean
Arlen