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A FINE LINE THE ARTS THE ARTS THE ART WORLD IS OFTEN ACCUSED OF
0 Comments | Sunday Herald, The, Apr 6, 2008 | by BARRY DIDCOCK
AHEAD of presenting the Turner Prize to Damien Hirst in 1995, musician Brian Eno made a speech in which he berated the art world for its failure to address the big issues of the day. Invoking geneticist Richard Dawkins as an example, he said that science was doing the job art should: firing the public imagination by starting important conversations. That these conversations often became full- on domestic rows was even better in Eno's eyes.
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As the days count down to the launch of Gi, the third Glasgow International Festival of Contemporary Art, it's worth recalling Eno's complaint. For those intending to view Gi's manifold attractions perhaps Jim Lambie's massive new show at the Gallery of Modern Art (GoMA); Catherine Yass's multi-screen installation High Wire at the CCA; or The Other Church, Wilhelm Sasnal's sensational film about murdered Polish student Angelina Kluk it might even make a useful yardstick against which to measure it all.
Fine by me, says festival director Francis McKee.
As far as he's concerned, the work which will be presented across the city's art galleries over the 18 days of Gi is highly relevant both to Glasgow and the wider world beyond. It contains ideas and it will start fires. Morever, art made by Glaswegian or Glasgow-based artists is necessarily infused with the spirit of the city and the invited guests such as Yass and Sasnal have been asked to made work which engages with some aspect of the place.
Using art as a mirror to view your country and your culture is "a very basic curatorial passion", McKee adds. "It's very exciting. To be able to say, 'Here are artists in the city, making work about the city and for the city, making work about you and about me' is an amazing thing." Yass's High Wire is a case in point. Filmed in July 2007 at the iconic Red Road ats, it shows an attempt by French tightrope-walker Didier Pasquette to walk between the buildings. Yass, who was nominated for the Turner Prize in 2002, has long been obsessed with notions of height, space, scale and perspective. But as well as seeing the dramatic possibilities of the lm, she was alive to the neatness of the metaphor: Pasquette becomes a sky walker symbolising the utopian ideal the Red Road ats were supposed to bring about.
YASS used five cameras, one perched on Pasquette's head. The Frenchman, who had previously set a world record when he walked across the river Thames, was to make the attempt on Saturday, July 21, but on the day, and 90 metres up, weather conditions were too bad. So he tried again on the Sunday, despite the vicious crosswind. Thirty metres out, however, he realised he was in danger of falling. He had no safety net. Unable to turn round, he had to reverse the way he came.
The vagaries of the Scottish summer weather meant the 2000 assembled onlookers were disappointed. He didn't cross and he didn't fall. But Pasquette's failure gave Yass's film an even sharper focus. Like the utopian dream itself, the sky walk had failed. The metaphor became even neater.
For Francis McKee, Yass's piece is an eloquent comment on the huge social, economic and architectural changes Glasgow has undergone over the last two decades changes that have resulted in a great deal of art being created in response. So while a modern history of Glasgow would feature the end of the shipyards, the Bruce Report, the experiments with modernist architecture, gang violence and sectarianism, a parallel narrative exists in the work of Ken Currie, Peter Howson, Roddy Buchanan, Toby Paterson and Martin Boyce.
In part, those changes explain why Glasgow has produced such an extraordinary crop of artists over the past two decades and why Glasgow School of Art graduates have dominated the Turner Prize and Beck's Futures shortlists. In that sense, McKee likens Glasgow's journey to the one Beijing is experiencing today.
"I visited Beijing in 1992 and everyone was still wearing blue boiler suits and cycling everywhere.
Now the city has been completely transformed and a way of life has vanished, just as in Glasgow heavy industry vanished almost overnight. It was quite a traumatic event but I think that's good for art. It then goes into that gap and thinks 'Where can we go next? What's happening here?'" The result has been a blossoming of artist-run workspaces and an emerging generation of young artists. The sense of excitement and vigour that surrounds contemporary Chinese art is palpable, so McKee has brought artists from Universal Studios in Beijing to exhibit at Glasgow School of Art under the eye of Beijing-based curator Pi Li. The aim is to open a "critical dialogue" between Glasgow and Beijing and, in truth, the cities do seem to have a lot to talk about. Can art become the Babel Fish that goes in the ear of the respective populations and translates it all? McKee certainly hopes so.
If Gi has a centrepiece it is Jim Lambie's GoMA show. Glasgow's contemporary artists have had a love-hate relationship with the gallery over the years due to disagreements with the exhibiting and purchasing policies of former Glasgow Museum and Art Galleries director Julian Spalding. But with Spalding's departure from the scene, there is a sense that the space is now opening up and fullling its potential as a platform for the best of Glasgow's artists. Lambie, for the record, has exhibited at Tate Britain and the Museum of Modern Art in New York, but this is his first solo show at GoMA and his biggest in Glasgow to date.
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