a-n awards over £20,000 in artists’ bursaries

Twenty-five artists are to gain professional development support through a-n’s artists’ Re:view bursaries. Awarded in March, the bursaries range in value from £310-£1000, from a total fund of £21,700. They are specifically designed to support artists’ self-determined critical and artistic development.

Claire Weetman has been awarded one of these bursaries to enable her to develop her skills to produce digital interactive works that she developed proposals for during her 2012 residency to Shanghai.  She will work with Salford University and internationally recognised artists to develop her work both technically and with critical support.

Writing last year about the Arts Council England cuts to small-scale, practice-centred organisations, Dany Louise said: ‘Disinvestment will impact considerably on the scope of opportunity for artists, impacting adversely on their career development and livelihoods and increasing competition for the professional development opportunities that remain.”

a-n’s research has revealed that artists’ practices and livelihoods have indeed been badly affected, including through reductions in levels of paid work on offer and increased charges and costs being passed onto artists.

Set within a professional development programme that also includes seminars, Go and see bursaries, AIRTIME networking events and online resources, the Re:view bursaries are exclusive to a-n’s Artist + AIR membership. It is hoped they will play their part in providing artists with much-needed finance for self-directed critique and advice, assisting more artists to move their practice forward.

All artists with a-n Artist+AIR membership were eligible to apply for a share of the £21,700 fund, and from 56 applications received, the following were successful: Judith Alder (Sussex), Sovay Berriman (London), Charlie Carter (Hampshire), Amelia Crouch (Leeds), Sophie Cullinan (East Midlands), Susan Diab (Brighton), Susan Francis (Salisbury), FrenchMottershead-(London), Penny Hallas (Powys), Anton Hecht (Newcastle), Matthew Krishanu (London), Sally Lemsford (East Midlands), Jean McEwan (Keighley), Steve Messam (Cumbria, Elizabeth Murton (London), Julia O’Connell (Coventry), Kate Paxman (Torbay), Chantal Powell (London) Phiona Richards (Northampton), Alexis Zelda Stevens (London), Joe Stevens (Bridport), Clare Thornton (Bristol), Alana Tyson (Wales) and Claire Weetman (St Helens).

The practices of the successful artists range from painting, print and photography to digital art, dance, design and sound, many with collaborative working integral.

Anonymous Drawings / Anonyme Zeichner

I’ve got a drawing being exhibited in this exhibition in Berlin, Germany, but as it’s all anonymous I can’t tell you which one is mine, so I thought I’d share the ideas behind the exhibition along with some of the works from the online gallery that caught my eye.
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Here’s the link to the online gallery where you can browse and buy drawings for a set price of €150.  http://www.anonyme-zeichner.de/1/online-gallery-shop/
Or if you’re in Berlin, then the show is on until 20 April at Kunstverein Tiergarten | Galerie Nord
 
Turmstrasse 75, 10551 Berlin, Germany
opening hours: Sunday March 24, noon – 6 pm
afterwards: Tueday-Saturday 1 pm – 7 pm
Background information 
Anonymous Drawings was founded 2006 by the artist Anke Becker in Berlin, Germany. Since then, more than 5000 artists from all over the world have taken part in the project. More than 10 shows of Anonymous Drawings took place in Berlin and abroad up until today.


The concept

800 selected drawings of international artists will be presented  anonymously in an exhibition. Every exhibition is preceded by an international call for participation on the internet. Everybody can take part: old and young, professional artists or laymen. There are no submission fees and there is no complicated application-procedure. There are no specifications regarding the content of the drawings. The only formal rule: the maximum size of the exhibited drawings is 29,70 – 42,00 cm (A3). 800 works will be selected for the exhibition. The age, biography or gender of the participants will not be requested and do not play any role in the selection: the selection will be made without looking at the names. What counts is the art itself and not the biography.
 
All the drawings are available for a symbolic unit sales-price of 150 Euros each – no matter if they come from established artists or from unknown laymen. For each drawing sold, the artists receive 100 Euros – the rest will be used for the partial financing of the project. Unsold drawings will be archived or returned to the artists. The given unit sales-price should not be seen as a real market price, but as a conceptual place-holder for any conceivable amount of money. The artist’s anonymity can only be revealed by a sale: the buyer can then take his or her drawing right off the wall and the empty space left behind will be marked with the artist‘s full name and point of origin.


The idea behind

What is the line between what is and is not art? What is a good drawing? How can one develop a personal definition of value if the sales-prices are all identical? How does one’s own assessment change if there is no information at all about the artist? It is all about the art and not current market-value. With Anonymous Drawings the common rules of the art-market are reversed in an experimental way turned upside down. In this way new space for unprejudiced viewing, judging and purchasing of the exhibited art emerges. Many single pieces of art become one total work of art. Each and every anonymous artist becomes part of a huge community where hierarchies do not exist. Anonymous Drawings is an action against separation, competition and monoculture within the art-market and a tribute to the inexhaustible medium of drawing.

New works from Shanghai

Following her month-long residency as part of the Metal international residency in November 2012, a selection of drawings and collages are now visible in Claire’s portfolio on her website.

The works have until now only been visible at the online exhibition (dis)Orientation, produced at the end of November to showcase the work made in Shanghai.  This exhibition showed a selection of drawings and collages, plus proposed film and interactive digital works which are set to be developed throughout 2013.

Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here? is a body of work that uses images of arrows observed in the city of Shanghai.  These arrows direct and instruct movement of people throughout the city, controlling and regulating flow.  The drawings and collages take the arrows out of context, removing any language and are arranged with arrows showing the same direction.  The drawings are simple pen outlines on paper, whilst the collages see the arrows carefully sliced out from a larger photograph, pinned to a board and lit, creating strong directional shadows.

“A remarkable architecture of stairs” are studies that have been completed back in the studio in St Helens, and form an experiment with composition and tone for the video work of the same name.  Inspired by the rhythm and movement of escalators between the floors of the many tall buildings, these slender works are made using graphite-coated strips of paper, some polished to a high shine, which are then collaged together.

These works are also available to purchase, ranging from £150 to £300 each.  Email the artist through her website.

September Update

*|MC:SUBJECT|*

You’re invited to….

TRADING STATION, Friday 21st September at Curve Gallery

TRADING STATION is POST’s second project. Exchanging with Istanbul, it seeks to uncover methods for artists to work together internationally, making the most of personal relationships and finding useful ways to develop work together using virtual methods. The interim results of this exchange feature in this exhibition at Liverpool’s Curve Gallery and showcase various responsive works developed within the exchange project.

Claire will premiere her four channel split screen film called ‘Watermark: An intervention in four directions’ which was produced during her two-week residency in Istanbul at the beginning of September.

Artists
Gülçin Aksoy, Nancy Atakan, AtılKunst, Cecilia Kinnear, Susan Meyerhoff Sharples, Amanda Oliphant, Claire Weetman, Robyn Woolston.

 
PREVIEW EVENING
21 Sep: 18.00 – 21 .00

EXHIBITION CONTINUES
22 Sep – 13. Oct 2012,
Thursday – Saturday 13.00 – 19.00

OPEN CONVERSATION:
These events will profile the artist’s physical and virtual methods of exchange, with the opportunity for invited guests and
audience members to participate.
22 Sep. 14.00 – 16.00
6th Oct. 14.00 – 16.00

CURVE GALLERY
Carlisle Building, 67 Victoria Street, Liverpool. L1 6DE. United Kingdom

TRADING STATION is funded by Arts Council England, Grants for the Arts.

Art Merseywide – The best of the open exhibitions

25 September to 1 November 2012
Liverpool Academy of Arts, Seel Street, Liverpool
Open Tuesday to Saturday 12 – 4pm

This exhibition will display some of the best artworks from the Open Exhibitions held in 20011/12 by the greater Merseyside boroughs: Halton, Knowsley, Sefton, Wirral and Liverpool.  Claire will be exhibiting her drawing ‘One Minute: Van Gogh Museum’.

There is something disconcerting about a dead zebra…
29 September – 27 October 2012
Private view: Friday 28 September, 6pm
Part of Warrington Contemporary Arts Festival
Warrington Museum & Art Gallery
Museum Street, Cultural Quarter, Warrington, WA1 1JB

This Markmakers exhibition tours to Warrington as part of the Contemporary Arts Festival.  For the past two years, the artists’ collective Markmakers have been exploring the concept of narratives. Reading and drawing, investigating and creating, members of the group have produced a diverse range of responses exploring story, folklore, personal history and the threads that bring it all together.

Claire will be exhibiting her book installation 71 Steps (After David Nash), which documents her collection of stones from this artwork at Yorkshire Sculpture Park.

Not From Here
An exhibition by Platform members during the Liverpool Biennial 2012, as part of Independents Biennial.
15 – 28 September 2012
At Baltic Creative, Jamaica Street (entrance off New Bird Street), Liverpool, L1 0BP
Claire Weetman has been working with other artists in St Helens to develop affordable studio space in the town.  This exhibition features artists from this emerging St Helens group, looking at the theme ‘Not from Here’.

In other news…

Future travels to Shanghai

In May, Claire was awarded the METAL International residency to Shanghai Fine Art University, China as part of the Liverpool Art Prize events.  She will travel to the city for four weeks during November 2012 where she will develop her work including research on public squares and calligraphic techniques.

Watermark, how an idea became a piece of work.

I’m currently out in Istanbul working as part of a residency for POST Liverpool. It’s the second time I’ve been here (the last time was March 2012) and I came with a plan to re work the ‘Watermark’ piece I made. Well, today that happened.

‘Watermark, an intervention in Four directions’ took place on Barbaros park, which is a public square in Besiktas. It’s quite a transport hub with ferries, buses and Taxis galore and as a result there’s lots of people passing across the square; the sort of place that I love to work in response to.

I’ve been looking at pavements for the past 12 months and thinking of them as a canvas for my work, so when I originally found this space it was perfect to make a piece of work on.  The courses of paving stones run from corner to corner of the square, and this is the predominant direction that people move across the space.  As I had no permission to make work here I needed to find a way of making a drawing on the floor without leaving a mark when I was finished. 

I think I was influenced by seeing lots of water traces around, pavements being cleaned, mechanical sweepers leaving a wet trail behind them, so I decided to paint water onto the floor. The basic method was trialled in March, using a small paintbrush, a Jam jar of water and a touch of bravado. At that point I only travelled in one direction, and having worked on some sketches back in my studio in St Helens I decided to make a better version of the work while I am here in Istanbul again.

I’ve had a 30cm paintbrush made (this involved me, a man in the market who makes sieves out of wood and mesh, a verbal language barrier, a diagram and some hand signals), bought a big roasting tin  (not your typical souvenir) to hold the water, am probably the only person ever who’s travelled with gel filled knee pads, and arranged for a filmmaker to document the while thing.

So that brings me to today, when I made my work following the paving stones in four directions, using 20 litres of water, avoiding a world peace day celebration with international folk dancing, getting filthy feet, a bit of a suntan, and very sore knees.  9 hours after starting (only 4 of those were performance hours) I painted the final square, and now you’ll have to wait to see the film, which gets edited tomorrow…

This residency is part of TRADING STATION, a POST artists exchange. It is funded by Arts Council England and UK trade & investment. Thanks also to all my assistants today, Dilek, Dilek’s friend, Mandy and Sue.





Metal International Residency Award

Visual Artist Claire Weetman has been awarded a 4 week residency in Shanghai as one of the two prizes that were offered alongside the Liverpool Art Prize.  Through a partnership with Shanghai Art School and LJMU’s School of Art and Design, Metal offered a month-long international residency opportunity for visual artists living and working in the North West region to travel to Shanghai, China. Shanghai Art School will host the visit and provide accommodation and access to a studio for one month. The award is envisioned as a professional and ideas development opportunity for artists and is part of the city twinning activity between Liverpool and Shanghai.

Whilst in Shanghai, Claire proposes to develop ‘Watermark’; an intervention that she created on a public square in Istanbul as part of the POST artist exchange project TRADING STATION.  Alongside that Claire aims to further her research into movement through public squares and to develop mark making skills inspired by Chinese calligraphy.

The International Residency Award was announced at the Liverpool Art Prize 2012 where, fellow member of artist collective POST, Robyn Woolston was awarded the Judges Choice prize and Tomo received the People’s Choice prize.  A fourth award of the Metal Studio residency went to Anna Mulhearn, who will have use of a studio at Metal Liverpool for 12 months.

http://www.robynwoolston.com/
http://www.quangowangism.com/tomosecurities.html
http://annamulhearn.weebly.com/
http://www.postliverpool.com/
http://liverpoolartprize.com

There is something disconcerting about a dead zebra

Markmakers exploring narratives, 19 May – 23 June 2012
The Brindley, Runcorn.

Halton’s contemporary arts collective, Markmakers have spent the last two years exploring the theme of narratives.  With work including print, drawing, animation, painting, sculpture and ceramics this will be a diverse and intriguing exhibition.

Claire Weetman is exhibiting a piece called 71 steps, as an installation and artist’s book inspired by the drawings and prints of John Cage that feature collected stones.  During a markmakers excursion to Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Claire collected 71 stones from the ’71 steps’ of David Nash’s installation.  Taking them back to her studio, Claire drew around each stone, before creating a detailed drawing of each one using pencil on black acrylic paint – a technique inspired by paintings by Giuseppe Penone.  Claire plans to complete the story of these stones during the exhibition at the Brindley by returning the stones to the steps at Yorkshire Sculpture Park.

www.markmakers-artists.co.uk

Watermark

Watermark was a 90 minute intervention on Barbosa Park, Istanbul on 29 March 2012.  Claire painted water onto a course of adjacent paving stones, drawing a line that follows a prominent route taken across that space by pedestrians. The water dries and the line documenting the movement of the people fades and disappears, echoing the temporal nature of people’s presence in that place.

Spread

Spread is the third in a series of animated drawings onto mountcard.  They take inspiration from Richard Serra’s verb works, where he created sculptures in response to words such as ‘to roll’, ‘to crumple’ or ‘to cut’. 

I’m going to take some of the words from his list, but also include words that have an inherent feeling of movement in them too, then create a series of drawings using cut away mountcard.  So far I’ve made ‘descend’, ‘curve’ and ‘spread’.  More to follow over the process of time.  Longlist of future words includes:

scatter, pair, surround, lift, follow, fall, shuffle, jump, loop, grow, criss-cross, ramble,

Large artworks – free to a good home

****These artworks have now been taken to a good home by their new owner****

Claire Weetman is moving studios during April and has two large artworks that she can no longer store. These are available for free, collected from St Helens. If you are interested in owning either of the works below, please email claire@claireweetman.co.uk before the end of April to save them from the skip. These are also listed on Ebay where 50% of any selling price will be donated to Charity.

Untitled: Four Panels. 2008
Paint marker on perspex.
Four sheets of 12mm Perspex, H2.44m x W1.22m


Untitled, Four Panels was created in 2008 during the Liverpool International Artists exhibition at Novas CUC. It comprises four perspex panels, with drawings on one surface of each. The drawings, in black or white, mapped and followed the movement and silhouettes of visitors to this exhibition.

The original installation was four panels displayed in the centre of a room in parallel, however, for preservation of the drawings, they would be best displayed fixed to a wall, with the drawn surface behind the perspex.

These would be ideal for a public space, or as a feature wall in a large home. You can take all four panels or fewer if appropriate.



Stepped 2008

Two rows of perspex panels, standing vertical from a white formica-clad base box.
Base is 2.4m long, 0.75m deep, 0.20m high. Panels stand perpendicular to the base to a height of approx 0.75m
Stepped features drawings of legs and feet, captured from a street in Stuttgart in 2008. They are line drawings onto 14 pieces of perspex, which overlap each other in two rows, creating a 3-dimensional representation of the people passing along the street.

The drawn surface is protected in a sandwich of two pieces of perspex, which then slot into the base box and are bolted together using discreet chrome fixings at the top. The base box has a slight chip to it’s formica cladding where a cleaning machine damaged it on first installation. The perspex panels do not have rounded corners, so may prove a risk if displayed in an accessible public space. Stepped was created as a commission, but was unable to be installed following risk assessment that the corners of the perspex were an injury hazard for display in a public space.