KlompChing Gallery, Brooklyn

6.10.11

I first met Debra Klomp-Ching and Darren Ching in 2006 at the much missed Rhubard Rhubarb portfolio review in Birmingham. KlompChing Gallery opened in 2007 with Simon Roberts’ exhibition ‘Motherland’  and is owned and run by Debra Klomp-Ching and Darren Ching, the former UK based curator (Arts Councl of England, Pavilion – Leeds) and Darren Ching, creative director at Photo District News. It is a pristine private gallery based in the Dumbo Arts Centre, which houses a multitude of other galleries, co-ops, Not for Profit, and Commercial spaces, as well as the Brooklyn Arts Council. Dumbo is an acronym for Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass.

Dumbo Arts Quarter

KlompChing is a gallery driven by a commitment to the exhibition and collecting of contemporary fine art photographs. They are passionate about the work the new talent they embrace as well as the established work they represent, and all of the artists they do take on are selected for the strength of the image itself – work that ‘demonstrates creative integrity and intent, originality, narrative and aesthetic challenges and the highest level of craftsmanship’.

Brooklyn to Manhattan

A recent write up describes the gallery as ‘dynamic’ and this is amplified by a handout which gives thumbnails of the artists represented including Roberts, and fellow Brit Tessa Bunney and Welsh photographer Helen Sear, newcomers such as Cornelia Hediger whose work is on show in the gallery, and striking work by Vojtech V Slama. Hediger’s work is titled ‘Doppelgänger II’ and is a new series of photographs which explore the ‘uncanny, constructing complex pictorial narratives into segmented tableau vivants, consisting of up to eighteen individual photographs combined into a single composition’. The gallery is funded solely through the sale of artists work.

Cornelia Hediger from the series 'Doppleganger II'

Debra Klomp-Ching

Debra also undertakes consultancy work in areas such as building up a collection and on organisational development. She offers to broker some introductions to other curators/galleries in order to extend the connections.

Along the corridor is another private gallery and publishing house, Umbrage, who exhbition by Tim Hetherington ‘Liberia: Long Story Bit by Bit’ which explores the dynamics of power in that country.

http://www.klompching.com

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The Kitchen, NY

5.10.11

The Kitchen, New York

The Kitchen is one of New York’s most famous interdisciplinary art institutions driven by a commitment to experimental work and the support for the early and mid-career development of the current artistic generation. On show in their space in the ‘hub’ of Chelsea’s art galleries are two exhibitions, one by Jennie C. Jones from Brooklyn and the other by Joe Winter, based in Long Island. Also available on a computer is a fascinating collection of video art works and documentation covering the 40 years of The Kitchen’s history featuring some of the most influential artists in America – John Cage, Laurie Anderson, Lucinda Childs, Bill T. Jones, Philip Glass, Christian Marclay, Robert Longo, Pauline Oliveros, Meredith Monk, David Byrne and The Talking Heads, among many others. Their aim is to make their archive accessible on the internet and through that process restore tapes that are most at risk of deterioration. A screening of some of this work wouldn’t go amiss in Glasgow, though the online presence will to some degree fill that gap.

The Kitchen installation view

Some of the audio archive has already been curatorially re-presented and a number of these are available to buy. ‘New Music New York’ is the first CD in ‘from the Kitchen Archives’ series featuring some of the performances from 1979 – Philip Glass, Monk, George Lewis, Phil Niblock, Tony Conrad, Nyman and Reich, amonst others. The most recent CD is ‘Pianos in the Kitchen’ with Harold Budd, Anthony Davis and some of their well known names like Glass, Monk and Palestine. These two productions encapsulate the pioneering position that the organization has had, as well as being a fine panorama of new music.

'New Work New York' 1979, and 'Pianos in The Kitchen' from 1976-1983

http://www.thekitchen.org

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Anton Kern Gallery, NY

5.10.11

Anton Kern Gallery

Lothar Hempel from 'Suedehead'

Along the road a mile of two is Chelsea’s bustling arts quarter and within that is Anton Kern gallery who will be showing a collection of work by Jim Lambie next month – as I write Jim’s work is currently being manufactured for shipping out by Glasgow’s foremost makers of artists work, Scott Associates. Their current exhibition is by Lothar Hempel, based in Berlin – an eclectic display of sculpture, paintings on aluminium and three-diamond shaped photo-montages. The title of the show is ‘Suedehead’ after the cult pulp fiction book by Richard Allen, and a reference to an early 1970s subculture. The work combines a range of material from blown up photographs on metal, cast concrete, and other elements. The press release is also very flowery, but it’s appropriate: ‘The bold colors, the hardedge qualities of the materials and the use of manufactured, rather than hand-shaped forms speak to the character of the work and the artistʼs intention. While the title refers to a past (yet, uncannily timely!) moment of youth dissatisfaction and aggression transformed into the nuanced and ambiguous style of the Suedheads with their grown-out Skinhead crop, dapper Hard Mod clothing, and latent hostility and demi-monde aloofness. It is Hempelʼs skilled language of combinatorial synthesis that allows the viewer to look beyond the intricacies of subcultural signifiers and to enter a world of body language and abstraction. Elegant modern dance poses meet thuggish posturing and swagger, while both coexist on a stage of extensive artifice and cunning craft.’

Lothar Hempel from 'Suedehead'

http://antonkerngallery.com/index.php

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Industrial Aesthetics – Hunter College Gallery, NY

5.10.11

At Hunter College’s Times Square Gallery until November is an exhibition ‘Industrial Aesthetics – Environmental Influences on Recent Art from Scotland’, which celebrates one aspect of the Glasgow art scene around Glasgow School of Art’s MFA orbit, noting that the past twenty-five years, the city has developed into one of the world’s most influential and 
imaginative centres of artistic production, linking that to Glasgow’s cultural 
rebirth, and Scotland’s transformation into a ‘vital creative nexus’. Claiming to be the largest exhibition of contemporary art from Scotland ever seen in the United States, the narrative accompanying this sizeable display positions it as having emerged out of a ‘unique set of circumstances. The participating artists are the originators and caretakers of a dynamic and inventive art scene that echoes ideals of social organization and communal action—hallmarks of Glasgow’s political and commercial history’ – stating that these artists are caretakers of the art scene seems a slightly over-dramatic as it relates to a particular, yet important, milieu connecting back to or having much reference to the MFA course at GSA. It’s an engaging and thorough exhibition however.

Jessica Harrington - 'Jane' (2011)

Accompanied by a catalogue which features a reprint of David Harding’s influential treatise on the post-conceptual current emerging out of the Environnmental Art Department at GSA, and a discussion with Sam Ainslie, it contextualizes their various 
aesthetic and conceptual concerns within wider social and civic legacies of their environment, which, as I suggest, is only one dynamic of many a larger set of scenes. In bridging the current practice of artists such as Gary Rough, Sandy Smith, Ruth Barker, with the likes of Douglas Gordon and Jim Lambie, it reinforces notions of a spiritual kinship that it proposes went hand in hand with the city’s ‘cultural and fiscal renaissance’.

'Group Engage in what Looks Like Action' (2009)

Iain Hetherington - 'Group Engage in what Looks Like Action' (2009)

The show contains some notable work – Jessica Harrington’s fascinating and disturbing found ornaments; Alex Frost’s colourful sculptures and self portrait; Craig Mulholland’s beguiling ‘Peer to Peer’ (2008); Iain Hetherington’s mischievous lean towards working class style and its intelligensia; the dry yet rigorous formalism of Dan Miller, which is counterbalanced by the playful and seeming spontaneity of Sandy Smith; and the highlight of the show Gary Rough’s ‘Motorcycle Mirrors’ (2011). Needless to say, Lambie’s plastic bags are enduring, and Gordon’s ‘I Remember Nothing’ is prophetic within the context of the show as a whole.

Gary Rough 'Motorcycle Mirrors' (2011)

It was a pleasant surprise to find out about the show in New York (from David Dale Gallery who some of the newer kids on the block have associations with) and something of an oversight that it hasn’t been promoted back home in Scotland as there is much to celebrate in this, if not to show the work in a civic venue, with the linked press release tweaked for more inclusive tastes.

 

Alex Frost 'Self Portrait'

Ruth Barker

Alex Pollard 'Dandy Outlaws Gesturing in a Forest' (2009)

Sandy Smith

Neil Clements

Martin Creed 'Lamp Going On and Off'

http://industrialaesthetics.wordpress.com/

The exhibition includes work by: Laura Aldridge / Ruth Barker / Neil Clements / Martin Creed / Rory Donaldson / Alex Frost Carla Scott Fullerton / Douglas Gordon / Jessica Harrison / Ilana Halperin / Iain Hetherington Jim Lambie / Duncan Marquiss / James McLardy / Andrew Miller / Dan Miller / Craig Mulholland Alex Pollard / Kate V. Robertson / Gary Rough / John Shankie / Sandy Smith / Ric Warren 

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WCP – Woodstock Centre for Photography

WCP – Woodstock Centre for Photography

3.10.11

WCP is situated in Woodstock’s main artery – Tinker Street. It was founded in 1977 as a not-for-profit artist-centered organization and its initial mission continues to support artists working in photography and engaging audiences through exhibitions, talks, events and production facilities. At present they are about to select their Fellowship for 2011 – in addition to this they support 7 residencies throughout the year by providing workspace and support of new projects. It is an idyllic setting in which to concentrate on making new work, but obviously a tourist haven for hippies and hippie watchers, old and young alike (the town, not WCP I should emphasize!).

We arrived to see the exhibition of work in their 2011 Benefit Gala, Vision Awards Ceremony (honoring Fred Baldwin & Wendy Watriss, who founded Houston PhotoFest) and the 33rd Annual Auction of Contemporary and Classic Photographs. The auction includes work from renowned historic masters to some of the outstanding work from emerging and mid-career artists. This year it includes such photographers as Stephen Shore and Robert Mapplethorpe! As well being an important fundraising event for WCP, the exhibition/auction attracts new collectors as well as discerning new buyers. It is never known however just how much it will raise.

The range of agencies who fund WCP are wide and some are displayed on a banner outside the venue. These include –

Milton & Sally Avery Foundation, the Honickman Foundation, the New York State Council on the Arts a State Agency, the National Endowment for the Arts, the San Francisco Community Foundation,  the Town of Woodstock, Ulster County, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Adobe Systems, B&H Photo Video, Blurb, Bostick & Sullivan, Canon USA, Kodak, Dyna-Lite, GTI, Light Impressions, MAC Group, Mamiya, Museo Fine Art Papers, Pocket Wizard, Sekonic, Toyo,  Wacom, X-Rite,  and from individuals, & our members

The ‘side’ gallery – which is dedicated to putting on small to medium sized solo shows is currently exhibiting work by Carla Shapiro – was sponsored by Kodak and there is a plaque commemorating that. Canon supply their printers and also sponsor them through this, and Adobe have also supplied essential software. They don’t go to companies with a begging bowl or under the pretext of being ‘not-for-profit’ – Ariel Shanberg, their Director of the past 12 years, is quite clear that what WCP offer companies is the direct contact with hundreds of potential customers through their programme, a large percentage of which will probably buy equipment to set up their own domestic digital facility. They lease their Apple computers, but a major asset is that they own the building which was bought in the early days of setting up. Their digital facility is run by Phil Mansfield, himself a noted freelance photographer, and akin to the other centres visited, gives artists one-to-one help in production and mentoring – to accentuate the homely feel of the place, their facility called The Digital Kitchen.

1.   2.    3. 
1. Phil Mansfield – Digital Lab Manager 2. Lindsay Stern – Education Coordinator 3. Deborah Mans field – Development Director

Malcolm and Ariel

The main gallery was used as a café at one point (1999) – Ariel tells us that his predecessor had hoped that a cafe would generate income but with 6 other cafés in the street, it never really worked. WCP also thought that this was not really its core purpose. We manage to have a quick chat with their Development Manager, Deborah Mansfield, who works part-time at WCP – she was formerly coordinator of major ‘gives’ at New York’s International Centre for Photography.

They also offer paid internships in arts administration – a unique opportunity for people in the Woodstock and Hudson Bay Area (a population of 6000). Through that they Interns learn business practices and fundraising strategies associated with an artists’ space dedicated to serving contemporary photographers. Candidates have to have an interest in photography and the visual arts, of course, and also consideration is given to how they will contribute to the work of CPW and its projects. Credits for college entry are also available through this, though how this works I am not sure.

WCP have a substantial collection of work of over 1,500 photographs and considering they don’t have an acquisitions budget this has been done through artists donating prints who work there or have received support – it is not discretionary but artists are asked if they will donate a work to support WCP. This has knock on profile for the artists in terms of pr and WCP’s annual auction. Their collection is kept at the Dorsky museum. Some of their collection is currently on show as part of the auction. Buying companies will often purchase as a tax write-off (but I presume they also like the work and decide to buy art instead of something else).

Ariel is modest about his role and thinks that the curatorial role should be in the background when artists publicly present their work in exhibitions. They have had a comprehensive lecture series running for some time and recently received a grant to get that up online as a way of connecting with audiences far and wide, without distance being an issue. We agree to exchange online links and also to see in what ways we can promote each other respectively.

PQ (aka Photography Quarerly) is produced twice a year and is a glossy A4 publication with colour reproductions, including articles and artists profiles with one page devoted to reproducing their work. Issue 99 is guest edited by Debra Klomp Ching, co-owner and Director of Brooklyn bases gallery KlompChing, who we will be visiting this week. The broad theme of this issue is ‘photography’s ontology’ and includes a profile of Helen Sear by curator Addie Vassie (she wrote the short essay in Street Level’s opening Trongate 103 exhibition by John Hoppy Hopkins), who looks at the body of work ‘Inside the View’ and her technique of layering negatives in an analogue way to it’s current migration to digital imaging. It is one of a few key photography magazines dedicated to art and photography in the USA – Blind Spot, Aperture, Contact Sheet are three of the others. It is a high cost commitment, and with a $13,000 reduction in their funding this year they may have to look at alternatives to the print version, through Print on Demand, or in having available as pdf downloads. Getting the back issues up online is also in the pipelilne, similar to Light Work’s archive for Contact Sheet – front covers and contents can be currently viewed. PQ is an essential distributor of their work as well as a way of tracking their history, and in keeping conversations alive. We talk of the essential need for that social space through the page and the gallery space, of the value of bringing people together. Think of it this way – would you rather sit on the toilet with a book or an Ipad?

We discuss with Lindsay Stern, their Education Coordinator, the possibilities of a dialogue with Street Level’s RRCS Coordinator. In conclusion, I agree with Ariel to be in touch in a few weeks time to arrange a day when we can have a dialogue and where we can write up their ‘case study’. I feels like the beginning of a relationship with Street Level that have some tangible outcome and ripple effects – through the exchange of work and expertise.

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Meduse – Quebec. Day 2

Meduse, 30 September


It’s day two in Quebec and another visit to Meduse cooperative takes us into La Bande Video and an installation by Sri Lankan artist Pavitra Wickramasinghe, ‘Refusing to Make a Scene’ – an elegiac installation drawing on her childhood memories of watching television when she thought that the scenes in the box were real and miniature misc en scenes. The photographic installation covering the windows of La Bande Video is called ‘Smog’ and is by Mériol Lehmann (who is also Director of Production at neighbouring Avatar, the organization for audio and new media in Meduse) and it mirrors the view of Quebec whose scenic panorama is jolted by the smoke from a local power processing plant (I think), an unusual sight in a city centre.

Alexis Bureau from VU recommends we visit two other organisations in the city, La Chambre Blanch and Le Leiu.

 

La Chambre Blanch

Isabell Demers and Catherine Blanchet

La Chambre Blanche is based in a former shoe factory and is one of two contemporary artist run spaces that are not based in the Meduse centre. They are currently collaborating with La Bande Video, Avatar and a Brazilian organisation, MIS, in a residency by Claudio Bueno, who isn’t present today but Isabell Demers and Catherine Blanchet are there to guide the visitor around and tell more about the work of their organisation. It is a documentation centre on contemporary art and has a massive collection of books, journals and magazines, all catalogued for viewing. Their current magazine shelf shows the range of publications produced in Canada today – Inter (Quebec based), Fuse (Toronto), C Magazine , Musicworks (Toronto – the last three are all based in 401 Richmond building), BorderCrossings (the successor to Borderlines), and I think more.

As well as their first floor library which contains back issues of probably all Canadian art publications and magazines, their are two spaces on the second floor which are used as working spaces for artists who are in residence and who also use it as exhibition spaces – artists are invited to create unique, ephemeral work, and the space is considered to be a laboratory. The public are invited to drop in and contribute to or quiz the artist on their processes. They have a membership which is categorised into ‘active’, ‘producers’, ‘friends’ and ‘support’. In their accreditation, it is members who are prioritised as supporting the organisation, followed by the Candadian Council for the Arts, the Quebec Ministery of Culture and Communications and the City of Quebec. Time did not allow any furthering exploration into the levels of funding and self-finance here, but I aim to follow that up in e-mail.

They also have a digital and web lab which encourages artists to create and rethink the idea of ‘site-specific’ within the context of cyberspace, and it is used by members for web art projects also.

La Chambre Blanche began their ‘artist-in-residence’ programmes in 1982 as a way of furthering the exploratory aspects of art making and the processes involved. Their large publication ‘Résidence – 1982-1993’ chronicles their first 15 years of in-situ residencies, looking at the delicate balance between individual research, public contact, and the nuances of residencies that result from collaborative efforts. It is also a useful record in printed form of their history. The gift of this book and the DVD of web performances from more recent residences are fitting memento’s of the visit and useful additions to our own archive at Street Level that folk back home can peruse.

www.chambreblanche.qc.ca

Le Lieu (Centre en Art Actuel)

Richard Martel

Le Lieu (Centre en Art Actuel) is the other artist run space that is not contained within the Meduse Centre. The Director here is Richard Martel, a performance artist, who, interestingly, was involved in the collective who started La Chambre Blanche. He talks of their festival Rencontre internationale d’art performance (RIAP) which has been running every year (sometimes every other year) since 1994, the latest being in 2010, the sixteenth edition. For that event he worked in collaboration with curators/artists in Brazil, China, South Korea, Mexico, and Singapore. The festival presents a wide range of artists working in the fields of action art and performance art. That event also included a programme of French-language action poetry.

He mentions some UK based performance artists that he has encountered and who are familiar to me from various events – Stuart Brisley, who he was involved in presenting in Quebec in the early days, Andre Stitt, Roddy Hunter, and John Jordan. As   an artist, he has undertaken work in Belfast and Cardiff, but hasn’t had any  dealings with anyone from Scotland, yet. I tell him of the National Review of Live Art and say I will pass on info to them. He shows me the substantial tome ‘Art Action – 1958-1998’ an abundantly illustrated book that covers 4 decades and nearly 20 countries/continents of Action Art practices which came out of a report and symposium held in Quebec City in 1998 and which brought together the historic protagonists of ‘diverse forms of Action Art: the

Fluxus DVD

Happening, Fluxus, ZAJ, Body Art, Action Poetry and Actionism’. The back flap also tells us that the book is dedicated to Dick Higgins, who passed away in Quebec City on the final day of the symposium. There are, claims Martel, only 7 of these books left in the world, but after some chatting, he agrees to sell me one to take back to Scotland.

Le Lieu archiveLe Lieu video archive

Now there are only 6. Martel, reveals his unique collection of video documentation of some of the major names – Jean Jacques Lebel, Otto Muhl, Beuys, Higgins, and others. It is yet to be digitised and preserved.

 

 

 

La Lieu installation

Le Lieu itself has a gallery space – the work on show at present is an installation of broken statues and plinths rescued from abandoned chapels, 19 studio spaces (which I am guessing here the rents from which pay the space?) and an archive library with a focus on the avant-garde lineage through Dada, Fluxus, Happenings, performance, actions, and critical art activities. It is somewhere to spend a lot of time. They also publish Inter magazine which Martel started in 1978 as ‘Intervention’, changing its name to Inter in the early 80s – a French language multimedia magazine which has just published its 107th edition, this time on the theme of ‘Art and Activism’. An earlier issue from the Autumn of 2008 is a dual translation edition and worth the purchase as it chronicles the evolution of the Quebec art scene of the last 30 years and it also coincided with the 400th anniversary of Quebec as a city, so it is a valuable resource in putting into perspective the history of the scene here. In here there are section on VU, La Band Video, Engramme, and the other organisations in Meduse. Martel resisted the temptation to move into Meduse when it was being planned, preferring instead the autonomy of their own space, which, as I can see, adds greater diversity to the city’s cultural scene.

A web search on Martel reveals he is also a poet, multimedia artist, curator and publisher, author of a number of books, numerous articles for catalogues, literary miscellanies and anthologies published in Quebec, Canada and abroad. He has undertaken more than two hundred actions and performances at various galleries and museums in America, Europe and Japan. His creative activities are of social character and is the subject for consideration for leading art critics. He is, also, a supporter of Quebec independence’.

I am grateful to Alexis for passing on the names of the two organisations above – it is easy to miss out on activities that are not on your radar when you visit a place, as it often the case when visitors come to Glasgow. Whilst Meduse is an artistic hotbed, the existence of Le Chambre Blanche, Le Lieu, and the latter’s activities and through Inter and the performance art festival, further edifies Quebec’s role as a hub of the cultural avant-garde, and the fact that they can and continue to work together creates a dynamic context for creative activities in the city.

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VU – Quebec City

VU – Quebec City

VU Photography Centre is based in Meduse, a cooperative of ten arts organisations housed in a former flour mill, and it provides production facilities, resources, exhibitions, event spaces, which gives such centres their flavour of creation and exchange. It includes new media organisation Avatar,  video art agency La Bande Video, the print studio Engramme, and others. The building is owned by the tenant cooperative, which was made possible by a loan from the city. Meduse opened in 1995 but VU itself was established in 1981.

Quebec City is home to 650,000 people and 95% are French speaking – the taxi driver thinks we are Russian, but when I emphasise that we are in fact Scottish, he cries ‘Ah Glasgow! You Rangers? Non? You Celtic then? Non? Ah ha!’ as he drives off laughing. A similar encounter happened in Syracuse.

The visit to Meduse follows on from a research trip that members of Meduse made to Trongate 103 only last week where we discussed the exciting prospect of a collaboration between the two centres, one which would take Glasgow/Scottish artists to Quebec in 2013 and reciprocally, a presence of Quebecoise artists in Glasgow in 2014. This could involve all the organistions in T103, if appropriate to them and if their partnering with a similar organization in Meduse facilitates this. The Quebec delegation were treated well on their visit to Glasgow, and we were all enthused about the similaries and the possibilities that we could develop. The Quebec organisers talk fondly of their time in Glasgow – visits to various hostelries has given it all a endearing and yearning legacy.

 VU ‘supports emerging practices and promotes critical thinking about the issues in contemporary photography’. It is a non-profit organisation made up of and administered by an artists’ collective – its board is comprised of artists and professionals in the visual arts. It has two exhibition spaces which are titled American and European (with respective exhibitions by Scott Conarroe and Celia Petrin Sidarous), a black and white darkroom facility for members, digital access, including high end scanner and flat bed scanner, and they have an in-house printing facility for the production of exhibitions by artists. They also have a substantial library of books, the Resource Information Center, which contains a vast array of publications on photography, events, and artists monographs – these are all catalogued and can be surveyed online, searchable by name artists, authors, titles and keywords. This resource is free to access and VU staff facilitates searches of the collection center.

The printing resource is a vital component of VU’s interaction and services to the arts community in Quebec and further afield. Their technicians will work with artists throughout the process of producing work for exhibition, offering advice both technical and artistic – this one to one service is something you don’t get for a commercial business. It is important to note that the technicians are also artists, so they give that quality service and understanding that is unique to photographic arts organisations of this nature, and is also shared with the to other venues visited previously – Light Work and Gallery 44. VU is also the only public access darkroom in Quebec, and artists are known to travel from Montreal and even the USA to use it. Their analogue colour facility is probably on the verge of being dismantled and relegated to analogue history, as it is not used anymore and therefore not cost or space effective (many artists will use a combination of film shooting, scanning neg and outputting digitally, but those who still want the distinctive quality of a colour hand print can still go to more specialist and commercial image bureau’s). This will be replaced however with more digital imaging facilities and allow the space to be reconfigured slightly. Their facilities are very similar to Street Level’s, with the same Flextight scanner, jet mounter, large scale printer etc.

In addition to 16 exhibitions a year, they produce a series of monographs that they apply for more money for and which are undertaken with another organisation, in this case, Dazibao in Montreal. These are nicely designed, medium to small sized publications that profile Quebec based artists such as Bettina Hoffmann, Patrick Altman, Lynne Cohen, and Evergon. They include a commissioned essay which is translated into French and English and around 90 pages of colour and black and white photographic plates giving a incredible outlet for the artists work. These are disseminated via an American and European distributor – I forgot to ask to average sales figures so far.

VU haven’t undertaken any international exchange of exhibitions as such, and we discuss the practicalities of such a venture that we discussed last week with Alexis from VU – a jointly curated exhibition opportunity for artists in 2013/14, possibilities of a residency at VU for a Glasgow photographer/artist, and also a staff exchange. This will be followed up and pursued in the next few months.

On leaving VU, a visit into L’oeil de Poisson is met by Caroline Flibotte who shows us their new publicity poster which folds up into a milk carton shape. Their office looks busy, and their exhibition space vibrant – we get to see their workshop spaces in the basement – wood and metalwork equipment and space make it a facility comparable to Glasgow Sculpture Studio’s and therefore obviously a vital production resource.  A copy of the bulky Directory of Artist Run Spaces in Quebec and Canada features hundreds of spaces across this vast land – one to take back to GPS and one for ourselves. This will be a very useful sourcebook.

We then drop into Engramme, the print studio organisation. Fortuitously there is a small reception for a series of silkscreens by Glasgow artist (and member of Street Level and Glasgow Print Studio) Sarah Hendry, the results of a month residency at Engramme, and the outcome of a working relationship already existing between Engramme and GPS, and one that serves as a model that other T103 organisations can hopefully build on.

Sarah Hendry at EngrammeSarah Hendry prints produced at Engramme on a GPS exchange

Pascale Bureau - Director of Vu

On the morning of writing this blog, CBC is on TV at 6 in the morning and the main news reports on a national Culture Day throughout the whole of Canada on 1st October – a annual cross-country celebration of arts and culture for raising public participation and engagement, initiated in response in the conviction that a vibrant arts and cultural sector contributes directly a society’s wellbeing. This is supported by arts and cultural leaders across Canada and its ethos is to encourage collaboration and giving, places an onus of equality of urban and rural communities, encourages the best use of resources and ‘is produced with a unifying spirit, bringing together the best energies in the country’.

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