Wednesday 30 March 2011

The Drawing Video




The video, displayed during the exhibition in the foyer of Wimbledon Space, was
recorded over the two weeks of gallery based work leading up to the exhibition. It narrates the installation of The Drawing Archive on the wall: emails, photographs, receipts, books, catalogues, letters, statements, arguments, every detail nailed directly to the wall.
As a part of the exhibition making, it represents a key point in the process that led to the final installation, assembled right after The Drawing Archive had been removed from the walls.


Thursday 24 March 2011

the drawing at Wimbledon Space




WIMBLEDON space presents

the drawing.

Private View:
Thursday 24th March, 5 - 8pm

Exhibition:

Friday 25th March – Friday 8th April 2011
Monday to Friday 10am - 5pm
Closed Weekends and Bank Holidays


'the drawing.' opens at WIMBLEDON space, Wimbledon College of Art on Thursday 24th March. The show reveals the extensive efforts of four curators on a mission to purchase their first collectively owned artwork. Operating as 'The Drawing Collective', the four members have fully embraced the spirit of collaboration by eating, working and practically living together.  Like the first clue in a prolonged treasure hunt, the starting point given for the exhibition was “to reflect on Wimbledon College of Art’s focus on drawing and expanded notions of the archive.

Over the last five months, every attempt at coming closer to acquiring the elusive artwork, has been categorically recorded and filed. Hundreds of emails, photographs, receipts, books, catalogues, letters, statements, arguments, unfortunate and happy accidents, every detail.

Curators, artists, archivists, collectors, interviewers, managers, negotiators?

'the drawing.' An exhibition about exhibiting.


Wimbledon College of Art, Merton Hall Road, Wimbledon, London SW19 3QA wimbledonspace@wimbledon.arts.ac.uk
Telephone 020 7514 9705
TUBE Wimbledon/South Wimbledon • TRAIN Wimbledon/ Wimbledon Chase • TRAM Dundonald Road



Sunday 20 March 2011

What is a collective?

What is a collective? What does it mean to be a collective?
What constitutes it?
In contemporary western society, how possible is it to create a collective?
Why a collective and not some other model of collaboration?
The challenge that we created for ourselves, had in some way crept up upon us without even having realized it.
In the sense that we had not really asked ourselves the questions that are stated above.
There are two short texts that I wanted to write reflecting on the idea of the collective but in many ways I think this might be the right moment for this one.
Our collective was created without even realizing it, perhaps the most ideal and sincere way of creation.
Perhaps it was over the countless conversations between three of the members about the idea of creating a club where art could be discussed in a more comfortable environment. It may have been from this and the mutual affection that had grown between us, did the idea that we would like to create something more permanent, something beyond just a project occur. This is what made this project more than 'just' a project.
As a collective we tried to do almost everything possible together, which meant from spending time together in class, coffee breaks, lunches and gallery openings in the evening, which almost always finished off with a pint and heading home together. It wouldnt be presumptious to say that this project would probably not be as successful if we had not spent all this time together, experiencing things together and reflecting on how we experienced the same moments in different ways.


I hope that what we have to show will reflect that, because it was more of an experience than I thought we could ever have. I am sure that for those that will look hard enough it will and those who choose to skim the surface, will always be the ones that miss out.
Rarely does this happen. As far as I have seen most times when people try to work together, many things happen that end up ruining the experience and in the end the whole work itself. This time I think we managed to get through many different obstacles and have turned them around to our advantage.
I guess if i had to answer the question of why we are a collective and not some other model of collaborative work, my answer would be because regardless of all that had happened, what was always everyone's objective was working for the good of everyone and not for individual good. I guess that is what separated us from other models and I guess that is why we did not even think to question ourselves that, because it was so natural to us. I feel that I am very lucky and privileged to have an experience like this one, that I think rarely occurs in any form in contemporary society.
When I wonder why this is such a rare occurance, I guess the only answer I can come up with is that we have been taught to misunderstand the meaning of 'putting oneself first '. Luckily I have the pleasure of working people that understand this the way it is meant to be understood.


Manca Bajec



Space to Concept?

When being introduced to a space where a project is to take place, the first thing that happens is that imagination generally takes over and tries to fit the concept into the space even if the project is at its beginnings. Taking in the width, length, height, light in the space, just at first glance, as if taking a glimpse at a text without reading it, just to get the tone that creates the environment and opens the possibilities.

Wimbledon Space.

Our project had an element of performance in it, as it did continue to change and the amount of physical material that would be available for the actual exhibition changed throughout the project. It is still an ongoing performative act including the installation process.
This final solution for the exhibition was not the only possibility and while at first it seemed to be a compromise because many of the other ideas were more complex and time consuming, right now it seems to be the perfect way of us being able to carry out our concept to its optimum as it allows us to carry out another role that we had discussed already but we are finally able to truly take on.
The main idea for our exhibition installation was that it had to reflect the concept but not illustrate it, therefore while one of our most beloved ideas of recreating our working space as an installation in the gallery seemed to have all the elements of allowing our performance to continue throughout the exhibition while also leaving us with many options, it did somewhat just illustrate visually what the material we had accumulated, already does.
We realized that while we wanted to make it quite clear to the spectator what the whole project was about, one element that seemed so important was that we completed our process to the very end. That the concept of the exhibition at the end was the concept of the whole project and not just a representation of what we had done. Simply illustrating or representing the process would simply then be a form of documentation, which would in fact not be true to the idea that we had conceived.

A bundle of documentation, part of the drawing archive.

In the end, the exhibiting of documentation was not what we hoped to achieve, because in fact the documentation that had accumulated in the past months exhibited in a gallery space, would probably be more of an exhibition for ourselves than for anyone else. This leads to question whether the artist actually ever really does have an audience in mind when creating a work of art that will be exhibited?
Which also leads to question what it is in fact that we had done in the past months? Is it a performance? Is it an artistic project? Is it simply an experiment, that was documented for learning purposes or is it all of the above and more?
And more, is it even really necessary to have an answer for these questions and the many more that surround these ideas?
Our project was about value more than anything. It was about the value of time and the value of a person in relation to the value of an object even if this object is a work of art.
We wanted to see if we were actually able to with the input of our work able to raise the value of the drawing that we had set out to purchase. When discussing value, I am not only intending monetary value.
Almost at the complete beginning of the project we began realizing that in fact the drawing had little importance, it had more of a symbolic value, rather than being of actual importance. In the end, what is it that we wanted it to symbolize?
And the roles that we had ‘played’, did they symbolize anything other than the roles that they actually stood for?

Manca Bajec

Saturday 12 March 2011

On collecting: Walter Benjamin

Every passion borders on the chaotic, but the collector's passion borders on the chaos of memories. (...) For what else is a collection but a disorser to which habit has accomodated itself to such an extent that it can appear as order? (...) Thus there is in the life a a collector a dialectical tension between the poles of disorder and order. Naturally, his existence is tied to many other things as well: to a very mysterious relationship (...); also, to a relationship to objects which does not emphasize their functional, utilitarian value - that is, their usufulness - but studies and loves them as the scene, the stage, of their fate. The most profound enchantment for the collector is the locking of individual items within a magic circle in which they are fixed as the final thrill, the thrill of acquisition, passes over them. Everything remembered and thought, everything conscious, becomes the pedestal, the frame, the base, the lock of his property.

Benjamin W. (1931) Unpacking My Library: A talk about book collecting, in Benjamin W. Illuminations (1999). London: Pimlico, p.62

Monday 7 March 2011

On drawing: John Berger

For the artist drawing is discovery.  And that is not just a slick phrase, it is quite literally true. 
It is the actual act of drawing that forces the artist to look at the object in front of him, to dissect it in his mind’s eye and put it together again; or, if he is drawing from memory, that forces him to dredge his own mind, to discover the content of his own store of past observations.


Berger J. Berger on Drawing. Aghabullogue, Co. Cork: Occasional Press (II edition, 2007), p.3.



Drawing works to abolish the principle of Disappearance, but it never can, and instead it turns appearance and disappearance "into a game" [which] can never be won, or wholly controlled, or adeguately understood.
Elkins J., letter to John Berger (2004), in Berger J. Berger on Drawing. Aghabullogue, Co. Cork: Occasional Press (2005), p.112.