Friday, 22 March 2013
Friday, 1 March 2013
March Diary
I've got loads of stuff coming up this month so putting it all in one post (mostly so I don't forget)
First Sunday this sunday 3rd march, starting 2pm Piccadilly Gardens
memorial tree come and explore ways of being/seeing/doing or embark on
the drinking in the city tour (finish 4pm in a NQ bar) more details in my previous post
Next
Tuesday 5th March the art of walking course concludes with an expedition
to which everyone is invited. Start 6.30pm outside the cornerhouse for
another chance to play ways of being/seeing/doing or to join me on the
ever popular manchester modernists heroine tour
I'm part of a new group exhibition Ways to Escape is at 2022 NQ 14th-23rd March http://www.waystoescape.org/ waystoescape/_.html and the escapist derive is will be on Saturday 23rd 2pm, starting at the gallery
Finally the manchester modernists are showing bata-ville on March 14th
at Manchester Art Gallery, an excellent film, i'll be giving a short
introduction and possibly talking to the directors afterwards (that bit
is tbc but there wont be any skype this time i promise) http://www.eventbrite.co.uk/ event/5656175774/eorg
All free, all welcome. would be lovely to see folk at any or all of these and I promise at some point I will finish the new website (if anyone fancies helping with this I'd be delighted: as ever I prefer playing out on the streets to being at the computer)
glittery love
Morag xx
PS THE COMMUNITY DRONE IS COMING....
Wednesday, 6 February 2013
Robinson in Ruins
Really delighted that Robinson in Ruins is screening at the cornerhouse next Tuesday, its open to anyone to attend (normal going to the pictures ticket prices apply obviously)
Details are here: http://www.cornerhouse.org/film/cinema-listings/robinson-in-ruins
Here's summat I wrote about the film after I first saw it (i really should get the website sorted shouldn't I so I get these things posted when I write them)
Reflections on Robinson in Ruins
Robinson in Ruins is Patrick Keiller’s third film – after London and Robinson in Space – exploring England through the travels of the enigmatic Robinson. His findings are imparted by a narrator, Vanessa Redgrave, who informs us our anti-hero is concerned England is suffering “a great malady, that I shall dispel… by making picturesque views, on journeys to sites of scientific and historic interest.” By coincidence (or not) his quest coincides with global economic crises and New Labours demise.
Keillers’ film is poetic rather than polemic but still didactic. His style contrasts with Adam Curtis's franticness, although both seek to weave together disparate political and historical strands to illuminate our current state. Keiller has distanced himself from the label psychogeography but it is easy to see why it still sticks as he unravels the complex layers creating “place”. Robinson celebrates the seemingly banal , which on closer inspection of course proves rather fascinating. However there is an implicit nostalgic tendency in much psychogeography. Visions of a brighter future – if they exist at all – are vague and rather conservative. Keiller avoids this; his investigation is a call to arms.
The landscape is not merely a palimpsest; if echoes resonate we should heed their lessons and view radical history as a catalyst. This is made clearer in the essay by geographer Doreen Massey which accompanies the film. Both Massey and Keiller share a pragmatic emphasis on the reality rather than aesthetic visions of space. There is a tangible rootedness in the country Robinson explores although he places it within an invisible web of energies. Massey’s words illuminate the previous Robinson in Space “amid the Ridley Scott images of world cities...the Baudrillard visions of hyperspace...much of life for many people, even in the heart of the First World, still consists of waiting in a bus shelter with your shopping for a bus that never comes.”
Power structures, and struggles, shape our landscape. The countryside is still viewed as a rural idyll or heritage attraction despite, for example, military ownership, bunkers hidden in the undergrowth and animals suffering in factory farms. Agri-businesses blur boundaries for the benefit of hungry urban bargain hunters. Can such places even be viewed as rural? The system creates a strange netherworld.
Robinson “believed that he could communicate with a network of non human intelligences that had sought refuge in marginal and hidden locations.” The peoplelessness of Keillers’ film is uncanny but telling: we have an urgent need to learn language of the landscape. There is meditativeness but not passivity in Keillers’ elegant visual style. It utilises languorous static shots of nature sound-tracked by tales of evictions, enclosures and PFI follies. There is dry wit accompanying despair; a celebration of the beauty and tenacity of lichen which mocks Blairite notions of modernity.
We are reminded Capitalism is not “natural”: markets destroy nature. For example, dependence on oil and its derivatives makes us complicit in war and desecration. The commodification of land, and labour at a local and global level is a recurring theme. Massey again: “in terms of power, the 'national' working class (of whatever ethnic origin) has no more ownership than does the recent migrant. There is common cause here.” Oppression and displacement transcend local borders, nationalism and race. To get to the heart of the problem we must “Ask not 'do you belong to this landscape?' but 'does this landscape belong to you.”
This is true wherever we are. As I type this the view from my window is dominated by “I heart Manchester” banners. These reveal something crucial about the (re)manufacturing of cities. The riots were the product of myriad factors; the frankly bizarre official response was a marketing campaign apparently suggesting we can shop our way out of inequality. I do indeed love my city but not uncritically. This is a place with a shameful public health record, acute deprivation outside the shiny core – and an abundance of buddleia.
We must beware the romance of ruins which so much contemporary art is enthralled with. Robinson is not simple propaganda; viewers need to unpick the code behind Keillers images. Effort is rewarded for although it may seem tempting to lose oneself in the striking visuals the narrator juxtaposes them with horror stories from the torture of Bartholomew Steer to David Kelly's suicide. Robinson’s little epiphanies rupture the comfortable hegemonic illusion and remind us of the political construction of landscape.
Massey conceptualises space as “a contemporaneous multiplicity of stories” this implies a dynamic process. We stand in landscape that tells an ongoing story. We can influence future development. We must consider the implications of our actions, and critically examine our perceptions of place, because they have a direct impact on what happens next. Robinson ponders whether financial crisis might be part of a “larger, historic shift” as the shadow of ecological, as well as economic, collapse hovers over the landscape due to the unnatural forces of Capitalism. A difficult question beautifully asked. I hope we can learn from the mutuality of lichen.
Details are here: http://www.cornerhouse.org/film/cinema-listings/robinson-in-ruins
Here's summat I wrote about the film after I first saw it (i really should get the website sorted shouldn't I so I get these things posted when I write them)
Reflections on Robinson in Ruins
Robinson in Ruins is Patrick Keiller’s third film – after London and Robinson in Space – exploring England through the travels of the enigmatic Robinson. His findings are imparted by a narrator, Vanessa Redgrave, who informs us our anti-hero is concerned England is suffering “a great malady, that I shall dispel… by making picturesque views, on journeys to sites of scientific and historic interest.” By coincidence (or not) his quest coincides with global economic crises and New Labours demise.
Keillers’ film is poetic rather than polemic but still didactic. His style contrasts with Adam Curtis's franticness, although both seek to weave together disparate political and historical strands to illuminate our current state. Keiller has distanced himself from the label psychogeography but it is easy to see why it still sticks as he unravels the complex layers creating “place”. Robinson celebrates the seemingly banal , which on closer inspection of course proves rather fascinating. However there is an implicit nostalgic tendency in much psychogeography. Visions of a brighter future – if they exist at all – are vague and rather conservative. Keiller avoids this; his investigation is a call to arms.
The landscape is not merely a palimpsest; if echoes resonate we should heed their lessons and view radical history as a catalyst. This is made clearer in the essay by geographer Doreen Massey which accompanies the film. Both Massey and Keiller share a pragmatic emphasis on the reality rather than aesthetic visions of space. There is a tangible rootedness in the country Robinson explores although he places it within an invisible web of energies. Massey’s words illuminate the previous Robinson in Space “amid the Ridley Scott images of world cities...the Baudrillard visions of hyperspace...much of life for many people, even in the heart of the First World, still consists of waiting in a bus shelter with your shopping for a bus that never comes.”
Power structures, and struggles, shape our landscape. The countryside is still viewed as a rural idyll or heritage attraction despite, for example, military ownership, bunkers hidden in the undergrowth and animals suffering in factory farms. Agri-businesses blur boundaries for the benefit of hungry urban bargain hunters. Can such places even be viewed as rural? The system creates a strange netherworld.
Robinson “believed that he could communicate with a network of non human intelligences that had sought refuge in marginal and hidden locations.” The peoplelessness of Keillers’ film is uncanny but telling: we have an urgent need to learn language of the landscape. There is meditativeness but not passivity in Keillers’ elegant visual style. It utilises languorous static shots of nature sound-tracked by tales of evictions, enclosures and PFI follies. There is dry wit accompanying despair; a celebration of the beauty and tenacity of lichen which mocks Blairite notions of modernity.
We are reminded Capitalism is not “natural”: markets destroy nature. For example, dependence on oil and its derivatives makes us complicit in war and desecration. The commodification of land, and labour at a local and global level is a recurring theme. Massey again: “in terms of power, the 'national' working class (of whatever ethnic origin) has no more ownership than does the recent migrant. There is common cause here.” Oppression and displacement transcend local borders, nationalism and race. To get to the heart of the problem we must “Ask not 'do you belong to this landscape?' but 'does this landscape belong to you.”
This is true wherever we are. As I type this the view from my window is dominated by “I heart Manchester” banners. These reveal something crucial about the (re)manufacturing of cities. The riots were the product of myriad factors; the frankly bizarre official response was a marketing campaign apparently suggesting we can shop our way out of inequality. I do indeed love my city but not uncritically. This is a place with a shameful public health record, acute deprivation outside the shiny core – and an abundance of buddleia.
We must beware the romance of ruins which so much contemporary art is enthralled with. Robinson is not simple propaganda; viewers need to unpick the code behind Keillers images. Effort is rewarded for although it may seem tempting to lose oneself in the striking visuals the narrator juxtaposes them with horror stories from the torture of Bartholomew Steer to David Kelly's suicide. Robinson’s little epiphanies rupture the comfortable hegemonic illusion and remind us of the political construction of landscape.
Massey conceptualises space as “a contemporaneous multiplicity of stories” this implies a dynamic process. We stand in landscape that tells an ongoing story. We can influence future development. We must consider the implications of our actions, and critically examine our perceptions of place, because they have a direct impact on what happens next. Robinson ponders whether financial crisis might be part of a “larger, historic shift” as the shadow of ecological, as well as economic, collapse hovers over the landscape due to the unnatural forces of Capitalism. A difficult question beautifully asked. I hope we can learn from the mutuality of lichen.
Friday, 1 February 2013
This weekend
first sunday is six this weekend! please join us for a loiter meeting at the victoria stature in piccadilly gardens at 2pm. there will be baked goods xx
Wednesday, 30 January 2013
Monday, 14 January 2013
The Art of Walking: Cornerhouse Course
Hello everyone, just realised I never shared some exciting news on the blog; I'm thrilled to be writing and delivering a course for The Cornerhouse. Its called The Art of Walking and includes a screening of Robinson in Ruins which is open to all. More details here:
http://www.cornerhouse.org/education/education-courses/the-art-of-walking
http://www.cornerhouse.org/education/education-courses/the-art-of-walking
Saturday, 5 January 2013
January 2013 - first first sunday of the year
hello everyone, apologies for the late notice but we will, of course, be celebrating first sunday in the traditional manner tomorrow, i'm delighted dale has agreed to curate and the adventure will start 2pm outside the friends meeting house, mount st. i'm not too sure what he has planned.... xx
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