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Output details

34 - Art and Design: History, Practice and Theory

Cardiff Metropolitan University (joint submission with University of South Wales and University of Wales Trinity Saint David)

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Output 14 of 42 in the submission
Title and brief description

Everybody Knows this is Nowhere

Type
M - Exhibition
Venue(s)
Millennium Court Art Centre, Portadown, Craigavon, Northern Ireland, 2009, Howard Gardens Gallery, Cardiff, 2010.
Year of first exhibition
2009
Number of additional authors
0
Additional information

The works in this body of practice are a series of paintings and the performance process which generated the series. The work was commissioned by the Millennium Court Art Centre in Craigavon, a new town (early 1970s) in Northern Ireland, as an artistic exploration of the formation and consequent psychogeographic experience of a new town. The research considers how we engage with specific natural and man-made environments, especially the civic, institutional and architectural structures that have attempted to respond to or deal with the political conflict in an area. The decision to use painting, and work through it in a way which was informed by a performance aesthetic, was a continuation of Stitt's interest in painting as performance trace. Cycling became part of the performance because a cycle network was an integral part of the town planning, designed to separate pedestrians and cyclists from traffic routes. The artist's psychogeographic experience - the study of specific effects of the geographical environment, consciously organised or not, on the emotions and behaviour of individuals - was carried out through cycling in the ‘new city’ of Craigavon in Northern Ireland through a series of site visits and explorations via the city’s cycle network. This arrangement created a transition between the artist's cycling experience, location, and the body-before-the-canvas. Cycling with the performing body drew to light the nature of the cycle network as a structure of transition, creating intervals between light and dark, e.g. going through underpasses, and safety and danger, e.g. isolated stretches, and these became competing or opposing states on the canvas, e.g., geometric forms overlain with smeary, industrial washes.

Interdisciplinary
-
Cross-referral requested
-
Research group
None
Proposed double-weighted
No
Double-weighted statement
-
Reserve for a double-weighted output
No
Non-English
No
English abstract
-