Making Visual Arts VisibleGEORGINA COBURN has been out and about the meeting visual artists and organisations throughout the Highlands and Islands to prepare a report for HI~Arts. Georgina airs some of the issues raised during interviews, and invites feedback from Northings readers ahead of the final report and associated conference later this year |
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THE STORY SO FAR …. It began in late June with initial interviews conducted locally around Inverness-shire and then regionally in Caithness, Sutherland, Argyll & Bute, Easter Ross, Wester Ross and Orkney. |
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| To date I have conducted interviews with 132 artists, arts development officers, visual arts education workers and gallery owners. They have revealed a wealth of diversity, expertise and talent. Of those interviews, 126 have been face-to-face meetings, which have enabled direct contact with practitioners and their work in context. |
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A further six interviews (so far) have been conducted by telephone. Discussions usually ranged from one to three hours in length, allowing a thorough exploration of perceptions about the current state of play from individuals and groups. Without public art, the creation of public gallery spaces and long term commitment to the value of visual arts education, we potentially face the same future as our pastArtists and arts workers at varying stages of their profession, from those developing their skills to well established practitioners, have taken part. They represent a wide range of disciplines, including painting, sculpture, digital art and photography, printmaking, ceramics, textiles, fibre art and environmental art, with a notable and fluid exchange between art and craft practice at a professional level. |
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| The final report on “The Current State of the Visual Arts in the Highlands and Islands”, due in the first week of October, will inform a region wide Visual Arts conference scheduled by HI~ARTS in November. Active strategy will then be formed by the agency in response to the issues raised by the interviews and the regional conference. The aim is to recognise the strength and range of activity that is already taking place, and facilitate future development of Visual Art in the Highlands and Islands in an unprecedented way. |
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Throughout this process I have been overwhelmingly inspired by the integrity of art practice and the expansive nature of creative thinking in generating new possibilities. The artists I have interviewed have profoundly influenced how I view our cultural landscape. Artists are constantly challenging, reinterpreting and adding layers to that experience. They inform my questions and shape the course of interviews in direct response to their work. While there is great inspiration and innovation in the work currently being done by individuals, artist groups, private galleries and predominantly island based Arts Centres, there is still a distinct lack of value attached to Visual Arts practice other than a market value. |
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That cynicism has also been expressed in relation to the idea of this research project. Ultimately, the key to its value lies with the testimony of practitioners and their approach to creative problem solving, which is what artists do best. Artists, too, must value their own practice and make their voices heard. Lack of public exhibition and affordable workshop space, limited arts coverage and commentary, the difficulty of communication in a large geographic area, and access to visual arts education opportunities are several of the issues raised so far. These are current obstacles to creating expectation and support for visual arts activity necessary to weather the storms of changing local government policy. There is a danger in the current political climate that the true value of cultural entitlement will be served only by short term measures. Part-time underpaid cultural coordinator posts, arts development positions with no budgets and question marks hanging over their term, or isolated visual arts programming in schools do not leave any legacy to build upon when the political climate changes. This does not ultimately strengthen the value of art, its economic viability or its social impact in the long term. Without public art, the creation of public gallery spaces and long term commitment to the value of visual arts education, we potentially face the same future as our past. We begin work all over again to stage the same events which, however worthwhile, have no follow-through or continuity, draining valuable skills and talent away from the area. |
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Overall, what is emerging is a profound need for a redefinition of arts funding to encourage professional and independent practice and long term sustainability, a redefinition of “cultural strategy” based on visual arts practice not product, and a redefinition of what it means to be a Visual Artist in the Highlands and Islands. (Georgina Coburn can be contacted at georginacoburn@tiscali.co.uk) © Georgina Coburn, 2006 Associated Pages |
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16 Mar 2010 | |
09 Mar 2010 | |
19 Jan 2010 |
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March 2010 Editorial |
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