Art in the CityNORMAN MACLEOD temporarily foresook Taigh Chearsabhagh to cast an expert eye over the recently ended Liverpool Biennial |
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THE LIVERPOOL BIENNIAL began in 1999, or so the catalogue says, but I’m still scratching my head to why it is on in 2004 and not 2005. Having been lucky enough to secure funding from HI-Arts to visit Britain’s best biennial (pronounced ‘beeinally’ in Scouse), I wound my way from Lochmaddy on the last week of the event. Not having been to Liverpool before and having only heard the stories – “they’ll steal your wheels”, “you’ll get mugged” – I was pleasantly surprised (although to be on the safe side I did lock my car away for a couple of days). |
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This maybe sums up the gut feeling that I got in my stay in Liverpool. It was by no means perfect, and I think that the committee organising the event would be the first to admit this. They are nowhere near what is shown in Venice (pronounced ‘Veenice’ in Scouse) but should this be what they are aspiring to? They certainly have their own identity and a grass roots way of doing things, so I am certainly looking forward to another visit in 2008 when Liverpool becomes the Euroepan Centre of Culture. The use of different venues throughout the city was interesting, to the extent that you wondered if some of the work was graffiti or was it art – or is it all art? |
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“Beethoven, the Headbangers by Amanda Coogan was compulsive viewing when a volunteer choir headbanged for ten minutes to the stirring strains of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony.There was no way that I could visit the fifty plus venues in my stay, but I certainly got near the half-way point. Unfortunately some of the smaller independent venues had decided to shut up shop for the last few days of the biennially. |
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The Tate Liverpool Bluecoat ‘Trigger’, an eight-minute loop multi-channel projection by Wong Hoy Cheong re-enacted the event in 1954 when Roy Rogers, his wife and their horse Trigger stayed in Liverpool’s Adelphi Hotel following an appearance at the city’s Empire Theatre. As the singing cowboy lay in bed with the flu, he was paid a visit by this horse Trigger who had made his way through the hotel and up to his room. This was after he had signed the hotel register with a pencil between his teeth. |
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Open Eye “Certainly the Biennial has a cultural and financial impact on the city of Liverpool. Can it happen in Scotland? Can it happen in Inverness?”The Walker Lime Street Station Peter Johansson Certainly the Biennial has a cultural and financial impact on the city of Liverpool. Can it happen in Scotland? Can it happen in Inverness? I would certainly like to think so. © Norman MacLeod, 2004 |
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16 Mar 2010 | |
09 Mar 2010 | |
19 Jan 2010 |
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March 2010 Editorial |
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