Speaker Programme – Arika

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

Well, since my last post and prior deletion of all blog entries, my attempt at starting afresh has been non-existent. However, Louise is making me feel guilty as she has been posting away.

I currently do not have much to say. Uni has been quite busy, considering it is only the end of Week 3, it feels a lot longer. As part of our speakers programme we had a talk by Patrick Elliot, the curator of Tracey Emin’s retrospective at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art. He gave a balanced and honest account of Tracey Emin which was refreshing to listen to. As yet I have not had the chance to visit the exhibition but plan to do so before it closes. I am unsure whether I will like it, mixed reactions from people I know, so it’s hard to predict what side I will fall on.

Our second talk was by Arika who are behind the Kill Your Timid Notion exhibition and festival at the DCA, which is basically about sound & vision, exploring the relationships between what you see and hear. It quite good, the guy giving the talk is clearly enthusiastic about what he is doing and made it an interesting talk. He did say “I put it to you” enough times to be noticeable though, which was rather amusing. The exhibition side of KYTN has, firstly, Paul Sharits’ Epileptic Seizure Comparison; explanation here which I found quite interesting – if you did not know you had epilepsy you would after viewing this! Clearly uncomfortable on first entering on both eyes and ears, but after a while my brain sort of got used to it and it stopped bothering me as such, although the flickering of the film did make me stop looking directly at it. My oncoming state of “calm” surrounding my viewing of it made me decide I should leave, as I was getting slightly unnerved. The second exhibit is Figment Light by Kjell Bjørgeengen; simple description is that it consists of “white noise” both visually on numerous tv screens and the sound; better explanation here. I liked the sound in this one, and having just come out of the previous, it is definitely a calming in comparison. Sounds wise I liked it, visually I was less converted, I would have been happy with experiencing the sound minus the TVs being in sight, because the visual association basically did nothing for me. Seemingly there is another exhibit by Felix Hess, but that might be where the DCA could signpost things a little better, because one I did not know it was there, and two, where on earth it is in the building!

The festival part of it has been ongoing over this weekend, and I’m hoping to catch a couple of things tomorrow night, namely Francisco Lopez and Seth Cluett, so lets hope I manage to get into town for it.