Strange yellow circles appeared in car parks around town
Clues began to emerge elsewhere and on social media
Meanwhile in a basement under Greyfriars Church other painting was going on
On Friday 17th October the Stove members and other members of the public gathered on Level Four of the underground NCP car park for the Annual General Meeting of The Stove Network
Hannah Brackston and Alex Wilde of Open Jar Artists Collective and Stephen Pritchard of Dot To Dot Active Arts led the discussion that followed the formal business of the AGM
The Stove Network Board worked hard
Stan and Cara thought hard
Craig Patterson from Burns Cafe served Stovies from the back of a pick-up
The Doonhame Derby Doll Usherettes arrived
Crucial chat
Everyone helped convert the space into a cinema
Eating popcorn whilst watching ‘How to Start a Revolution’
The next day people played street games on the top deck of the carpark
The skaters were busy on Level 1
On Level 2 ‘Mirrorlands’ by Mark Lyken and Emma Dove was showing on two walls simultaneously
On Level 3 was Mark and Emma’s ‘GabCab’ in which people were filmed talking about where they would like the taxi to take them
Emma Dove operating ‘GabCab’
Entering level 4
Where Alice Francis made popcorn
…and Max Fox made hot chocolate
Parking Space cinema – screening ‘Shell’
Screening of movies by Mutual Motion (films made by local skaters)…watched by local skaters
Parking Space – by The Stove Network and the people of Dumfries
Lead Artist: Katie Anderson
Stove Artist Team; Matt Baker, Hannah Brackston, Moxie DePaulitte, Doonhame Derby Dolls, Emma Dove, Dumfries Skaters, Alice Francis, Max Fox, Andy Jardine, Mark Lyken, Will Levi Marshall, Debs McDowall, Mutual Motion, Stephen Pritchard, Colin Tennant, John Wallace, Ailsa Watson, Alex Wilde
Photography: Cate Ross, Colin Tennant, Galina Walls
Thanks to: Members and Board of The Stove Network, Stuart and Sean at NCP, SHAX, Speedy Hire
Howdy, my name is Mark Lyken, and I’m an audio and visual artist who, until very recently—10 days ago, in fact—was based in the sunny South Side of Glasgow. Regular collaborator, artist filmmaker Emma Dove, and I have moved down, lock, stock, and barrel full of equipment, to Dumfries to begin a joint six-month public art residency for the lovelies at the Stove Network. We’ll be posting regular rambling updates, sharing discoveries, and hopefully stimulating discussion over the course of our time here.
Now, the thing about residency applications is that, at the point of writing, it’s dangerously easy to suggest relocating for the duration of a project largely because the part of your brain that deals in that kind of reality is sporting sunglasses and sipping Mojitos, quietly confident that it’s highly unlikely your application will be successful. This is the same part of your brain you’ll find waving its metaphorical arms in a blind panic when you get a call from Matt Baker actually offering you the gig.
I’m joking, of course, mostly. In actual fact, the move down the road went like clockwork, and by Saturday afternoon, we were unpacking the very last box, chucking a tent, torch, and radio in the car, and heading for the Sanctuary 2014 event at Galloway Forest Dark Sky Park. Although we were a bit knackered post-move, it was a really inspiring event with a relaxed vibe, soundtracked over the course of 24 hours by a multitude of different roving radios all tuned into The Dark Outside FM broadcast from the hilltop Murray’s monument.
All the different models of radio being carried around added very interesting modulations and directionality to the music being received. You might, for instance, walk past a stationary boombox with decent bottom end with your own trebly handheld radio and become a momentary human high-pass filter as you moved in and out of someone else’s earshot. Doppler effects abound—in short, marvellous. There is something about listening to (largely) electronic music when surrounded by very large swathes of nature (or better yet a forest if you happen to have one handy) that seems very fitting. I know it works equally well in urban environments, but I do love a bit of electric with my organic. I imagine this is why wooden panelling on synthesisers just feels so damn right.
But I digress… Personal highlights for us were catching Geoff Barrow of Portishead fame, along with fellow Drokk band member Ben Salisbury, playing a short live performance (that slotted into a ten-minute space in the Dark Outside FM playlist) in front of Robbie Coleman’s circular blue neon “enclosure” sculpture (with added dive-bombing bats). Throughout the night, Glasgow label Broken 20’s TVO Orchestra and Erstlaub, along with friends and audience members, performed a partly improvised, partly self-generating set from 10 pm to 6 am. Yup, that’s 10 pm to 6 am. Unfortunately, it was a cloudy night, so you couldn’t see the stars, but that didn’t make the location and the event any less epic. Roll on the EAFS Environmental Arts Festival in 2015.
So, down to business. “Who the hell are you two and what are you doing here?” Well, our collaborative practice involves film, music, sound art, painting, and sculpture, which gives us a number of ways to respond to an environment, place, or situation. At the core of our work is an interest in exploring relationships to place. Our most recent work—“Mirror Lands,” a film and sound installation for the “Imagining Natural Scotland” initiative—explored the delicate balance between nature, industry, and rural life on the Black Isle in the Highlands. This piece focused on the local area of the University of Aberdeen’s Lighthouse Field Station in Cromarty, finding radically different relationships to place even within that small geographical stretch. During our short time here to date, we have found that events and connections seem to be spread across a much wider area, and we have been wondering how that might affect people’s overarching ‘sense of belonging’.
We have always had a vicarious relationship to Dumfries and Galloway through a large circle of friends in Glasgow originating from D&G. What seems to single this bunch out from other friends, other than a worrying tendency for fire poi, is a stronger-than-average connection with home. Whether that is simply popping “down the road” for the weekend or just in general conversation, home seems to be ever-present. We are at the very beginnings of our project, but the idea of migrations to and from Dumfries feels like an interesting starting point.
What drew us to the Stovies in the first place was their refreshingly broad definition of public art, and true to that initial impression, our remit for this project is wonderfully open, the only real proviso being that the work should be relevant to the people of Dumfries. Our process is a very intuitive and socially engaged one, and we work best when there is time to gather as much material as possible and see what emerges.
Whatever form our research and final work takes, it will debut at the opening of The Stove’s HQ and Creative Hub at 100 High Street, Dumfries, once renovations are complete next year.
It feels like we have arrived at a very exciting time, and we hope we can add to this growing buzz. More project-specific guest blog posting to follow, and hopefully see you at the Stove’s “Parking Space” event on the 17th and 18th of this month.
Those who follow the work of Mike Inglis will be very intrigued and excited to see the image below. Mike’s work is all about layers of exposure, and his relationship with public space is often a troubled one. There is an aspect of his work that involves the 3D assembly of very private shrine works. Mike has often talked about ways that he could bring this side of his work into the public domain alongside his paste-ups and graphic work. Maybe Dumfries is about to see something very significant in Scottish art history…
One of Scotland’s leading public/street artists, Mike has been researching ‘outsiders’ and ‘custodians’ in Dumfries since May 2012. He has worked with community groups and historical information ranging from the execution of nine women accused of witchcraft in 1659 to the groundbreaking therapeutic community at the former Crichton Hospital.
Mike’s work around Dumfries will include two ‘window shrines’ and six ‘paste-up street shrines’ – these will begin to appear in the town centre on 4th November and will be visible for as long as the good folk of Dumfropolis choose to leave them unmolested.
The Dumfries and Galloway Standard has had its reporters out and about:
“It wouldn’t be the first town you’d think of if you were asked to name a fashion hotspot of the world. But thanks to visual artist Lisa Gallacher, a collection of bespoke pieces created and inspired by Doonhamers and their town will be exhibited here next month.”
Fabric based in Paling’s Window by Lisa Gallacher
TRDM: Dumfries is one of eight creative projects specially commissioned by the artists’ collective The Stove for their exhibition InBetween: Dumfries. The project will culminate in a collection of “Dumfries Inspired” made-to-measure garments being shown at The Stove’s base on the town’s High Street throughout the beginning of November. The Dumfries-born, internationally acclaimed artist has collaborated with ten local residents from all walks of life to create an item of clothing, representing what the town means to them.
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