Saturday 11 December 2010

My art project 2009 and background

The idea of creating a contemporary art installation developed between 12th July 2002 and 29th April 2003 and led to knowing how I was going to use the rest of my life after reaching the age of sixty five in March 1964

On July 12th the Baltic Contemporary art centre opened in Gateshead on the banks of the river Tyne and during the day there was a build up of information on regional news programmes leading to a series of special programmes on BBC 2.

That such a project had been developed in Gateshead was amazing and signalled a significant change in the cultural experience of living in Tyne and Wear. The creation of the centre from a building which had been a flour Mill was in fact part of a strategy by forward looking politicians, development agencies and those interested in cultural activities, to transform how the region saw itself and how others saw the region, and which had is roots, perhaps unknowingly, with the ending of great industries of the North in the mid 1980’s, as coal mining, steel making and ship building all collapsed and then disappeared from Northumbria.

Then in the 1990’s while the development of the car assembly plant of Nissan outside of Sunderland provided employment for a major workforce the transformation of the central areas of the city of Newcastle and the newly created city of Sunderland was kick started by the creation of two new universities, based on existing institutions of further education. Whereas now the ancient University of Newcastle provides for 20000 fulltime students in long standing buildings in the city centre, Northumbria University in Newcastle has 300000 full time students and an iconic new building complex with a new bridge over the central highway connecting the old and new complexes. Similarly in Sunderland a new complex on the banks of the River Wear has been created with the consequence that there are also over 20000 full time students and in all three instances students come from all over the world. In Gateshead as in South and North Tyneside, as well as in Sunderland and Newcastle colleges of further education have been developed bringing together six form colleges, study for degrees and other part time courses in association with business and industry, including for apprenticeships and for lifelong learning, providing over 50000 places and running alongside the continuing College of Art and design in Newcastle(a range of applied art courses are provided at Sunderland University together with South Tyneside College.

This growth in higher and further education has a combined teaching and administrative staff in excess of 25000, radically changing the population structure and transforming the centres of the cities and towns, creating new residential communities and developing the provision of food and recreation activities for primarily the contemporary generations of 16-25 year olds.

This in turn has aided tourism making Newcastle the second most popular city to London for a short break. In addition to two Major football stadiums seating 100000, there has been multi million pounds expenditure on two existing theatres enabling performances from international touring companies and a multi million pound transformation of a third theatre, the developments of arenas and concert hall halls for all kinds events and with the creation of two major new concert halls in an iconic building adjacent to the Baltic on the Gateshead side of the Tyne river, and the promotion of range of festivals, including separate modern and traditional jazz events. There are now five multiplex cinemas and one specialist international film theatre, a world class Olympic standard swimming pool, casinos and the continued development of the largest and outdoor shopping complex in Europe.

This package was intended to make Newcastle and Gateshead the European centre of culture for 2008, but had to settle for runner up to Liverpool. This was the vision which the Baltic was to fit in alongside a score of art galleries and museums. It is also fair to say that the majority of older local residents were bemused, curious, under whelmed and sceptical.

In discussing the Baltic building and the opening exhibition on the July Friday Newsnight Arts Review programme, Germaine Greer summed up my subsequent reaction on visiting. It was an important new development but there was no WOW. This was art of the mind, clever art, and art of contemporary skills and materials, but I was not moved, challenged or stimulated by anything experienced. This reflected my personality and interests but I was aware from the reactions of many of those visiting, that I was not alone in this reaction.

Between the opening of the Baltic and making my first visit I went on a mini trip which included a visit to the recreation of wartime Britain at Eden Camp in Yorkshire, to Bolsover Castle in the midlands and Eltham Palace in London. I had watched Yorkshire play Durham at a Cricket match in Leeds and taken a thirty mile car journey to watch the film, No Mans Land which trailed a film on the Life of Jackson Pollock, to be shown a few weeks later.

I had seen some Jackson Pollock original works at the London Tate decades before and my knowledge of him as an artist was based on a Melvin Bragg programme which had become distant memory. Although I had never experienced his brooding depression, the binge drinking and binge sex, there was something about the man and his life which struck a chord rather than having empathy with his work output. However I was filled with the need to understand why some visual artists devoted themselves to work which aroused public ridicule, destroying themselves as balanced people, experiencing family and personal breakdown and failing to integrate their lives with society generally.

A few days after seeing the film I made a special visit to my birth and care mothers who lived together 300 miles away on the southern outskirts of London, and decided to try and purchase a book or two which might help to understand the nature of contemporary art. Over the previous three years I had travelled by car to visit and assist in their care over a period of a week and on average once a month. This time I travelled by train and there was time before the evening departure to visit the bookshops in the Charing Cross Road. By good fortune research on the internet I had decided on two books which were to transform my life, but could not find either until visiting the London branch of the famous Oxford Bookshop, Blackwell’s. I still could not find the books in the art section although on checking the computer there were copies of both in stock. A young assistant explained that it had been his idea to create a separate section on contemporary art and I was shown where the two works were located: After Modern Art 1945-2000 by David Hopkins, Oxford Art History, and Concepts of Modern Art, From Fauvism to Postmodernism edited by Nikos Stangos in the World of Art Series published by Thames and Hudson.

On return train journey back I concentrated on two chapters in the second book: Conceptual Art by Roberta Smith and Post Modernism and the art of identity by Christopher reed. These two chapters had as great an effect on my life as had previously reading two of the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal reports as an adolescent school boy in 1954 on the recommendation of our Jesuit teacher of modern history and then rereading the Sermon on the Mount again shortly after leaving school in 1955 having experienced my first loss of faith in the Catholic Church. These readings had led to embarking upon the Gandhian teachings of Satyagraha and to deciding to spend six months in prison rather than accepting a recognisance to stop non violent protests against the British possession and potential use of weapons of mass destruction on 1960.

There were two reasons why I found these two chapters of such significance. Over the previous five decades I had thought of many things which others had transformed into physical works of art. I had tried to play the piano and then the clarinet, I had tried to draw and paint. I had longed to try creating objects from clay or in bronze but lacked the means and knowledge. I relished the company of artists who were part of the peace movement and devoured programmes and books about individual lives and lifestyles. On leaving prison I had written a play which the Readers at the Royal Court had felt of sufficient interest to suggest to the company that they look at what else I had created. I had not, and had then accepted a place at Ruskin College and then switched to the University Diploma in Public and Social Administration and professional social work practice. I directed my creative energy into this work while always nagging away was the wish to create something which expressed my soul and vision of the world. It was not until attending an international management college in the mid 1980 that my personality was psychometrically tested and I came to understand the nature of my creativity and its impact on relationships, personal and professional.

For several years I harnessed the insights gained in ways which resulted in greater creative productivity but channelled in such a way that I also became more satisfied with my life. When what had become an all embracing career came to an end I wrote a novel which again received some encouragement as well as rejection. Because of the unusual nature of my childhood and upbringing, which had thrown up problems akin to dyslexia, autism and Asperger’s I had always had difficulties in communicating what I felt and thought. Not knowing who was my biological mother until attending school and never being sure if the individual said by relatives when I was an adolescent to my father, I had more than the usual uncertainties about who I was. While always being heterosexually interested and inclined, I was also aware that an upbringing by three single women, only one of whom had been married, had given me a greater feminine personality and outlook than appeared to be usual for the boys and males of my immediate experience. Just when I was comfortable with my sense of identity and just before my sixtieth birthday I learnt for the first time that my father had been a senior priest in the Catholic church and this his family were from Malta, although similar to my mother he had was born in Gibraltar, but had then been taken back to Malta for his education and subsequent training for the priesthood. This changed my perception of self and my experience to that moment.

Reading those two chapters against this background, became a revelatory experience in two ways. For the first time I had a clear vision about the development of contemporary and the point to which it had reached, and I understood myself as a creative artist and for the time in my life all the dots became connected. I was not confident about producing work or certain about the form of work but I commenced to reorganise my life as a working contemporary artist.

However at the very point when I was ready to devote myself full time into creative work activity three developments stopped me at the point reached. I was invited to give evidence on behalf of sixty claimants in a contested Class action in the High Court and it was several months before the case was settled out of court with a settlement satisfactory to the those involved, and to their lawyers. My birth mother who had severe short term memory loss with psychosis was admitted into residential care when her sister who had been my care mother, was admitted to hospital against her expressed wishes because of medical and nursing negligence and died as a consequence of a secondary hospital based infection within a matter of days. My marriage of over thirty five years failed.

At one level the combination of these three developments led to an emotional breakdown and a re-examination and re-evaluation of my life, but it also changed my everyday perception in a way not experienced since leaving prison in 1960, seeing the film Jazz on a Summer’s day and listening to records of Beethoven’s Piano Sonatas and String quartets, first heard during a brief stay at an open prison camp in the second month of the experience.

And then at the end of April 2003 I travelled by coach to London to stay at the former home of my birth mother while visiting her on a daily basis in residential care. The journey from the north east to London by coach is long taking, on average over seven hours, but it usually quieter and more comfortable than standard class train travel. On the outward journey I read Wladyslaw Szpilman's, "The Pianist," after seeing the film, and where the extract from the diary of Captain Wilm Hosenfield was as moving and of interest as the life of Wladyslaw. The Pianist is book about someone who survived the ghetto to become an international artist. I was reminded that although I knew I was a creative, I was not functioning as one, or engaged in artistic activity. It was in this frame of mind that before returning home I made an early morning visit to see my mother and then took the train to London to visit the Saatchi 100 exhibition at his gallery, then at the former County Hall building on the South Bank close to Waterloo railway station and the giant Millennium Ferris Wheel, The London Eye, passing the Dali sculptures and exhibition of his work. Unusually I can remember most details of that day, in part because I made notes and then converted them to a laptop and desktop and have written of the experience several times.

The impact of the Saatchi 100 works which changed British Art was intoxicating, sending me whooping with joy at the translation of concepts into a fairyland of heaven and hell and with the dramatic awareness that I had come home.

In one large area there were two works by the same individual. One I had some awareness because it had attracted media attention. Superficially it was a bed with objects but to me it was a naked soul who had looked into the abyss. Above the bed the artist had crucified herself. When you look into the abyss said Nietzsche, the abyss looks into you. The artist was Tracey Emin. I quickly made my way to where my travel bag was stored and retrieved a notebook and then seeking permission from a security steward sat on the floor and wrote down what I thought and felt. There was sadness and joy, empathy and remembrance of my own experience. I rushed around seeing everything, delighted that among the present day there was some Bratby and I made a note to reread his two novels, 'Breakdown' and Breakfast and Elevenses,' published in 1960 and 1961 and read for the first time in 1963 after buying them second hand.

On my way out I bought Stephen White's disappointing cleaned up photo of the Bed together '100 Works that changed British Art' hardback edition, and giggled at the audacity of deciding that I would go home to produce the hundred and first work, blissfully unaware of the extent to which the wider concept of 101 was already in active circulation.

Later I discovered there were 98000 Google references to Ms Emin and I read several hundred of these, printing many for further reflection. I acquired a copy of. ‘This is another Place', Modern art Oxford, and 'The Art of Tracey Emin, Thames and Hudson, edited by Mandy Merck and Chris Townsend, The Tracey Emin Video and by luck was able to make a tape of some TV Programmes.

I was not dispirited to learn that most of what I had recently been thinking and feeling had been thought and worked through before, by others, especially after reading But is it Art? by Cynthia Freeland, bought at the Tate Modern, that same afternoon. I was confronted by the notion that everything I now thought had been thought and worked through by others before and with greater clarity, and that everything I wanted to do, had already been done better. It was as if I have lived in a parallel universe but unlike Dr Who or Primeval, I was able to now successfully cross over. This sense of enlightenment and satisfied beingness was reinforced by my first visit that same afternoon to the Tate Modern which like the Baltic has a Millennium pedestrian Bridge outside linking to the main areas of the city.

On leaving school in 1955 at the age of sixteen years I had worked in a building around the corner from the Tate Gallery and went regularly to look at exhibits during lunch times. I had been much affected by the work of Rodin more than anyone else, and continued to make visits when I left the office in 1957, including the Painting and Sculpture of a decade 1954-1964 exhibition. As with the Bratby at the Saatchi there was some Stanley Spencer at Tate modern which reminding of the impact of Gulley Jimpson, in Joyce Carey's ‘the Horses Mouth ‘and the wallow and slosh of paint. However I was to take a very different route because of other work on show that day about which I had no previous knowledge.

The Saatchi visit had focussed on the work of Tracey Emin but her work and that of others, revealed who I was and who I had been but not what I was going to do. I found the physical nature of objects fun and impressive although presumed that in some instances other people had been employed to translate the ideas of the artists into what I experienced such as the room filled with liquid and distorting balance and creating the dual image as that when looking across a lake; the underground map of people that influenced; the room of distorted instruments, come to mind, as well as the installation of hell bringing back the memory of the Rodin Gates. however these and others had little impact on what I decided to do and have done.

On arrival at the Tate Modern I had found a seat overlooking the former Turbine Room where people were laying on the floor looking upwards at something I could not then see, and I eat a late lunch of home made salami sandwiches, two purchased crème caramels and drank a can a diet coke. I was then ready to explore and found the experience overpowering, but instantly knew what I was going to do and why, excited at the possibility but also afraid that there would not be time for me to achieve something of value, and also afraid there would be time, but I would fail, as I had failed in several important aspects of my life. I also realised that a chronicle of aspiration and failure was as valid as one of achievement and success.

After the meal I took a lift to the first public access floor and the rest as they say has become my daily experience. Several artists moved and challenged piling on one layer of WOW and revelation upon another. I became so excited that I abandoned a visit to the theatre or cinema that evening and returned to the apartment to develop the idea precipitated by the work of four artists in particular. Through their work I found a portal between my world of sixty four years and theirs. I knew not only who I was had been but what I was going to do, and have done so for close on six years.

Top of the list remains Bruce Nauman. On the first visit it was Good Boy Bad boy which first caught my attention but I did not stay for the full session and it was only the second visit which confirmed the impact. On that first visit it was his photos of the concept work where he had created a living area as an exhibited installation and then exchanged objects from his flat with those which he had put on exhibition which echoed my feeling that my work had to cover everything that I had of my life. I had long since rejected the convention biographical work which usually centres on the aspect for which the individual had become well known rather than the totality of their experience. The idea of keeping and putting everything about me into one situation was an extension of this concept. Ideally I should move everything I own into a working art space, while retaining some areas for privacy, the objects and the work activity and the output should be able to be viewed by anyone interested at any time both through a physical presence and also via the internet and the web cams. The use by Bruce Nauman and others of neon lights and colourful pieces at both places influenced the decision to create artman signature card with glitter and also to use glitter on the spine of volumes of card work.

On a second visit I listened to the full Good and Bad Boy performance of sixty minutes, fifty two seconds, and apart from the hypnotic musicality, there was something more profound: a dialectic dialogue about gender and identity. Well that was my reaction. There was something about me in his work or me putting myself into his work. My third visit to the Tate was exclusive for the Nauman installation in the Turbine Hall. The installation comprised speakers on either side of the long side walls fixed at intervals. I had with me a voice recorder which picked up background sounds so I walked from speaker to speaker the length wise listening to each cycle and making my comments as I walked between. I then transferred this recording to a laptop and must check if this is so later. My actions that day attracted some attention from other visitors. This was an important stage because I felt my experience was an instinctive personal performance. It was what Nauman’s work needed to appreciate his experience but which also became a different work through my experience .

On the first visit the Tate Modern had two areas, booths, where it was possible to watch recordings of Sarah Lucas, including street performing which must have taken great courage. I did not set out for my visit to become a performance nor did I attempt to communicate what I was doing with anyone else. However it was a taste of what being a performing artist must be like and confirmed he difficult I would have in putting idea into practice.

I was also much influence by the Joseph Beuys, not so much the work available abut but audio information about his life and beliefs, something which I followed up later, I was also able to follow up the visit with internet searches.

The most important influence that day in terms of the precise form my work would take was that of Hanne Darbovan who present a series of numbered cards.

For the rest of the day and most of the night I found it difficult to contain myself filled the certainty about what I wanted to do and how I would do it. I then made lots of notes on the coach journey back the following day. During the period 1960 2003 I had accumulated substantial records of aspects of my life. The material was not comprehensive and a lot if was confidential and must remain so but it would form the basis for recreating the experience of my life in the context of the world external to me.

I decided to recreate my life from birth 3.9.39 to the age of 65 in the form of A4 cards with one card representing every hour, over 600000 cards, and make them into sets of 24 some 24000, which would be bound in volumes, level arch files and in boxes and sealed filing cabinets. Each card would be numbered and each set signed together with front card made with glitter glue. The Artman and signature cards would themselves become part of the total card output with their own numbering.

As a starter working framework I divided the 600000 cards between those which reflected the work process and its development, those with covered events together with others with covered information. There would also be creative work sets and those to be treated as confidential as well as those which covered lists, of books, of audio records, of various activities including theatre and cinema films and of the project itself which was called 101. I selected black folders and black boxes for development and creative work. Blue for events and information records and red for confidential. And that is what I have done since, some completing over 8000 sets and close on 200000 cards

The project has evolved in various ways Early on I bought a digital camera to record the process of creating the work as well as the environment in which it was stored and as a bonus the camera included a memory stick for taking photos or short film clips. Although over the first two years I created 20 hours of films, these remain unedited and I have concentrated on taking stills of every completed card as well as photo essays of present experience reflecting on the past with some 310000 photos created, only a small proportion of which have been converted into A4 cards. As a substitute for talking direct to anyone wanting to view what I was doing I created 101 90 mins audio tapes.
Of the 8000 sets over 1700 are confidential although only a proportion of these are destined to be secured in large four draw black cabinets. Those in display units or red boxes will need to be kept within viewable but securely locked containers, enabling them to become public access if consent is given or the individuals concerned die.

Those which must remain confidential will be sealed with a welded black metal cover once full, (I am using ten at present but will need another ten to twenty more when the work is completed). The idea of sealing into black cabinets developed during 2003. The first influence was the black monoliths in the films 2001 and 2010 which represent the original and ongoing creation of the universe and therefore the ongoing recreation of my individual experience within the known universe. The second influence was another German artist and sculptor, Eva Grubinger who used black and exhibited at the Baltic September November 2003 and commented that black projected something sinister, secretive and menacing.

It was in May 2006 that I decide to created a Blog site on AOL 101 Public and Private Art 2003-2012 with the first posted on 14.05.2006 called Fragments of time as a substitute for audio recordings and where I was able to add photographs of development work and other activities some 40000 over the course of the next 11 months with the last writings posted on 30.03.2007 “Just another Day parts 1 and 2” and where on the penultimate date 29.03.2007 the writing is entitled MySpace 101.

AOL had discontinued this programme but the photos are among over 325 CD’s and DVD disks, with the writing some of the 350 data disks covering the Amstrad 215 and 512 and primitive multi media desktop as well contemporary desk and lap tops, as well as lists and individual prints contained in the 2250 development sets. The reason for brining to an end posting on AOl was the discovery of MySpace, having checked out information on artists appearing at the X factor live show in Newcastle and finding that several had posted pieces of their music on the MySpace site which I joined originally intending to have 101 friends, 101 Blogs, 101 best books best music etc but which evolved into 100.75 to indicate work i progress and to mark the 100 and three quarters years of the life of my birth mother.

An invitation to join a new MySpace site linking artists and their work, the closure of AOL and a request for information about my work from another new friend led to deciding to revise what had previously been written about how I came to do what I do. I joined Google Blogs about a year ago without posting anything and had forgotten doing so until deciding to set up a duplicate system of posting which would also provide the opportunity to collate and review everything written before since April 2006 as I approach my three score years and ten.

In doing this aspect of my work I am influenced by the French performance artist and creative Sophie Calle whose work Exquisite Pain was performed by the Forced Theatre Company at the Newcastle Playhouse. This work involves the repetitive re-examination of one traumatic episode in her life over the course of the year and how times gradually changed her perspective, juxtaposed with recounts of the experience of different types of pain by others. The performers reproduced her work which made it into an historical period piece rather than contemporary art which would have qualified they had changed the sequencing of the juxtaposition. Clearly it was essential to keep to her changed perception but a variation and rewriting of the reactions of the experience of friends, even if re written or reorganised by Sophie would have kept the work contemporary as art and as theatre. I made the point in the after performance discussion but was not appreciated.

I have consider exhibiting a component of the project from time to time. In 2004 I wrote a statement about the interaction between development as a creative, the loss of catholic faith, the search for spirituality and the impact on identity of the discoveries about my biological father. 101 in Black and white is a 400 page work badly printed for my by the Daily Mail including 101 Black and White photos. The 101 copies are contained in a series of black and white boxes stacked three at a time to represent the day month and year of birth, 9 (3 x 3) 3 and 39 (1x3 and 3x3) and two sets of framed photo cards, one set the 101 photos and one set 101 states about my experience related to the book.

I decided against exhibition until I had resolved official enquires into the preventable and premature death of my care mother by the authorities and completed a work about my relationship with birth and care mothers and their lives and backgrounds. I have extensively researched their family on their father’s side going back to the 1500’s in the Wiltshire and a two hundred page study of the family up to 1901 census has been completed and published as a public access version in association with several other family history researchers who covered different branches of a family taking individuals to the USA and Canada, Australia and South Africa in addition to Gibraltar. My mother‘s grand father was the fourth of five sons born in succession after the birth of seven sisters in succession and my mother was the last survivor of a family of seven sisters and four brothers with one other reaching the age of 98 and my care mother 93. I have completed a 200 page work on the life of my care mother with limited circulation in addition to becoming part of 100.75. I have changed my mind about continuing with the work about my care and biological mothers and my interaction with them and to concentrate over the next five years on a remake of the 1993 completed novel together with a play about life in a residential establishment for those with severe memory loss and the interaction between their past lives, their present existence and their relatives. Although I live in a ten roomed property with a loft I have reached the point, only a third way through, makes it difficult to manage the work in the space and display as envisaged. There is also the escalation in the price of card doubling over five years and in folders and transparent pockets although the price of printing ink has significantly reduced through on line services.

I am reminded of my mortality with the passage of years and it has long since ceased to matter if anyone else is interested or shares enthusiasm for what I am doing and why, or if the installation will be completed and experienced by others. What has come to matter is being able to live the dream and being me, a creative artist working. Yes I can and I have.

Saturday 13 November 2010

Project artman at November 2010

Intense and prolonged efforts over previous days have taken their toll in that throughout Saturday I struggled to break from an overwhelming tiredness. I did work immediately on rising for a couple of hours drafting one of those letters which are good but should not be sent, and did not do so. This may me feel worse.


I have not worked out what made the desk top crash last week but I have been suspicious about what and who but the event had led to some improvements and finding out the cause of a problem experienced before I went on line. There was a malicious code with the original set up programmes when the machine was first booted up or from the word processing programme which came for a disk from a previous desktop and which created an instability. I did not use the internet with this desktop because my existing broadband modem only worked with Windows XP and not with Vista. Mind you a lot of programme do not still work with Vista such. As earlier additions of the Adobe Reader. I then decided to use the lap top for the internet so I could undertake research as I went along with writing and this proved effective.

I only decided to change after the BBC i player was introduced and wanted to view on the larger screen and this also led to learning how to connect the lap top to TV, but I was limited because of the need for a cable connection, I took the plunge and decided on a wireless link modem and with much trepidation and much trial and error i sorted it out to the extent that I can now use a lap top and connect to the internet anywhere in the house going through solid walls and two floors, Now with wireless I have a multiplicity of options.


I also have a multiplicity of options between listen to CD, and digital radio on the TV, watching TV on the desktop scene, just caught up with Merlin from yesterday evening, or hundreds of USA local radio stations, so there is music or sound while I do work which does not involved intense concentration and quiet. There is no single pattern of use which I vary according to mood and current interest.


As soon as I became wireless and internet connect on the desktop Microsoft bombarded with updates including a programme to detect and eliminate malicious codes and the problem I had encountered was eliminated. I do not know why the computer last week but mention I have my suspicious and the individual is destined to rot in hell in the passage of time as such individuals always do however much they appear to prosper from outward appearance. The Catholicism in me still says, Lord Have Mercy on them, but it is sometimes more difficult than others.

The one positive aspect of the crash is that my understanding of the original problem was confirmed because immediately after rebooting the original problem was there and then disappeared once early the malicious code update was added. I only wish my edition of the HitchHiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Don't Panic also had a section about coping with old age and anxiety attacks about unexpected health problems.


Having mentioned the bright side of this particular form of crash, one of the many downsides is that my records of games played against the computer were also wiped out although I recorded progress in Blogs from time to time. However the upside of this is that with mastering how to play without losing most of the time I have maintained a 100% record so far with Chess, Hearts, Spider and Free cell although total plays for each game sp far is between 10 and 15 at the beginner level and 101 seems very distant although because of wanting to do catch up as well as continued to progress from where I was on other matters, I am not rushing or becoming engaged in long sessions and therefore making silly mistakes through momentary lapses of concentration.

This reminds of Titus Bramble, a Newcastle United Football Player who had lots of promise but always managed to have a concentration lapse a game with disastrous consequences. No one shed a tear when he moved to Wigan but yesterday he returned to haunt the Toon, scoring a goal which levelled the game in its final moments, and depriving the home side of two vital points. Sunderland had a brilliant win away from home although I fell asleep during Match of the Day. I am even tempted to go to see the next match next weekend as long as it is not be shown live.


Durham Cricket have sent membership renewals applications for the season which at £90 for an oldie £50 discount on the usual price is a great bargain. I will not take up an invitation to sit in the main members lounge veranda for £75 for the England V Australia one day match next year thought as it will be on the telly.


Another aspect the crash is that I thought I had lost my chronological record of 101.75 work completed sets from between 5000 to 10000-. It was not fundamentally serious as from time to time I print out completed pages, and a check confirmed that I had done so page 67 and had only lost the incomplete page 68; more over I had last saved the record to disk at the end of September. I must commence a weekly cycle of savings, although this kind of work house keeping is time consuming. The concerning aspect of typing out again the missing pages onto the system is that I detected errors. These were positive errors in that I had used the same set of numbers more than once and had therefore completed more work than recorded and I had not recorded some completed work although correctly numbered.


However this raised issues about the quality of earlier work but I decided that to start checking on top of everything else would take too much time. It was always my intention to create at least 1000 more sets than required to meet the original target of one for every hour of he day of my life between 0 and 65 to cover for such errors and that I had also undertaken research into the family history back to the 15th century, and included current information such as the new American President, visit to cricket and football, new films and theatre and so on, although always trying to relate this to the past.

This also reminds that an excellent fellow on the Gibraltar Family History net work has been creating PDF files of information which is sending out free to anyone interested. This kind of public spirited endeavour is heartening.


Recently a new MySpace friend enquired about my main work activity and I could not resist staying up several hours longer that I should for someone my age to explain what I was doing and where I was at.

This reminds that lovers of historical art should spend some time looking at the My Space work of those creating dedicated sites to the work of historical artists. The latest added is that of Hieronymus Bosch who along with Peter Breughel the Elder created amazing fantasy and reality pictures of contemporary life. Most people with an interest in art know of Breughel but miss out on Bosch. Take a peek. If he does not blow your mind nothing will given that he was also a 15th century artist and where do you think Salvador Dali and the rest got their ideas from ? Original artists my hat! Gormenghast and Smallcreeps Day are exceptions

Although I was able to immediately regain my chronological record of completed work, it took more time to transfer the completed set information to the record according to categories.


For the record I have completed 2188 sets of what I describe as development work. Each set has an artman card written in glitter and a registration signature card which lists the number of each set and the numbering of each card. I established the numbering system at the outset so that the work begins with development card 1 and I have made 52146 cards so far and these exclude the glitter and signature cards which are numbered separately from set 4999 working backwards to set 4438 at present. Sets 2189-2198 are in the process of completion. These development sets tell the story of how the project came into being, contain drafts of creative work, information about ongoing events in my life and the world around such as sweet wrapping papers or cut outs from prepared food packages and fit into my belief that to qualify as a contemporary artist in this multi media global communicating world the process of making the art work is an important as the final output and that the process of creating the work should be available 24 hours a day to anyone anywhere with the technology.

This is not original an original concept as Tracey Emin did this for a couple of weeks at one point and also turned her home into an art house also at one point. I thought of this separately and then found out she had also not only had the same concept but put it into practice, and it was this and other similar discoveries that what I been thinking privately over several decades had been put into practice by others convinced me that in one sense I had been living in a parallel dimensions and also that we are more cloned and interconnected than most of us have realised. Obviously some people of known this for longer, but kept the info to themselves, knowledge is power as they say.


I use A4 size black lever arch files for the sets some holding 1-3 sets and the majority 6-7 with the start number of the set in gold or red glitter on the spine. Each card is housed in cases through punched pockets two to a pocket. If you take the cost of the Lever arch files, the cards, the pockets, the glitter, the glue to stick stuff on the card and the printing ink each volume involves significant expenditure an which is one reason why I reduced the pace of working. The main other is to continue to participate in life now.

I did work out once what all this cost excluding my creation time. It is worth at least £50000 but it does fill a large house. I now come to what is perhaps the core or soul of the project, The creative work component where all the sets are contained in either soft black cover expensive display books with quality pockets, and some with space for a DVD on the inside of the cover or more simple and inexpensive report files to which the pockets have to be added. Only 691 creative sets have been completed less than 17000 cards These are contained in three types of black boxes. A few sets of plastic boxes, and the majority divided between two styles of black cardboards boxes each costing between £4 and £6.There are also three small black metal filing boxes. There are between 50 and 60 of these boxes completed


The creative work is varied. It includes all my writings from the 100 editions of Parliament and Social Work to the 100 published articles predominantly about Politics and Social Work but also about other aspects of work as a child care officer and social services senior manager. There is the 1992/3 written mystery adventure involving the internet, young women and the secret services, set mainly in the South of France. There is the 2004 memoirs printed with 101 copies of 101 in Black and White for a contemporary artwork in black and white boxes together with 101 photographs and a 101 series of statements and descriptions. There are the 1001 Blogs written for AQL and the 501 and more written so far for My Space. There are creative photographical sets and a child's views of art using crayons and pastels with photos of some of these A4 cards included in the MySpace Photos and other creative set work experiments. There are film, theatres and sporting reviews and experiences.

Then there are the event sets in blue lever arch files and soft covers display folders and blue boxes. There are also thirty to forty boxes completed or in process and altogether there are something of the order of 1600 of these sets completed ranging photographic expeditions to homes and work places, and visit to Gibraltar. There are the photographic studies of places and activities, My space profiles of friends published public MySpace stuff such as the profiles of Friends Public access diary material, Holiday trips based on scrapbooks less confidential information and a visual description of the early work in progress. Only a small proportion of the 300000 photographs have been included in the development, creative and event sets work.


Then there are the record information files. I have one series of sets of record of event and other information for every year of my life from 1938 through to when I became 65 There are something like 1100 completed sets of this work in blue lever arch files only as these do not merit boxes, These sets include receipts, bills, bank statements, football, cricket and other programmes and paraphernalia which go to make up a life. There is a series of mauve soft covered display books which just contains lists: List of books, lists of CD's DVD's Tapes and albums, list of lists.


Then there are the Confidential set work. There are housed either in the four drawer black filing cabinets which are to be completely sealed before this part of the work could be put on pubic display, but there are also red lever arch files which could be housed in transparent sealed unit which contain information such as current Household Records and here are also red boxes with soft display folders containing correspondence such on family history or with My Space Friends which I need to look at from time to time and which could become available to be examined say 100 years after the respective deaths of the contributors.


I have not yet worked out if or when to attempt to put the work on public display and have deferred consideration of this until reach half way and with only 7800 sets completed there is another couple of years work before the half way is reached. I did celebrate the reaching of 7777 sets in late October.

I shocked myself by waking up not as I first though at 11am but at 1pm. I had gone to bed around 2am and only remember rising twice. It was three before I sat down to a chunk of roast pork with crackling, apple sauce and roast potatoes, with half a glass of red wine.


Last night I watched about a road crash in which a much loved wife dies and strange things begin to happen with Richard Gere finding himself in a strange town in late night having been Close Encounters like. The Mothman is creature larger than a human being with moth like wings m often with no head, but red eyes within the torso seen by a number of people in West Virginia in the Charleston and Point Pleasant Areas over one year 1966 and 1967. The creature can take human form and when it takes the name of Indrid Cold, The spectre was first recorded as being sent neat a former World War 2 TNT factory. The creature is said to have been seen shortly before the Silver bridge collapsed between Point Pleasant and Kanuaga in which 46 people died. The collapse of the bridge is said to have been caused by a manufacturing flaw in a single eye bar in a suspension chain and the creature has been identified with predicting or associated with disasters since, or to have been the cause of them.

The Mothman Prophecies 2002 is an adaptation of a book of the same name by a parapsychologist. It is not a very good film lacking credibility which is essential. The X files covered the story in one episode in a much more convincing way. However it was enjoyable late night viewing on a Saturday and a great concept, especially it became a collective experiencing.

Sunday 26 September 2010

Art for artists MySpace

I usually have no difficulty in knowing what it is I want and am able to say, and sometimes the ideas commence to queue, sometimes in orderly fashion and sometimes anarchic. When this happens I just write and see what the outcome is and then review after a gap of hours, usually overnight. Sometimes, when sufficient research for the subject has been undertaken, the amount of change is small, but as has happened with the writing for Tuesday, it has been necessary to rethink and then rewrite the entirety because of the information which became available and time taken to reflect on the issues under consideration.

Usually when the idea flow, the connection between them are tenuous and only occasionally the connections, if they exist, are clear or emerge through the process of the writing, reflecting and rewriting.

The subjects which from the core of this writing will appear unconnected- the organised return of the British Olympians to their original and sometimes continuing home areas was covered extensively by national and local TV and to less extent by the national media. The Conservative Party through their spokesperson on sport attempted to get in on the act with critical speech on government policy and practice, significantly underestimating the mood of the nations and causing his party untold political damage. Rightly the media gave way to the two more important matters of the day, The actions of Russia faced with an organised attempt to isolate the country from its neighbouring states as they are encouraged to join NATO and become part of an expanding Europe. The issues here are complex and not what they appear on the surface, but how any western country can appear to support the actions of Georgia in bombing and setting upon its allegedly own people needs to be emphasised. The other issue is where in the simplest of terms America will vote a Blackman as President, the Democratic party by the narrowest of politician machinations having set on this course instead of the first woman Presidential candidate.

Then there has been the coincidence of two new MySpace Friends -Art and Artists and hmmm Creative Partnerships from the Arts council of England Exciting minds, both of which have been added to my list of Top Friends with the latter having the potential of greater significance for the future of British society than the Olympics 2012 and their legacy.

With such an agenda plans for Wednesday were abandoned except for watching Sunderland at Notts Forest on Sky hoping the club will be able to repeat the Friendly win on the first day of my recent visit to Nottingham for the first day of Championship game between Durham and the County. I will also need to comment on last night's win by Newcastle at Coventry and England's thrashing South Africa at cricket also at Tent Bridge Nottingham, looking forward to a weekend where the next two the five game series is to be played, Newcastle is at Arsenal also on Sky and where I will be going to see the second home game of Sunderland where I would be surprised if the city's first ever Olympic Medallist was not introduced to supporters sometime during the afternoon.

Art and Artist is a curious but interesting site run by an artist from Germany which at present only includes interviews with three new artists yet with 4500 friends and approaching 1000 comments. Invited to comment on the Blogs my attention became focussed not on the three artists whose work is of interest to me in so far as it is ever possible to experience visual artwork through this medium, but on the response of some 50 members to the Question What is Art? Oddly although everyone is given the opportunity to comment on the individual comments of everyone else, no one until the approach to me has chosen to do so. What does not surprise is the limited view and understanding of Art expressed by artists and those interested in art in their published public comments.
Almost everyone has attempted to define art as an earth planet human activity and only a few showed any understanding of Art as a separate force from earth humanity and which can only be defined once you have understood and accepted the infinite nature of space and time. Obviously there are those who genuinely believe that it is only possible to define Art as am earth human being activity but such views are at a similar level as those who argue that Christians, the Jews and the Muslims are followers of the only true religion.

There were also contributors whose vision appears restricted to defining the difference between professional and amateur artists, as if this has anything to do with the significance of individual art works, and those who appear more concerned with defining what is good or bad art or real and unreal art rather than the encompassing breath and depth of art. The aspects on which most contributors are in agreement is that most artists are compelled to do what they do irrespective of the level of food, shelter and things acquisition which the doing provides, or does not, and that most also hope that their work will have an impact on others individually and society in general as a force for good often associated with love, truth and beauty a la Moulin Rouge, the film whereas the reality is that art also encompasses hate, deceit and ugliness.

I hope to show the connection between this and what is happening in relation to Georgia and Russia and the American Party and Convention system later.

Perhaps because I did not identify myself as a creative until in my mid forties, and only then began to understand the significance, and that I was not able to begin to be an artist and produce artwork until I was sixty four, five years ago, I have moved beyond the hope that my work will impact on individuals and affect society and I am content with just doing what I am driven to do, although this is not also to say that I hope my work when it is completed or when I am no longer able to work, it will have a life independent of me for like human beings art tends to be happy art if it is recognised as art. There is a role for unhappy art and unhappy human beings but I cannot cope with too much unhappiness at anyone time.

It is a fortuitous coincidence that within a day of being contacted by the new friend with a preoccupation about the nature of Art and of the Artist I was also contacted by Hmmm, a new Arts Council My Space Site on Creative Partnerships which is a flagship government sponsored creative learning programme designed to develop the skills of young people across England and designed to transform teaching and learning across the curriculum.

The aim is to forge inspiring partnerships between creative professionals and young people across a wide range of projects. The project support thousands of innovative long-term partnerships between schools and creative people, from architects to scientists to multimedia developers and artists.

They cast the net wide in projects as they believe creativity is not a skill bound within the arts, but a broader ability to question, make connections, and take an innovative and imaginative approach to problem solving. It immediately struck me that this programme has the potential for a more important and lasting significance than the success of the Beijing Olympics and that hoped for in 2012.

My personal interest among my range of many interests is that schools should be asked to measure their intakes, (I prefer measure, to testing), for creative personalities, and then provide the understanding, help and support necessary to enable such children to find satisfying and socially beneficial outlets for their creative energies instead of what often now happens if they become destructive, often self destructive and anti social. This poses a challenge for those in government and social planning and development because every society needs a level of anti social behaviour, especially at points when societies have become locked into negative situations and understandings. A balance has therefore to be achieved between meeting the needs of the society and the needs of the individual creatives especially when they become teenagers. This is also true for political and religious questions. The one aspect of Marxism which I have continued to uphold and which he took from Hegel, is the dialectic, the concept that an equilibrium can only be achieved as a consequence of the process during with opposing forces, sometimes extreme forces become fused. The cynical in me could argue that you have two individuals one black and one female who wants to be president of the USA and therefore has to become the party candidate so they fight an intense, bitter and personal campaign in which they attempt to foster their own standing and attack the standing of the other until one is able to claim victory over the other and hen the concentrate on a creating a unity behind the successful of the two and repeat the process with this time as heads of the two power political organisations and then having divided the nation, the victor announces that the first task is to unite the nation and set aside political differences to achieve the common good.

The government and the British Olympic authorities are handling the unexpected success of the team brilliantly, attempting to immediately establish the successful athletes as icons and trend setters in their local communities, with the triple aims of encouraging as many as possible to engage in sporting activities at a level appropriate for their age and physique and which will have health and other social benefits as well as individual ones; of mobilising the public, especially those living around where 2012 events will be held, giving support to what is and will happen in their communities, and becoming volunteers, and thirdly to attract as many young people as possible to as many different sports, especially those where there has not been much interest to-date, to ensure that we have a range of competitive young people across the board at the 2012 event, and subsequent ones. A fourth by-product is that it should have become easier to encourage more commercial enterprises to sponsor and become financially involved in 2012 and supporting teams for the various events.

Measuring the legacy of all this will be nigh on impossible and the tendency will be to concentrate on the future use of new buildings, both the competitive arenas and the accommodation facilities. The immediate product of revolutions is rarely if ever beneficial to the existing population but visionary change can more easily be stifled or sent off course down a blind alley. Conservatives are more likely to achieve radical change than Liberals who are usually forced into supporting the status quo in order to survive.

Of course we will not be able to progress developing British societies through sport and creative activity if the economic situation continues to deteriorate and we are thrust into ongoing confrontation with Russia. Unravelling what has happened in Georgia and the true positions of Russia, and the other members of the eight top economic powers club requires the time which I have not chosen to allocate so far. My present understanding is that the decision of the other powers to accept the unilateral declaration of Kosovo led Russia to escalate it moves for the Georgian provinces to seek their independence, to the extent that it provided all those wishing to have Russian citizenship in addition to those who already possessed Russian citizenship and had previously moved into the satellite and neighbouring countries.
There are obvious parallels between the behaviour of Russia with, Britain and France for example in relation to their former empires. Britain and France are now attempting to play a leadership role trying to prevent the escalation of what has happened and Britain in particular through my local Member of Parliament David Miliband needs to avoid appearing to defend Georgian action and attacking the Russian position outright. My understanding is that it was Georgia that used bombs, rockets and arms against people within its own stated border, many of whom were long standing as well as recent citizens of Russia. What would we or America done if we had been in the same position?

I originally wrote this watching the tens of thousands of citizens of Edinburgh greet the open bus carrying Chris Hoy and the three other Scottish medallist through the streets of the Royal mile and I did not see one Union Jack being waved throughout the hour long journey and everywhere there was flying the National Flag of Scotland. The only indication of a British Team was the track suits worn by the Athletes. There is no doubt that the move for a separate Scottish Team in 2012 will grow apace. It was also interesting that during the opening ceremony a Scottish band of pipers was used and that Scotland the Brave was heard at least half a dozen times, and at the time I wondered who and what was behind that. Before the bus journey there was a carefully orchestrated reception at Edinburgh Castle for the four Medal winners with Sport Scotland in the Chair and Wendy Alexander the Deputy First Minister welcoming and congratulating them on behalf of the Scottish Government, mentioning that the first Minister would hold a reception at the Parliament building in mid September. This and the pre arranged questions was well done.

One could never envisage a British government using troops and their weaponry against the Scottish people, especially in a situation where the overwhelming majority voted in favour of independence such as is my understanding of what happened in part of Georgia. There is also the problem of our dependence upon Russian oil where forty percent is provided although in turn Russian needs the revenues to develop its own economy. And I do not want to hear about election fixes by those who forget how George Bush first came to power. I have previously commented that whereas once there were over 50 coal mines in the North East there are now only Museums but at the Port of Tyne here in South Shields there are mountains of coal reserves brought in from Russia. So are we really going to do more than words whatever Russia does in relation to Georgia and other countries on its borders where there are significant populations of Russians.

One of the reason why perhaps Georgia and Russia felt able to use weapons in an attempt to settle their conflict is the commitment of American, Britain and Europe in varying degrees to Iraq and Afghanistan, and potentially to Pakistan, already a nuclear power and which is now the target for militant Muslims to take control. It is interesting that the Democratic line is that American troops should be used in Afghanistan and not Iraq a similar argument being used by the Conservatives, thus confirming the problem for democracies having to appear to go with the public flow regardless of principles, values and what one believes to be right.

The biggest uncertainty is over the future Foreign policy of the U. S. A. as the country moves into the final phase of the Presidential election process and I will return to this issue having watched the Democrat Party Convention over the past two days. It has been an amazing and at time a sickening

Other notings

What was the public reception for the Rebecca Adlington motorcade on Tuesday and that given to Welsh medallists at Cardiff? How far was that in Scotland organised by the Scottish National party?
I enjoyed the evenly matched League Cup game between Newcastle and Coventry but what is going on behind the scenes in relation to Milner and Owen. I enjoyed the quip of one cycling medallist that where was the media when the team was winning world championship medals - and then answered the question focussing attention of Joey Barton going to Prison.. There are just a few days left in the summer transfer market for the big surprises to occur. I tried to become an online member of Newcastle's member's club as a means of buying individual tickets but the internet site is hopeless. Now I have received an application through the post. It is interesting to learn that for the first time in a decade the stadium was not sold out for the opening home match of the season and at last it looks as if people are going to more selective and not given unconditional support regardless of performance and achievement.

The way England fast bowlers demolished South Africa after they had won the toss and elected to bat was also amazing but the supporters who had paid their £35 for an afternoon and evening of cricket went home content but after seeing less than half the normal hours of the 100 over game as the match was over after 37 overs with 63 unplayed. It was good to see the Trent Bridge again but I wondered what the Nottinghamshire members who had met on my visit felt about the situation. Was a one sided victory in a third of the time allocated what they really wanted to see but it was great for the British morale.

Thursday 11 February 2010

1383 Some work in May and the film Venus

Yesterday, Saturday, May 18th 2008 became a very good day in that I completed the first stage of getting on top my work again and now have my work room is a management condition, retaining this morning the energy and determination to continue.

I awoke early around 7 am, drank two cups of coffee and had marmalade toast and wrote out an ideas for three hours and then decided I should attend to other things losing the train of thought.

I believed it would be necessary to call upon the TV insurances for a house repair visit and commenced the task of finding places the piles of work which surrounded the set made entry into the room a precarious activity

During the subsequent 16 hours I achieved the following.

I completed the photographing of the Civilization work, about which I want to write further over the coming weeks, a completed Development volume and several sets related Myspace, mostly confidential.

I also completed the registration of several new sets and prepared artman and registration cards for My Space Blogs, a new work Development volume and a new volume relation to the Fun, Food and drink establishments within a mile of my home.

I sorted out the in tray in order for working through as the next main activity, later this morning. I organised other work back in this room into three small piles covering the search for early identity (one volume) Two large and several smaller volumes and papers related to Annual and perennial documents and information covering myself, and my birth and care mothers, and four of the volumes and papers concerned with the complaint regarding the premature and preventable death of my aunt and the request for medical records where I have not received an acknowledgement, but will wait until the end of this week before making further enquiries.

This activity did result in the completion of more work sets to 7378, and additional 56 for the month and therefore less than half the higher monthly target of 120, although I will achieved a running average of 100 a month set for this year, it was set on the basis of writing at least the first drafts of a main work about the relationship with my birth and care mothers, delayed because I need to completed research in relation to my earliest life and also in relation to the death of my care mother although I am seeing a way forward to begin and possibly complete the work with various unanswered questions, given the anticipated time the next stages will take. Given it has been 57 months since the work commenced the actual overall average is closer to 130 sets a month. The total photographs taken since acquiring the digital camera is 280000.

There were four other activities during the day in addition to having some good food. I played lots of hearts where I am struggling to achieve one win in five having increased from 17% to 19% with a couple of weeks, and this is at the expense of level two chess, where after several runs of twenty games I took a break, and am now playing only one or two games a day, with the present running total of eight wins.

I half watched the Hull and Bristol City Game until local aging Wonderman Wandass aged 39 years who scored the stunning goal of a lifetime which has taken the club into the top flight league for the first time in its 100 years of existence. He was supported by the other local man and international player Nick Barmby who returned home at the end of his career to help a club struggling to avoid relegation, such is the romance and magic of football still. Such are the fortunes in this game that Leeds play another local club Doncaster, this afternoon, in an attempt to gain promotion the third league to the second.

I also watched Britain has got talent until falling asleep for the greater part of the last programme searching for those who will make the finals. This programme is even more condensed than American Idol and the British version, The X factor. The search for those who will perform before the public voting audience is spread over what has been five or six weeks, with the producers creating two shows a week, one a background show, from an amalgamations of the auditions held is London, Glasgow, and Birmingham, perhaps also Manchester.

Then last night fifteen minutes was spent showing the process in which the 175 individuals selected to continue to the next stage were reduced to the forty with eight acts appearing each of five nights next week. As all the acts who ahd this stage were present and in the costume it was not made clear of they were given the opportunity to show the act they would perform live on TV or if this was an exercise undertaken by the judges with the help of the produces using photographs and recorded footage. We were not shown the process of decision taking but just some of the line ups in which groups were told they were successful, the top forty, and some of those who were not. One was able to guess that each programme will have at least one child star, one elderly person, one dance group, one stunt act, and one singer or group of singers, thus some of those who got through the first audition may well have lost out simply because there were too many one category and the producers needed to achieve a balanced programme each night.

The third event was watching the film Venus with Peter OToole and Leslie Phillips as amazingly early evening after the football had ended and I had made a walking visit to the supermarket for milk and marge, I found that the TV was working properly again. I will save my reactions to this film for old men about old men until next writing.

The consequence of the supermarket trip is that I could not resist some inexpensive diced beef and returned to make a stir fry, cooking the beef with an onion and then added a yellow pepper and some small string beans and courgette, and then the noodles with a chilli sauces the noodles coming from somewhere in Asia. I enjoyed this as I had the salad made with a tin of Scottish mackerel in tomato sauce and generous helpings of an already sliced olive mixture including thyme, red pepper, carrot sun dried tomato and sun flower oil from some middle eastern country. It was also yummy. Staying up till 2 am also meant a sandwich of cheese and salami around midnight.

Tuesday 9 February 2010

1875 Work, Simon Boccanegra, Super Bowl. Pickup on South Street

I have been giving myself a good and hard talking to at becoming self indulgent regarding my work and my existence in general. I devoted a great part of the weekend to researching, reflecting and learning about the TV series Lost at the expense of many others things, although I became fully engaged and produced thoughtful work and found my own approach to understanding what had had happened in the past with some indication of what mysteries are to be resolved, and questions answered, over the next three months. In part, learning which characters will have a role in the final series, and which characters, to-date, will not, could prove an important clue.

Having written the above late on Monday evening I embarked on two hours of activity which required physical exertion, a bonus. My first decision is to proceed with boxing completed work and making sure I know, what was where, from that already boxed. Now of course I do not mean taking up fisticuffs to my work but placing it in small reinforced cardboard boxes retained from the move, which amazes me is over five years ago.

I will allocate one to two hours a day for this from tomorrow, Tuesday February 9th, 2010 dividing the time between boxing completed work already on display, or laying loose on the floor, to make room for new work to be placed in the space then available, and sorting out what is where in the two kinds of boxes being used.

There are two kinds of boxes. The first are display boxes in Black for creative work, Blue for events and Red for confidential. The second are those used for the move and which will hold lever arch files containing six to ten sets of completed work covering a theme or area of interest. These are functional and can be stacked within storage areas and I have settled on the small attic room with fitted wardrobe to one side and floor to ceiling shelving on the other for this. Organising this room ked to the overdue task of sorting old clothing, keeping some as part of the project to reveal my changes in weight and past choices and giving the remainder to charities. About once a fortnight since arriving a charity has left a collection bag at every house on the hill, almost as frequently as a leaflet advertising a meal delivery service. I have kept a record and todate 54 different firms have circulated their latest offers and menu and several provide updates on a regular basis. I decide to keep a record of the charities requesting clothing. I also have a supply of blankets and bedding which will be reviewed.

There was an ulterior motive behind the sort of everything on floor of my downstairs work room as three items had gone stray. Two have been recovered. A wireless mouse which I use for the lap attached to the TV. My original intention was to spend the latter part of this evening watching any Portillo Great British railways series programmes from his fourth journey. Alas I discover that all but one is left and this of an earlier series already covered, so that ends that. Is there a DVD set in the offing me thinks?

The second item is a small memory card of 64 MB which can hold 12 mins of film or between 100 and 300 photographs depending and their quality. The third, and so far, still to be found item, is the other chargeable battery for the camera. I use the camera to photograph completed work as well as to record places and experiences, and as the recording of work is boring I tend to do in batches while watching TV, so having two batteries has been useful, but not the end of the world if I cannot find the latter, but it irritates me as the loss occurred in one room at home. Its whereabouts remains a puzzle.

My preliminary sort out covering all three floors of the house led to another decision to junk decided to junk a pile of catalogues, travel brochures and such like where I like to keep the latest. This proved not straightforward, because I need to retain a cover, and some of the contents to form part of the work project in the development sets. If I die tomorrow or when the work is completed sufficiently to put on exhibition, should I choose to do so during my lifetime, the catalogues will indicate interest aspects of my personality and experience at this period of my life and therefore to throw out the catalogues without listing them would removed the attempted completeness of what I am doing. I am so resolved by undertaking this activity albeit late into the evening that I confident it will be carried through the days and weeks until Spring and early summer. Now to the rest of the weekend review

I have had three long days in succession. Saturday 6th February commenced with a reasonable start although the night before had been interrupted. The morning and early afternoon was devoted to work on Lost and cleaning the bathroom and kitchen in preparation for a service visit for the central heating system and the cooker on Monday. The bathroom got a deep clean and I remain pleased with the effort and outcome. The kitchen less so but the floor got a wash and the work surfaces well cleaned.

I had intended to leave earlier than I did for my evening out and decided not to visit the main supermarket for cooking oil and Wilkinson to see if they had restocked of Black display albums. Then on impulse I so put the oil back and went along Fredericke street which as street parking on one side and called in at an Asian store just before closing and purchased a small bottle of olive oil to use with the ready made up vegetable stir fry which I planned to use with some lamb chops for Sunday lunch. I then forgot some stir fry sauce so had to use a little ginger until calling in at the supermarket on Monday afternoon for postage stamps and salami. I used the rest of the stir fry to accompany pork chops for the evening meal on Monday with a packet of spicy oriental sauce to which I added some ginger. All this talk of food makes me hungry and I will have a bowl of Muesli cereal rather than salami slices in crackers. But then relented on opening the fridge for the milk!

As the area to the west of Fredericke Street and the river is being redeveloped with the former Plessey factory site cleared Fredericke is getting a face lift with some of the derelict shops being brought back to life although between a third and half the street is still to be brought back into use.

I arrived at the Heworth car park outside the metro and bus station around 5.15 pm, staying in the car to drink soup from a flask and salami rolls with mustard. I parked next to the ticket machine with required fee on the dashboard. I then saw not one, but two, ticket wardens coming over to check the windscreens of the few cars parked around me so I got out and was about to put the money in the machine when one of the two called out to say there was no charge if I was remaining sitting in the car. I explained I was having a meal before going to a theatre in Newcastle by the Metro. I completed the purchase of the ticket and placed on the dashboard. as it was not one those which you attach to the windscreen, and thought nothing more of it until return just before 10pm to be alerted by two of the taxi drivers in the nearby rank that I had been given a parking ticket. The £50 fine reduced to £25 if paid within 14 days was issued because a correct ticket was displayed. I had left the ticket upside down. I assume this was from a different warden as the fine notice was timed just before eight pm when the payment period ended. A complicated two stage appeal process is listed on one side of the ticket which I will follow.

The purpose of my visit to Newcastle was to see a relay of the Metropolitan Opera House, New York, production of Simone Boccanegra with the internationally renowned tenor, Placido Domingo, in the title role, using his baritone registers, and with James Morris playing his Nemesis.

I must admit that I did not enjoy the evening. It was exceptionally hot in a packed auditorium so I quickly became tired and had to fight dozing off. The seats in Classics stall are not as comfortable as those in the Circle and do have full backs and head rests and have no space between seats or pairs of seats so one has to take care not to take the space of neighbours. None of this would have mattered if the work had been entertaining with memorable songs and a visual spectacle in support.

The sets and clothes are sumptuous, richly textured and designed in reds and browns, and the scenery used to create the palace reception room for the Doge and the courtiers, is amazing, because of its size, and the impressive decorated ceiling. The singing of the principals - two baritones, a tenor and a soprano, was brilliant and the emotional performance of Domingo extraordinary and exceptional. The music is powerful and there are moments of passion and tenderness but not one memorable tune. The performers all spoke of their enthusiasm for the Opera and I can see why it is the choice of singers and musicians and I can say I have attended a live performance of an opera with Placido Domingo, but it is not an opera I would wish to pay good money to see, although I will view a production on the Met Player at sometime, although there are others I wish to experience beforehand.

The plot is complicated. Boccanegra is a young upstart who has fathered a child with the daughter of the Doge, played by James Morris and who he wishes to marry but whose father has locked her away and regards Boccanegra with enmity.
The Doge has become unpopular with the courtiers and the people and two of the courtiers plot to remove him and place the popular hero Boccanegra in his place believing he will be able to become the power behind the throne, however over time Boccanegra becomes his own man.

Early on Boccanegra’s lover dies before they can marry and her father pleads to be able to bring up his grand daughter, Boccanegra refuses and the girl is brought up away from Boccanegra and hidden from her grandfather thus increasing his hatred for the usurper.

The first act is described as the prologue with an interval after thirty minutes of thirty minutes because of the need for the main characters to age by twenty five years and the major change of set required from outside to inside the Palace. The next act described as the first lasts for an hour with a short interval mid way, followed by the second long interval of 30 mins. I made my way up the stairs to the second floor for the gents and then to the third to the bar for a glass of Merlot while watching the scene change projected on the wall with the running down time clock, leaving when there were two minutes to go and getting into my seat with only 20 seconds to spare.

During the first interval Placido and Morris joked about the difficulty of pretending they were young men and this is achieved through a dark haired wig and make up. He and James Morris have been playing rivals and enemies for thirty five years!

The story develops that Boccanegra’s daughter brought up separately had in fact been brought up by the former Doge under his assumed name of Grimaldi away from Genoa, but this fact is unknown to both father and grandfather. Moreover the former Doge, the daughters fiancée and Paulo Albiani a goldsmith and the courtier who had brought Boccanegra to power are all involved in a complicated plot to bring him down with Gabriele Adorno, the finance, one of two assassins. The complication is that having been reunited with her father, Paolo suggests to Gabriele that she had been abducted and seduced by the Doge.

There is then a period which unfortunately from my viewpoint Gabriele reveals himself to be a chauvinistic pig as well as an assassin. He demands to know if the Doge has taken his fiancée by force or seduction, proclaiming that if this is so, he will having nothing more to do with her. This should have wrung alarm bells with the young woman and abandoned the rat. Instead she reveals herself as cunning and manipulative attempting to achieve the best of best worlds by finding a way to maintain both relationships and bring the two men together. The problem is that Paulo has poisoned the drink of the Doge which produces a long painful death with stretches almost throughout the last act. Paolo gets his just deserts and Adorno and Boccanegra are reconciled to the extent that the couple are able to marry with his blessing and Boccanegra insists that Adorno is appointed the next Doge at his death. Moreover the former Doge Jacopo Fiasco who has reappeared in Genoa is also brought to a new understanding and is entrusted in ensuring that Boccanegra wishes for his son in law are respected and brought to fruition. The brilliance of Placido Domingo is that he able to make the story, and his role, believable.

The highlight of the weekend was however Super bowl XLIV in which the New Orleans Saints, attending the contest for the first time and as champions of the National Football League, defeated the American Football League Champions, the Indianapolis Colts by 31 points to 17, having come from a 10.0 lead at the end of the first quarter. I had not intended to watch the event live which meant staying up until 3am but I shared the view of the majority of people in the USA, outside of Indie fans who wanted New Orleans to win for three very different reasons. The foremost is that the city, the state of Louisiana and the south east oft he UDA is still recovery from the devastation of Hurricane Katrina. The second reason is that the Saints have only recently become a good team had never been to a superbowl and were regarded as the underdogs and now a great team and the third that the owner of the Colts transported them overnight from Baltimore to the new prestige Lucas oil stadium which is to hold the Superbowl in 2012 with the 2013 event to be held in New Orleans at the very stadium which was use to house hurricane refugees. The background of the two teams was the difference with one professionals with a great offensive team led by what many consider to be one of the great quarterbacks of all time while New Orleans was also a team of professional, but with a mission beyond furthering their individual careers or team, but aware that the morale of a city, a state and a region was at stake.

I first came to enjoy American football in the 1980’s when whole games were shown live on TV. I made two visits to Wembley stadium in London to see pre season warm up games and visited Gateshead who, and may still have a team in the British league version which existed for a time and may still do. I supported the Chicago Bears in part because of a defensive player called the Fridge and also the San Francisco 49ers after being given one of their shirts as a Christmas present. I learnt more about the sport after getting a computer game played and fro a time it rivalled my interest in football. Over the past five years I having been preoccupied in my work and competing programmes to watch many live games during the season and then the playoffs involving the two separate leagues

Because of the national interest the games was watched by an audience of over 100 million in the US alone, the largest TV audience in the history of that country and also shown in some 30 other countries including China, Japan, Australia and New Zealand, Russia and the UK as well as Canada and Mexico Brazil and Chile,

For the third year in succession the national anthem was sung by a winner of American Idol- Carrie Underwood, Jordan Sparks and Jennifer Hudson. Queen Latifah sang an odd version of America is Beautiful and The Who provided the half time entertainment. Jerry Rice and Emmett Smith two of the 2010 Hall of Fame new entrants participate in the pre game coin toss. $100 million dollars of merchandise was pre-sold to indicate the extent to which the event is the biggest sporting event in the US Calendar, greater than Baseball and Basketball.

The highlight of the game came in the fourth quarter when just as the commentators were remaking about the overall lack of mistakes and turnovers Tracy Porter intercepted a pass from manning at the 26th yard to run the 76 yards to gain a touch down and force the Saints to get two touchdowns and conversions to go into extra time. For a few minutes it looked as if this might be on as the Saints drove all the way to within three yards. However there was then disaster because with pass interference they were pushed back to 10 yards and their last effort went through the hands of the receiver incomplete. At that point there was nothing more to do than to let the lock run down the remaining time and accept defeat. Then the celebrations commenced and the people of New Orleans were out on the street starting the Mardi Gras over a week early.

Having got up early the gas man did not come until midday but stayed longer than anyone giving the cooker the boiler a thorough clean and arranging for an electrician come and check the downstairs switch which had become temperamental, due to a loose wire. The visits were a bonus in two ways because I learnt that it was wise to keep the light on as in severe weather the boiler is designed to switch itself on to avoid freezing. The visit also provided an opportunity to get the ceiling light fixed in the day room although discovered that it looks as if the tube was a dud after replacing the starter. I will leave the tube until Wednesday when I get a 10% every little helps discount.

This brings me to a Richard Widmark film whose title I noted somewhere and hope to find. ( Pickup on South Street 1953). He plays a pick pocket just out of jail for the third time and facing life if he is caught. He makes the mistake of then take the purse of a woman whose dominating male partner has got her to pass micro film of a valuable formula to the enemy and who was under a surveillance, hoping to find out who the main culprits were. The girl takes a shine to Widmark and tries to help him keep to the straight and narrow as well as break free from her boyfriend, Widmark is a kind villain who does not carry a gun compared to the boyfriend who is a nasty villain and who does but both are recidivist criminals. The dividing question is Widmark also a traitor to his country in other ways. It can be argued that being a criminal is being a traitor to one’s country although not as damaging as selling or giving secrets away. This is typical of USA film making at the time and an obsession to this day that it is better to be dead than red and that anything which is true Christian or is social motivated is quasi communist and must be defeated.

Almost to the last moment the character still finds it difficult to give up making a small fortune from having got hold of the microfilm. What tips the balance is when the girl is beaten up and nearly killed and that she held out to protect him. Finally he gets he message and puts himself in arms way to help the Feds capture the next villain up in the spy chain. He wins the girl but the city cops reckon it won’t be long before he offends again and gets life inside. Great fun but a good performance from Widmark.

Wednesday 20 January 2010

1863 Exqusite and necessary forms of Pain. Sophe Calle, International horror and Wallander

Over the past decade there are three series of images of human suffering on a scale which is difficult for most human beings to comprehend except through the circumstances of individuals. The first was those of 9/11. The terror of those in the aircraft which flew into the twin towers, the Pentagon and the fourth where the passengers attempted to overcome their captors knowing that pain and death was likely, coupled with those trapped in the higher floors of the building, especially those who decided to jump, and of the fire, police and other rescue workers who went into those buildings and then realising they were collapsing on top of them,

The second was the Tsunami rush of water which swallowed up populations of towns, villagers and holiday makers.

The third is only emerging now and I find them even more difficult than usual to bear. The firemen standing among the rubble of a community school where their dogs have confirmed what surviving local have said, there is no one left alive here and where those who survived are too shocked and full of grief to do anything of themselves.

Then there are the uplifting stories of the survivors, two children brought out from under the ruins after a week, a young woman who immediate sang a hymn of gratitude to her rescuers and her God. The frustration of the reporters, undertaking the essential task of bringing the horror to the attention of the world so that Government, agencies and you and me with reach into our pockets to provide a little of what will be required and press the authorities to get their act together and provide more and better help than they are have been able to do until now.

What impact will these experiences have on them and all those who are directly helping, the locators of bodies and providers of burials of the unknown reminiscent of the mud swamps of the first world war. This is real suffering and real pain although experienced at a safe distance by the majority able to continue with the rest of our lives as if nothing unusual has taken place.

The work of Sophie Calle, the contemporary concept and performance artist, photographer and mini film maker, which continues to impress me most is Exquisite Pain in which she compares her changing thoughts and feelings about a personal experience which devastated her at the time with that of friends who have experienced personal loss and physical pain of varying intensity and circumstance. The work is a brilliant demonstration of how our thoughts and emotions usually change over time and how in each individual situation it is usual to be overwhelmed and unaffected by everything else that is happening around us, including the pain of others, which objectively may be worse, until a distance develops between the actual moments of our individual experience and we can place the experience in the context of the rest of our lives, before and since, as well as in the context of the lives of others and the history of human and animal kind and our surrounding physical world.

In the same way that some people enjoy films about horror and blood shedding, including recreations of acts of extreme violence, I wallow in work of emotional intensity. I cry with any sentimentality at the cinema and over the past year have discovered the sophisticated grandeur of the live operatic experience of loss, self sacrifice and death with Madam Butterfly, Aida, Il Travatore and Carmen, and of Turandot, but to less extent. Five years ago I rediscovered the emotional fix live drama when the Playhouse reopened in Newcastle, and the Sophie Calle work was made into a theatrical performance without interval. This work had the most influence on how I approached my own project since visiting the Saatchi 100 show at the former County Hall building followed the same day by my first visit to the Tate Modern further along the south embankment of the river Thames. My two visits to the Sophie Calle exhibition at the Whitechapel in December of last year has not had such a dramatic impact as those before but reinforced and reinvigorated my work rather shifting it into a new direction. I returned to the gallery just before Christmas because of wanting to experience the bank of screens in which women performed the letter at the core of Take Care of Yourself, some adding their reactions. I watched what I thought was a set cycle in which one of the continuously playing screens became the centrepiece with sound. I discovered that the order of showing within each cycle changes which pleased me considerably. After the performance of Exquisite Pain at the Playhouse I had attended a short open session with the Director and actors and asked if they varied the order in which the experiences of Sophie’s friends are interjected between the changing account of her own. The reaction for the Director was in effect that I was daft to raise such a suggestion which seemed to me to miss a fundamental point of the work.

My visit in Christmas week also reinforced my view that that three distinct groups of people visit art exhibitions. There are the tourist attraction visitor who goes to the Tate Modern or the Baltic at Gateshead who have had no previous interest in contemporary art or prepared for the particular exhibition(s), who pass through and who may stop at a particular work, usually for seconds before moving on. There are those with an interest in contemporary art, knowing something of the work and the artist before arriving and may spend time in reacting and considering the exhibition and to individual works, but rarely from my experience attempt to take in everything in one session. And then there are the artists usually students and young who go to study as well as experience and enjoy, and where at the Calle, there was more evidence than previously experienced of those sitting somewhere with a note book. It was evident from both visits to the Whitechapel that the majority if not everyone had come with prior knowledge of the work of Sophie Calle, even if they had not experienced the work directly before. Having said this only one other individual appeared to stay experiencing the different screens as they went through a cycle. The average stay was for one or two screen performance. Perhaps having grasped the concept they were not interested in its execution and therefore missed the extent which the same subject, a letter, can be read and interpreted and in this instance performed by singers and musicians as well as read.

Pain was also the subject of the last Wallander of the second series of three dramatizations of the nine novels of Henning Mankell. As with the other works, the subject is familiar, that of revenge killings where there is similarity in the modus operandi but the absence of an link. The killings are all of men where the victims die horribly. One retired man spends his time watching birds, and is impaled when he falls from a tampered viewing area. A florist is kept prisoner, starved and then tied to a tree to die. A jogger is placed in a bag loaded with rocks and dropped into water, with only the face exposed and also three were able to look into the face of the murderer before they departed, Only the fourth is prevented, a railway guard as he is about to be pushed under an arriving train.

Wallander and his team gradually discover that the connecting link is a self help group for women who have experienced violence within a relationship and that the organiser of the group is the likely murderess whose mother had also been a victim and had recently died. And then we come to the significant difference between this work and most others and will become an award winning episode among all three award winning masterpieces of dramatic storytelling scripting and acting.

The special ingredient is the character and life of Wallander and acting of Kenneth Branagh.

In this episode there is the sudden death of his father. Wallander visits his father at the residential home where the man has placed himself aware he is a burden to his family as Alzheimer’s takes stronger hold and he pleads with Wallander to takes him home where his life had some meaning. In one of the brief moments of clarity he talks of the joy of just sitting watching the passing of nature’s time and tells his son that he also should have someone to sit with him. Shortly afterwards, Wallander, while in the midst of the murder inquiry, is told that his father has died and he rushes to find that this is so and is immediately confronted with all the unresolved issues of their relationship, his father’s rejection of him, which was not just illness generated, and his own failure to spend more time with the man, and where the nature of his work and its demands was an important factor, but only one of several factors in the gulf between them, a gulf which one suspects had always been there.

I project this because of my own experience where my biological mother denied my existence in public throughout my life until going into care at the age of 96, when Alzheimer’s had already taken a strong hold and showed no affection during my childhood, never talked of my father or of our subsequent relationship and where in fairness several aspects of my life did live up to her fears about me and that I never measured up to any hopes and good wishes she possessed for me. And this was so until moving her to a residential home in South Shields where she progressed from the sad and angry stage of the disease into a demonstrable loving and happy person retaining the childlike belief in her Catholicism until her last breath, despite the pain and discomfort of her last weeks and days at the local general hospital. I was in the fortunate position of being to visit almost every day staying an average of one hour and although at times as he was unsure of who I was and although our ability to communicate directly ended over time we communicated and stabled a bond stronger than ever before and I had my childhood through her progress into babyhood and felt atonement for my many failures in other relationships and experiences.

This was not so for Wallander and worse was to come when arriving just in time to meet his daughter at the station for the funeral he found that his ex wife was with her at his daughter’s request. This was the first time they had met since the divorce and both communicated the challenge of the situation and he was confronted by his own loneliness and inability to come to terms with what had happened between them, especially when she confirmed that she was happy in the life that had developed since their parting. She has moved on, he had not. The film ends with both returning to his father’s graveside, and he leaves his wedding ring behind.

There are two other memorable magic moments. The first when he calls at the home of someone who had a relationship with one of the murdered men who physically abused her against her wishes. He is attracted to the woman who also reacts in a positive way to his visit as does her young son. On the wall he sees one of his father’s paintings which she inherited when acquiring the apartment. She thinks this is a print and he explains that his father only painted the same scenes with slight variations throughout his life, producing thousands of editions. The moment was wonderful because of the way Kenneth Branagh was able to communicate the pride felt in being able to explain about his father’s work and recent death to someone who appreciated the painting.

However the moment which was one of the most the most remarkable of dramatic portrayals of reality I have experienced during my own lifetime was when Wallander confronts the murderer and who manages to take him prisoner producing a gun with the consequence that colleagues, including a marksman, focus on the murderer. Wallander pleads with the woman to surrender or she will be killed unless she puts down the weapon and for a few seconds it looks as if he is successful as she breaks down in floods of tears in his arms but then turns the weapon on her self.

What had emerged beforehand is that the killing spree had commenced shortly after the mother of the women died and Wallander having just experienced the death of his father knew from his recent experience which included, meeting his wife after a period since their divorce that it can trigger extremes of behaviour with some children experience relief and a sense of freedom where others are devastated because of the closeness and bonds which had existed. There was also empathy for the murderess built up during the episode as we learnt of the extent to which those killed who had physically violated their partners, some assaulting a succession of women. Branagh was playing someone whose work and conviction was to apprehend the guilty and bring them to the justice of the society which employed him for such a purpose. At the same time Branagh also conveyed a man who believed he understood why the woman had behaved as she had. She would still have to face action of society against her and indeed punishments for actions for whatever the trigger and justification, the killings were premeditated and horrific involving torture and infliction of intense pain, but he also wanted her to have the opportunity for atonement and redemption. The level of acting was extraordinary.

We all need to experience both kinds of pain, that of the actual relayed and that of the drama and the performance. We do not need to experience directly and many people’s experience is limited in their lifetime although I suspect those who never experience directly are small in number. Because of this there is need to prepare for the eventuality and where through the reporting and experiencing in dramatic form we are able cope better when it happens to us and to show compassion and provide support to others when it happens to them.