It's been a week of introductions.
Hi, I'm Aodhán, in
Studio One. Yeah, like A-gon, after O’Rathaille, the poet? A writer
actually. Yes, it's short residency, just this month and in connection with the
literary festival...
And I find myself relying again and again on the word
‘introduction’ even as I introduce myself and we, in our Cork way, locate
ourselves.
Right, it’s something
of an introduction really - to people here at Uillinn and to the other
artists... No, no, I live near Inchigeelagh, near Lough Allua, near where
the Lee begins.
And each time trying to rephrase a little what it is I've
said I'd do or what I thought I wanted to do with my time here. And each time
perhaps, getting closer to understanding how I might go about it and where it
might lead.
Then, of course, there are online introductions to make.
Happy announcements and updates, busy projecting a self-image. Public
panels also require an accompanying image: an artwork, book cover,
an artist headshot. The latter I ordinarily consider a humbling ritual
best avoided but within the portrait taken on the first day is a surprise,
an image within an image. It will serve.
Studio One. Day One |
Looking again I notice it’s a double portrait, not only
of me in abstracted mood taking in the view, but a portrayal of some
of the experiential qualities of the buildings’ architecture. As
Micheál O’Connell observes, Uillinn is a beautiful building,
simultaneously bold but appropriate to the landscape, monumental not domineering, standing out, blending in, having a colour, not submitting to the ubiquitous corporate aesthetic, functional and open, penetrated by light.
It’s fitting with those design principles of ‘just proportion’ and
‘openness’, that Tomasz and Micheál and I (all currently artists-in-residence) readily established a code or policy amongst ourselves: if the
door of our neighbouring studios is open then passing heads are
welcome in. And as an art writer that’s where I want to be - participating
in the kinds of conversations that can take place in places like
artist’s studios. Or in the corridor. Or on the stairwell, or anywhere
where people who value critical exchange might wish
to speak.
Art writing for me has always been a personal experiment - one’s initial thoughts and intuitions are the inchoate materials the writer endeavours to assay and bring into connected discourse. Thoughts are never conquered; they resist command and ordering; ideas change over the course of their exploration. But through the discipline of a creative practice, what starts in conversation or idyls in the run of one’s private thoughts can lead one to discovering a territory of engagement.
Art writing for me has always been a personal experiment - one’s initial thoughts and intuitions are the inchoate materials the writer endeavours to assay and bring into connected discourse. Thoughts are never conquered; they resist command and ordering; ideas change over the course of their exploration. But through the discipline of a creative practice, what starts in conversation or idyls in the run of one’s private thoughts can lead one to discovering a territory of engagement.
My project, 'Elective Affinities', is, at heart, a proposition about mutual inquiry. What the arts does best is point us to the inherent affinity between intellectual cross-fertilization and the expansion of our imaginative vision. I believe our best chance of reimagining the world is simply to begin with an open question:
Hi, I'm Aodhan. What are the questions of importance to you?
Aodhán Rilke Floyd is an artist and art writer living in West Cork. As part of his research and critical writing residency this summer he has been invited to write in response to programmes at Uillinn and at the West Cork Literary Festival 2019 on ideas of ‘collaboration’, a recurring theme in both our programmes.
Hi, I'm Aodhan. What are the questions of importance to you?
Aodhán Rilke Floyd is an artist and art writer living in West Cork. As part of his research and critical writing residency this summer he has been invited to write in response to programmes at Uillinn and at the West Cork Literary Festival 2019 on ideas of ‘collaboration’, a recurring theme in both our programmes.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteA thought: Vigilance would be advisable for political activists who, as well as embracing art because the cultural sphere offers some protection, see it as a vital channel for social change. Can it be argued that the usually imagined scheme operates in reverse: perhaps it is art which is parasitic on other systems? Amusingly this logic would also apply to situations in which corporate, bureaucratic, and governmental entities harbour designs on cultural activity. Rather than art being envisaged as somehow pathetic and dependant, it may operate as a court jester of sorts, shrewdly manipulating power in its own interest, in order to survive.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has not been removed by the author.
ReplyDelete