Cain, Ben (2016) Practical Training. [Show/Exhibition]
Type of Research: | Show/Exhibition | ||||||
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Creators: | Cain, Ben | ||||||
Description: | An imaginary studio takes up temporary residence in order to figure out what it wants to do and how it wants to behave. A studio or workroom which is made accessible to all comers, where artistic or creative work can be viewed and created collaboratively.An Open Studio is intended to foster creativity and encourage experimentation in an atmosphere of cultural exchange, conversation, encouragement, and freedom of expression. In the modern era, Open Studios originated in the salons of 17th Century Paris such as the Hôtel de Rambouillet and the gatherings of intellectuals and artists hosted by Madame de Scudéry. Much later, during the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, the concept of the Open Studio took the form of public poetry exchanges (most notably those of the Beat Poets events that were the forerunners of modern poetry slams, the ‘happenings’ of Andy Warhol’s The Factory (culminating in the multimedia open-floor parties known as the Exploding Plastic Inevitable and the experimental jamborees of the French literary group Oulipo). In the 21st Century, the Open Studio (often taking the form of a virtual or web location) focuses on the creative act of making and sharing, in a flexible space equipped with a range of contemporary media and multimedia. Artists and non-artists come together in a social act of collaboration, the only entry requirements being an inquisitive nature, a curiosity about new and traditional media, and a lack of inhibition about creating in a semi-public space. (Wikipedia) Absent-minded exercise In fields of art making where ‘participatory practice’ implies the audience’s ‘active’ role in producing, for example the production of a subject (the audience themselves?), there’s an increasingly pressing need to qualify the nature of that productivity.This need arises out of a more general demand for our (i.e. a viewer, client, consumer, user, operator, producer, or all of these at once) productive engagement with an infinite variety of fields where people come into contact with other matter, data, people, objects, and subjects. So one question might be about the nature of the active and/or productive relationship between people and things, people and people, and people and materials. Do those relationship generate capital or exchangeable data, and can that data be monetarized? And anyway who’s doing the acting? When does that relationship generate a space of self- or community-realisation, which in turn might have a capacity to liberate or make powerful, or promise ‘mutual-support’ as an outcome, for example? When people are consumers are encouraged to recognise themselves as consumers who should present themselves as products, who really benefits from all that productivity? ‘In the era of biopower, what bodies are meant to produce is essentially their own economically productive lives – integrally self-converting into human capital. Life itself has become integrally capital- intensive’ (Massumi, Politics of Affect). The effects of excessively competitive and self-exploitative patterns of work arguably take root in the body. Immaterial or cognitive labour materializes, if anywhere, in or on the body, e.g. skin, eyes, limbs, joints, nerves, hair. Functioning as something of an antidote to a backdrop of ever-present activity or productivity, in Technologies of the Self Foucault talks about learning how to effectively take care of oneself, and in discussing this form of care, he quotes Marcus Aurelius, ‘I did little work, and that to no purpose’. So small-scale, seemingly purposeless work, or perhaps work that is done when we’re not at work or not really working at all is upheld as being valuable, and seems to be equivalent to a kind of ‘taking care’. Perhaps this ‘little work of no purpose’ can also be associated with a form of passivity? There are three areas that I’m linking here - the active and passive nature of ‘affect’, signs of contemporary work on the body, and a notion of caring for oneself and others. I want to consider the ways in which these areas might be co-dependent. |
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Your affiliations with UAL: | Colleges > Central Saint Martins | ||||||
Date: | 24 June 2016 | ||||||
Funders: | Supplement Gallery | ||||||
Related Websites: | http://supplementgallery.co.uk/exhibitions/ben_cain/practical-training/, http://ben-cain.blogspot.co.uk | ||||||
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Locations / Venues: | Location From Date To Date Supplement Gallery, 96 Teesdale Street, London E2 6PU 24 June 2016 26 June 2016 |
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Material/Media: | mixed media | ||||||
Date Deposited: | 08 Nov 2016 16:56 | ||||||
Last Modified: | 08 Nov 2016 16:56 | ||||||
Item ID: | 10365 | ||||||
URI: | https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/10365 |
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