In part two of Garageland Blog's coverage of Unlimited Festival, a disembodied voice leads Joe Turnbull to art outside the galleries and museums. (Here's part one if you missed it.)
When I first arrived at Southbank Centre for this year’s
Unlimited Festival I was waiting outside the Royal Festival Hall as crowds
surged past at the usual frenetic London pace. My ear was grabbed by a
disembodied voice with a distinct Scottish accent. As I listened, a fascinating,
if troubling, account of the daily experience of living life on the streets
unfolded.
As was mentioned in my previous review of Cameron Morgan’s TV Classics Part 1 at Unlimited
Festival, the curation and exhibition of the visual arts elements was
problematic. Tramway went some way to remedying this at their own version of
Unlimited Festival in Glasgow. But where both festivals excelled was in
presenting art in unusual and non-traditional spaces.
The piece that had caught my ear was part of Bekki
Perriman’s Unlimited (administered by Shape and Artsadmin) commission The Doorways Project. Following
Perriman’s own experience of sleeping rough for many years her first Unlimited
R&D revisited doorways she had slept in, reflecting on moments that
occurred there; some tragic, others snatched glimpses of joy. For this iteration
Perriman decided to share the stories of other homeless people about their
experience of street culture, different from the usual narratives of blame or
tragedy.
The Doorways Project
popped up in unusual spaces around the Southbank Centre and in locations across
Glasgow city centre, each time placing a spoken story in a place you might
expect to find a homeless person. The idea is to catch an accidental audience
and get them to stop and listen when they might not do so for an actual
homeless person. The fact that there is no visual element mirrors the
invisibility of homelessness.
This was a common thread that runs through each of the
stories and was highlighted at Perriman’s artist talk at Southbank Centre. The feeling of invisibility is perhaps the most damaging aspect of life on the
streets; worse even than the horrific abuse, discomfort and health problems it
entails.
Disabled people in general and disabled artists specifically
are likely to empathise with this experience, given that the latter’s work is
still practically unseen by mainstream audiences or in mainstream arts spaces.
Aaron Williamson’s own Unlimited commission, Demonstrating the World also plonks
itself on an unsuspecting audience; like an alien presence that is somehow
strangely familiar. This piece of performance art sees Williamson − master of
the ridiculous – deliver a bizarre demonstration reminiscent of a QVC sales
pitch that would play in the early hours of the morning, on busy Glasgow high
streets and the main drag of London’s Southbank.
Williamson shows off the pointless multiple functions of his
bespoke ‘absurdist furniture’, including a chair with a selfie stick attached,
an extending ironing board and a cupboard with vacuum hoses concealed in each
side, mimicking the recent explosion in YouTube ‘how-to’ videos of the most
mundane tasks. He uses a series of hand gestures for particular functions
alluding to sign language.
Passers-by are positively baffled. Is this the shittest
sales pitch ever or postmodern irony taken too far? No-one seems sure.
Williamson is inverting the usual power of the gaze held by the audience by
depriving them of any comprehension. It also parallels how the deaf community
must feel in a world built with the needs of the hearing in mind. Demonstrating the World certainly makes
itself visible, but intentionally not understood.
If these two works were purposefully innocuous, Noëmi Lakmaier’s
Cherophobia was an unabashed
statement, a piece of pure spectacle. It saw her suspended from 20,000 helium
balloons in a 48-hour live durational performance art piece in Shoreditch
Church. The setting was clearly an important artistic choice adding both
aesthetically and symbolically. The grandeur of the Church’s pillars and
vaulted ceilings juxtaposed with the childlike innocence of the multi-coloured
balloons created a breath-taking contrast. The hallowed setting also invoked
notions of ascension and crucifixion, both fitting given the artist’s ordeal in
performing the piece.
The work was also live-streamed to the Southbank Centre and
beamed across the world; purposefully encouraging the gaze of a largely
non-disabled audience to be placed on the body of a disabled artist. In doing
so Cherophobia raised extremely
difficult questions about the ruthless objectification of disabled people and
the nature of our voyeuristic society.
What each of these pieces showed is the opportunity that
presentng working in non-traditional arts spaces provides can be invaluable,
particularly for disabled artists who are still disproportionately underserved
by those spaces. In each instance, the setting was central to the artistic
vision and effectiveness of the piece. It also demonstrates how sorely we need
to see more work by disabled artists embedded in all spaces, both inside and
outside the gallery walls.
Joe Turnbull
Unlimited Festival was shown at:
Southbank Centre, London
6 - 11 September 2016
Tramway, Glasgow,
15 - 25 September 2016
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