So the debate over the last two weeks in the SWA house - should we be putting a commercial or a more conceptual slant into our exhibitions? Should they be exclusive? Does one override the other?
The truth being a matter of a nice balance of both seems to be the most sensible. We want to be able to showcase great contemporary work of all practices but like with anything we need the capital to do it.
Putting on an exhibition costs money, through promotion, and the curators time, as well as artists material expenses. In the ideal world we would want to be able to pay the artist for their showcasing their talent not just pay them for materials. This time next light year Rodney when we have found the right formula, which once again comes down to this debate, how much Commerical? How much Conceptual?
Of course some pieces can be both, but not all. I can only assume very few people would want a film of an ass crack suspended over a circle of short film work named Moonlighting, created by Fine Artist Ed Jones. The day we sell that to put in someones living room I promise to eat my left shoe. But the point of the piece isn't to appeal to the buying market, its appealing to the art viewer, the art appreciator. The entertainment of the piece is right there in the exhibition space, to view, enthuse and move on. Of course if someone wishes to buy it this is a bonus. An unlikely happening, but still a bonus.
This is why we need funding in the first off, before the exhibition begins to enable the exhibition to be realised fully, and to get the general public to want to come in and see it. And yes we do our exhibitions for the public, for everyone, not just the elite 'artist circles' you can get in some areas. This is the problem with contemporary art or any art for that matter, why just open the doors to a select few? Art is for everyone. Anyway I'll get off my soapbox on that matter and come back to it on a another blog post.
So back to buying, selling, buying, selling. Of course the more we sell the more we can reinvest into the SWA to enable us to put on more shows and show off the great talent we have here in the South West, dahling. But if its all pretty 2D work that people are happy to take away and put above their mantle piece then some of the magic of an art show can be lost. The exhibition is the entertainment, well thats what we believe anyway. The exhibition should be curated in such a way the space is alive with work, concepts, musings, ideas, debates, entertainment.
Getting the funding to do this however, is now minimal. We aren't big enough yet to compete with the organisations that get over £100k a year from the Arts Council, but we are keen on getting even a percentage of it if it means the artists and the general public can enjoy something a bit different. That however isn't as easy as it may sound either. Hundreds of man hours filling in proposals , funding applications to get £100 isn't that appealing I have to admit.
So we are back to selling! The scrap yard show was intentionally bereft of 'sellable' work. The space warranted a more conceptual theme, the poundbury garden centre show however has a more open element of people coming in to 'buy' something, usually some pesticide and bulbs but if there is some artwork in the space that takes their eye then we hope to sell it to them. Then we can always have the odd conceptual structure that has the viewer enthralled, entertained, but not necessarily a piece they can buy.
For now thats the way to play it, I think anyway. Of course if we sell both commercial and conceptual in one show I'll eat both my shoes. As then I'll be able to buy a new pair!
If you are around between the 14th - 30th August pop in to the Poundbury Garden Centre, see what you think of the mix.
Couldn't agree more with SWA! Having done a degree in Fine Art (Painting and Film/Video) in London (ages ago now!) I got a bit dis-heartened with all the art snobbery as well as non-artists who don't like conceptual art moaning about it, plus it's not an easy way to make a living! Art and Design (and all other artistic forms like film, fashion etc) have always played off each other, so why not mix it all up in a show?! The purpose of art is usually to stop and make people think differently, thus why you get all the white walled gallery space as a place to stop, engage with the work and contemplate BUT it's also really interesting to put art (and design, crafts etc) in unusual and public spaces so people really have to question what is what. It also makes it much more accessible to the general public who otherwise may have no interest in visiting an art or design show. Plus... balls to commercialism v conceptualism! Artists either die poor or have to take on commercial commissions or sell work to finance their art - and that's their personal business anyway, so sell away SWA!!! But that's only my opinion of course!!! Me and my boyfriend Stu haven't done any art since we graduated a decade ago, but having SWA around is now getting Stu involved in showing his work, even if his illustration (i.e., design / non-conceptual) work but that's equally valid, any anyway we do now feel we have a platform to get back into conceptual art as well - and that's all thanks to SWA, so watch this space...
ReplyDeleteIts a pleasure to have you on board, and in fact we may just get t-shirts made up for the Dorset Show saying balls to it all!! ha ha! so looking forward to seeing Stu work at our next show....
ReplyDeleteSince the Catholic church is no longer the patron it once was, and I doubt I'll ever get my Sistine Chapel moment, artists have to look were they can for an income.But art sells and people like owning original art.I'm just not sure about the market in my part of the south-west.Most people who visit Weymouth don't come here for art. Siting outside Costa on a sunny afternoon will leave you it little doubt. I'm sure it's quite different in other parts, St.Ives for instance but unadventurous watercolours of predictable landscapes, seascapes, boats and seaguls dominate the private galleries and giftshops giving the impression that that is what art menas down here and if that is all that is offered then that is all that can be sold.
ReplyDelete2D sells more that 3D which sells more that conceptual (which a great many members of the public struggle to recognise as art anyway). Placing contemporary pieces in unusual places, taking them out of the gallery, challenges notions as to what art is, can be, should look like. It performs the dual role of promoting the artist and educating, challenging the public. This then implies that part of SWA's unenviable task may be to help create a market for more interesting, relevant, challenging artworks.