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Is it beyond out grasp to understand creative thinking fully ?

Dr Alex Carter clears up some issues on the philosophy of creativity and humour.

Cambridge Arts Round Up Episode 56 

In this edition I visit Dr Alex Carter Associate professor of Philosophy at Fitzwilliam college (above) to educate myself on the philosophy of creativity and humour and the problems is raises. Alex Carter is Academic Director for Philosophy and Interdisciplinary Studies at the University of Cambridge, Institute of Continuing Education where he has designed and delivered courses in philosophy, ethics and creativity theory. He also oversees the Institute’s undergraduate research courses.

His own research interests are diverse and include Wittgenstein’s later philosophy, the theology of Simone Weil and the philosophy of humour. Alex’s PhD thesis explored some of the surprising aspects of Wittgenstein’s views concerning freedom and fatalism. Alex is currently researching the relationship between humour and creative practice via the concept of ’serious play’.

We encounter artist, musician, and short film maker Taron McCallan Moore at his Cambridge gallery and find rewarding deep thought on the life of a satyrical artist who knows the rules and how to break them in an entertaining way.     

….And we make studio visit to abstract painter Charlotte Cornish who talks on recent work with environmental themes as she open studios and meets the public.   

Artist Charlotte Cornish at her new studio 

I have been working professionally as a painter and printmaker for over 30 years, regularly exhibiting in a number of galleries and working with art consultants. I also undertake commissions and my work is held in numerous public, corporate and private collections.

During my degree at Brighton University, UK, and postgraduate studies at The Slade School of Art and Central St Martins in London, I specialised in printmaking. My early interest and involvement with printmaking has informed my practice as a painter. I build my paintings using layers of paint, thinking of each layer, often poured, as a distinct element. Working with acrylic paint allows each of the layers to dry overnight. This gives me the opportunity to remove new painted layers or elements, without affecting the earlier work.

I have always made limited edition original prints, and more recently I have been making unique works on paper. These are made initially using a screen print monotype process, further developed with painted elements, creating images that combine the qualities of both of these mediums.

Inspiration for my work often comes from places I have visited and have significance to me. Taking photographs as a starting point, I then work on small studies. It is during this process that the images become abstracted. I am drawn to places full of intense atmosphere – colours, noises, smells, and I hope to capture something of these experiences in the work. I have always loved exploring the possibilities of colour and colour relationships and the infinite potential to create dynamic connections and reactions.

Satyrical Artist Taron McCallan Moore 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i1R6p9GjCIM&t=3s

The Overview

‘Travelling Light’ was an innovative Biennale collateral project showcasing 58 international artists and was featured by the British Council on the Artupdate map for the 53rd Venice Biennale. The concept of the exhibition was borne out of necessity: with no official funding and no budget to speak of, the curators devised creative solutions to cover all the costs of both a London preview show and the Venice Biennale itself. Strict size and weight constraints were imposed on the works, both as a way of minimising shipping costs and encouraging lateral thinking from the artists. Works – ranging from site-specific installation, video and sound, to delicate sculptures, paintings & drawings – were posted to London in large envelopes together with a modest submission fee. Ultimately the creative and the financial were conceptually interwoven: in order to both fulfil the ‘Travelling Light’ dogma and achieve a professionally staged exhibition, the team saved money by transporting all 58 works to Venice in hand luggage and overhead lockers. Travelling Light was an antidote to the usually massive scale of works shown at the Biennale and the exhibition received considerable media interest and critical acclaim.

On the strength of ‘Travelling Light’ at the 2009 Venice Biennale, WW & Pharos were invited to participate in a conference on curating at the IUAV university in Venice (Starting from Venice: The Biennale Collateral Events, 5th October 2009). Chiara Williams joined a very distinguished panel of some of the biggest international curators and professors from New York University, MIT, Karlsruhe University and SIK-ISEA to discuss and debate collateral events at the Biennale. She presented and discussed ‘Travelling Light’ with other Biennale curators, notably Angela Vettese (Director of the Graduate Programme in Visual Arts, Iuav University, Venice and President of the Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa), Cornelia Lauf (Art historian & curator, Iuav) Chiara Bertola (curator Fondazione Querini Stampalia and Mona Hatoum’s Interior Landscape), Stefano Coletto (curator Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa), Chiara Vecchiarelli (curator) and Giulio Alessandri (Iuav).

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‘Daily Artist’ by Sardine & Tobleroni

The Background

The exhibition showcased a total of 58 artists including: Kate Davis, Maria Chevska, Jarik Jongman, Oona Grimes, Sardine & Tobleroni, Boa Swindler, Lucy May and Eva Lis.   Submissions arrived from all over the globe, which was appropriate not only because of the theme of the 53rd Venice Biennale, ‘Making Worlds’, but because the ethos of community-grounded Pharos and WW Gallery is inclusiveness. Many of the selected artists are London-based and hail from as far afield as USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, Russia, Poland, Portugal, Switzerland, France, Netherlands, Germany, Italy, Greece, Wales, Scotland and England.

Travelling Light opened in London at WW Gallery from 14th – 28th May.  From there it travelled along the trade route to Venice, a path historically well trodden by merchants and hedonists attracted to the trade and pleasure capital of Europe. From 6th – 10th June it was hung in a palazzo between the Accademia Galleries and the Peggy Guggenheim Collection.  Additionally there was a special acoustic performance by Italian born Olivia Chaney at the London private view and by Veneto musician Alberto Grollo at the Venice private view. 

Home of the murder mile and notorious for being one of the most crime-affected boroughs in London, Hackney is often synonymous with hoodies, gangs and guns in the imagination of the British public. By contrast, Venice evokes heritage, beauty and culture; with its magnificent architecture and ancient waterways, the capital of the Veneto is considered by many to be one of the most beautiful cities in the world. On the face of it, these places don’t have a lot in common. However, two worlds literally collided in Travelling Light, an exhibition which promised to explode London’s edgy East End onto the luminescent international art stage when all eyes were upon it: the opening week of the 53rd Venice Biennale Art Exhibition.

The Curators

Travelling Light was a collaborative project between a dynamic trio of female East End director/curators, Chiara Williams and Debra Wilson of WW Gallery and Sophie Wilson of Pharos Gallery. Intending to stretch the imagination of their artists through imposing size and weight constraints, the brief demanded that work arrived by post for the London exhibition before being transported to Venice for the Biennale. The dogma encouraged lateral thinking and some interesting responses: artists used to working on a larger scale had to challenge their usual practice and leave their comfort zone, often to surprising, silly and outright creative ends.

“The journey from London to Venice was one of the inspirations for Travelling Light,” explains Williams, who herself is half Venetian, half Londoner. “The artworks will be transported along trade links used for the exportation of silk, grain, spices and exotic produce when Venice was a major maritime power and centre of commerce. The path was also navigated extensively during the 16th century when Venice was a leisure destination for libertines lured by the promise of the glamorous courtesans, fabled to be the most beautiful in the world at that time.”

There is a glint in Williams’ eye as she says this. The allusion to overt femininity and fabulous women does not go unnoticed; after all, the show will be curated by three women already rather notorious in their Hackney homeland. In addition, they have chosen to take a number of artists/documenters to Venice with them to make and record site-specific works. Wilson, the other half of the WW partnership adds: “The team is a dynamic resource bank, we are a group of women ranging from early 20s to late 40s, putting on cunning stunts across London and Venice.”

The sight of these women descending on the streets will certainly be a sight to behold, and Sophie Wilson, the force behind Pharos Gallery suggests that there are more visual and sensual surprises up the sleeves of the Travelling Light team: “With its gambling houses and beautiful courtesans, a trip to Venice represented, in the words of J J Cale, a “one way ticket to ecstasy…”

Artists

The exhibition showcases a total of 58 artists including: Kate Davis, Maria Chevska, Jarik Jongman, Oona Grimes, Sardine & Tobleroni (AKA Victor ‘Torpedo’ Silveira & Jay Rechsteiner), Boa Swindler, Lucy May, Eva Lis and Eleanor Moulsdale. Submissions have arrived from all over the globe, which is appropriate not only because the theme of this year’s Venice Biennale is, ‘Making Worlds’, but because the ethos of community-grounded Pharos and WW Gallery is inclusiveness. Selected artists hail from USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Korea, Hong Kong, Russia, Poland, Portugal, Switzerland, France, Netherlands, Germany, Italy, Greece, Wales, Scotland and England.

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