Tag Archives: huddersfield

Post It Note drawings

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Post it Note sketch, 2000

Posting has been slow of late as i prepare for the start of the school semester, i’m teaching courses at SAIC and UIC in the fall and with the new term only days away at UIC i’m putting the finishing touches to the syllabus and what not. It’s great to be teaching again, i’m looking forward to meeting my students and immersing myself in academic life. I’m hoping to take some classes myself either in Motion Graphics or Maya both of which would be a big help to the studio effort. Holly is also about to start school at SAIC for her MFA in sculpture so we’re about to become a very academic household again.

post-it-notes

Post It Notes, 2000

In a search for the sewing machine Holly dug out some sketchbooks from a “hidden” closet last night, and found some real treasures. I’ll be trying to get back in the daily posting groove and share these with everyone. Looking at this current post and the last one i;m struck as usual by the similarities and connections between the work i was making in the period of 1995 – 1997 and 2000 – 2001. The synchronicity of seeing all this work, from Loughborough, Carbondale and now Chicago together for the first time combined with my “new” studio practice is very exciting and I hope that i can get some of these “unfinished ideas” out in the real world soon. As you can see from the drawings these images mostly revolve around the idea of unfolding sculpture, of an installation that is either MANPORT (man portable) or VEH PORT MOD (vehicle portable modules) …. At the time i was making this work, i was back in the UK i think for the summer before my final year in C’dale. Regular air travel meant that i had to carry whatever i took back and forth across the Atlantic. After transporting an aluminum relief across the water in the summer 0f 1999 i realized that i should quit making art out of solid metals like aluminum or iron and focus instead on more MAN PORT objects / items. This idea for making in a general sense has held true for me throughout my practice, working with Holly or by myself. Apart from a brief stint between 2004 – 2005 (ish) i’ve never owned a car or other form of motorized transport and frankly do not plan to. Holly and I factor our living plans around public transport. When we do a big install we rent a cargo van or similar. And so it goes for my art practice, these sketches illustrate ideas for either unfolding installations that expand from a compact module to fill an exhibition hall, to paraphrase Marshall Mcluhan, “the medium is the message”…. the work is about networks, structures—- and it speaks this with form — it is what it is — OR the sketches illustrate pieces that are still modular, but are wheeled and can be moved from place to place and exhibited not necessarily in an exhibition hall but rather taken out into the public sphere.

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Post It Notes

Studio wise i’ve been building and calibrating a camera stand to record all the frames of the Permutations animation i drew while in France this summer. It’s taken a lot of effort and fine tuning, and in the long run maybe it would have been quicker just to scan these images in at a low ppi… but i have another experiment / idea to follow up on now…. which if it’s half way interesting will post asap….

Anyhow plenty good material here to work from…. ok now i’m off downstairs to draw.

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Huddersfield Post Office Sorting Building

Huddersfield Post Office Sorting Building

Huddersfield Post Office Sorting Building, sketchbook page, 1996

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First land art project

First land art

Untitled (?), dirt, 1993

This is a photograph of the first “land art” i made and the first collaboration i really made. Dated somewhere between 1993 and 1994, this piece was the result of a collaboration between Simon Hankinson and myself. For me i found the whole process of collaborating on this piece very hard. at the time i had no idea what i wanted to do with the piece, and it really did not relate directly at all to what i was doing in the studio. Simon has this idea of cutting into the landscape, and neither of us had heard of Michael Heizer at the time. So we selected a clearing, in a copse of trees, half way up a hill, on the foothills of the Pennines. It lay across the M62 from the village of Outlane. The copse was in a public area accessed by trudging thru a golf course. So for several, usually soggy, saturdays we went up to this area and bumbled about first with string and so forth to lay out a patch to cut and then spades and shovels to clear 2-3 inches of sod from the ground and expose a wide but shallow trench. Presumably it’s overgrown and gone at this point. perhaps a minor dimple still exists marking our exertions. One day maybe i’ll go back up there and take a look and see if i can find it again. Anyhow this was during my time at Dewsbury College (now Batley School of Art i think). The faculty weren’t encouraging us to do much of anything at the time, let alone collaborate with each other (god forbid) or making land art. So in that sense this was a great project for me at the time as it opened my eyes up to other ways of working that weren’t just marks on paper or daubing on canvas. But i was way too closed off in my thinking to really appreciate what we were doing or why. It’s funny how i spent most of my youth trying to be this really conventional (traditional) artist and now i’m older i really don’t care less. Shouldn’t it work the other way round, blaze a trail in your youth and get more refined with age? i guess that’s the avant garde way, so i missed that boat too… i dunno. any how i’ve totally lost touch with Simon now and i’d really like to get in touch with him, so Simon if you’ve been googling yourself and found this web page / image please email me at tburtonwood@gmail.com i’d love to catch up and see what you are working on.

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