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Wednesday 27 February 2013

Land Grab

I'm half way through Writing Urban Space, a Zero Books publication edited by Liam Murray Bell & Gavin Goodwin, which, as the cover-all tagline states is an exploration of "the relationship between imaginative writing and the built environment". It's a compilation of short, digestible chunks of essay texts, that meanders gently through the subject matter, until I got to Can Writing Shape Place? by Sarah Butler, writer and director of UrbanWords - a consultancy setup "to explore how writing and writers might intersect with the process of regeneration". Oh dear.

Whilst Butler tries to allay my fears around the use of terms like consultancy and regeneration, I'm not convinced. It all feels like a physical and metaphysical "land grab". The property developer/ council/ regeneration agents has the monopoly on the physical land and it's planned architectural development with artists/ writers subcontracted (through a consultancy agency) to lay claim to the more ephemeral spaces that occupy the soon-to-be-developed site. In the case of this short essay, Butler's projects are "participatory, community-based projects, which look to explore, unpick and articulate communities' relationships to their environment." Oh my.

I'm perhaps coming down too hard on this idea of a consultancy/ agent working with communities to help articulate their sense of a place/ space through writing or any other creative forms, as this is something artists are often parachuted in to do. However, it is the motivations of those retaining the consultancy's services that I question and their ability to "harvest" the creative outputs of a community for their own gains. The allusion of "control" extended to those within a community in such a situation, again, unsettles me greatly - "We're knocking down your town centre, but as you've indicated you'd "have a café with huge sofas and bottomless coffee pots..." therefore we'll lease the new prefab to Starbucks". Butler certainly wants to challenge the artists being "'used' as a tool"in these circumstances but the examples given in this very short text completely undermines the conclusion that the artists' role is anymore than that of 'tool' (both as instrument and person).

Despite appearances to the contrary this entry is not a 'cheap shot', as Butler's essay has raised a lot of interesting considerations when dealing with place/ space. Specifically around the term 'ownership' (and similar terms like authorship, control, etc.) and the simultaneously empowering and powerless act of reigning over conceptual place. Perhaps we can define these places/ spaces as 'property', aligning the terminology more closely with terms used in Andrea Phillip's essay Art and Housing: The Private Connection (in ArtSocial Housing-Housing the Social: Art, Property and Spatial Justice, 2012). This allows us to draw out the sense of ownership or implied ownership aspired to by unsuspecting Community D who sees Artist C descend on them with creative writing groups, drawing sessions and all other manner of conceptually camouflaged psychoanalysis employed as a control and feedback mechanism for Consultancy B under the employ/ instruction of Property Developer A - I imply a linear hierarchy starting at A moving through to D in order to highlight possible power structures inherent in such relationships.

My thoughts have dried up, so until I've mulled over it a little more I'll end this post here.

Tuesday 12 February 2013

A Dander with Demarco

When trying to find your bearings and get a sense of architectural place, what better way to do so than with a guide? In the case of the below video from 1970, Richard Demarco takes us on a dizzying tour of the City of Edinburgh from the west end to, rather befittingly, Calton Hill. "Look at this."; "Come look at this."; "Look at that." His love for the stone city is offset against a distaste for, (rather ironically), the contemporary, specifically, the inability of the New Towns to illicit the same sense of identity with place as one achieves when living in historical porridge. I'm going to take a punt and suggest whilst external appearances of tenements in Edinburgh in 1970 evoked all the romantic notions of living in history, conditions within, would have been less than palatable. Just like Glasgow, Edinburgh had slum clearances too, with the latter only being on a comparatively smaller scale due to population, but both building new social housing to cope with the decanting away from the centre. Alas the marching drum of gentrification sounds in Demarco's Walkabout as he surveys the monument of Edinburgh's architectural triumphalism.

WALKABOUT EDINBURGH (link to NLS Scottish Screen Archive)


Tuesday 5 February 2013

Finding Place

First, a little background.

For of my proposal to Collective for the Critical Discourse Internship I appropriated the term 'non-place' from French anthropologist Marc Augé's book Non-places: Introduction to an Anthropology of Supermodernity as a way of describing the notion of being 'in-transit' from one 'place' to another. In Collective's case this was a reflection on their planned moved from their Cockburn Street gallery to the City Observatory on Calton Hill. I was drawn to the Augé's writing during my MFA when exploring the temporality of the Modern Movement (in physical architectural terms) and anthropological place expanded out on and indeed became an articulation of architecture's ability to service as a tangible gesture of a particular political/ social ideology. At the time of writing it seemed the most direct means of putting across this train of thought.

The places [anthropological place] have at least three characteristics in common. They want to be – people want them to be – places of identity, of relations and of history. (Augé, 1995, 51)

As anthropological place on the one hand feels very defined it also offers an armchair-anthropologist-come-artist like myself a level of ambiguity, allowing for appropriation. In an act of validation or qualification anthropological place can be regarded as being anchored by architecture. Physical structure can be employed as metaphor/ monument/ icon of the aforementioned identity, relations and history. It was the monument's of Cockburn Street (in relation to Collectives' identity, relations and history) and Calton Hill (in relation to Collectives' aspirational identity, relations and history) that led to the appropriation of place and non-place in describing my interests. The use of non-place was employed as a means of stripping identity, relations and history from those taking part in NWSP and specifically referring to Collective (as the name given/ appropriated as anthropological place) being in-transit not just between two physical and geographical locations but also metaphysically in-transit. This, on reflection, seems somewhat naive interpretation of Augé's work and requires some more research and scrunity.

It might therefore be more apt to consider this period of research during my internship as one of finding place anchored by Calton Hill as a monument to this new place - as yet to be defined. The focus may not be one of a found place, but the accumulation of thought and physical material (notes etc.) in finding this [undefined] place. The ongoing act of finding may in fact become the 'output'. 

I'll update as the search continues.