Archive for the ‘Art’ Category

Design Cities

October 27th, 2008 by james | No Comments | Filed in Art, Urbanism

The Design Cities exhibition–running at the Design Museum until early January–has been on our list for quite a while and we finally made it along yesterday. The exhibition focussed on seven cities that the curators argued had in turn dominated world design over the past 160 years, and laid out a number of iconic items from each. It seems like almost every exhibition we’ve visited in the past couple of years has been dominated by chairs and this was no exception, but there were also a range of other devices from tableware to consumer electronics.

I had been expecting more exploration of cities themselves rather than a focus purely on the items produced within them. There was a sketch of a proposal (not accepted) for the Chicago Tribune building (interestingly given that Chicago wasn’t one of the featured cities), the obligatory photograph of the Bauhaus, and a quick look at one of the new Olympic facilities being built in East London. But other than that the built environment was ignored and that was a shame. It would have been interesting to have had more depth and an exploration of whether there’s any connection between city planning, architecture and the aspirational consumer goods that actually dominated.

The exhibition started and ended with London, arguing that London is currently the focal point of contemporary design but then leaving a dangling question of whether design has such a focus in our globalised world. It felt like that final section was rather confused as it raised the question but didn’t really grapple with it.

The place of communications was another area that wasn’t really serviced as it could be. The time spent exploring each city’s products in turn was a good introduction, but there wasn’t enough space for looking at the wider ecosystem in which each city enjoyed its moment of glory, how the trends moved on, and so on. Presenting that might have left the visitor better able to assess the questions about whether we have or need a focal point for global design today.

Overall it all felt like the introduction to a great exhibition and a little incomplete, but worth a visit if you’re in the neighbourhood.

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Coupland writes for TV?

October 16th, 2006 by james | No Comments | Filed in Art

There’s always some trepidation when a favourite artist moves into a new medium. Just as many great music video directors have made dreadful movies and songwriters aren’t necessarily the best poets, not all novelists do a great job of writing for the big screen.

But I have such faith in Douglas Coupland, that there’s nothing but enthusiasm in my response to the news that he’s shopping a TV series, Extinction Event:

a new science fiction series described as being in the vein of Doctor Who, Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Lost. The pilot has been written and production is moving ahead now.

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The Long Tail

September 24th, 2006 by james | 1 Comment | Filed in Art, Books, Life, Media and Politics

Disclosure: I was sent a review copy of The Long Tail by the author after responding to a request on his blog for reviewers.

I wrote a few times on The Long Tail when Chris Anderson’s original article began its journey to being one of the most talked about concepts in the blogosphere. In the months that have followed, the phrase has become part of everyday language and the buzzphrase to drop when talking about media consumption.

If you haven’t read the article, I’d suggest you do so now at Wired’s website. Put simply, the argument is that while traditional shops have limited shelf space and so have to limit their stock to guaranteed ‘hits,’ online retailers such as Amazon, iTunes, and others have unlimited shelf space and are beginning to see more and more revenue come from less popular products. When storage space is not a factor, being able to stock one hundred albums, each of which will sell fifteen copies is considerably more attractive than selling 100 each of 10 albums. As those numbers increase, so does the potential gain to both consumer and retailer.

The ideas presented in the article were attractive on many levels. For those of us whose media tastes have never sat squarely in the mainstream there’s a sense of vindication in Anderson’s thesis that going forward ‘hits’ are going to be less important, and comfort in the idea that new metrics will allow more independent artists to enjoy some measure of success, and that the unlimited shelf space of the virtual world will make it ever easier to explore back catalogues. While some of the statistics have been overstated in subsequent discussion, the figures do seem to suggest that key revenue sources for big online retailers are increasingly in their vast stock of lower selling products.

The attractiveness of the ideas does not, however, prevent me from having several concerns about the patterns that this trend is part of or of the way the information is presented. As Bruno Giussani covered quite effectively in his review of the book, one clear concern is that Anderson’s focus is very US-centric (or at best US-and-Western-Europe-centric) and that while the vast majority of his evidence is concerned with the media industry he doesn’t seem to fully address that restriction, implying that the trends apply outside of that market.

Similarly, much has been made in recent years of (in Douglas Coupland’s words) “choice paralysis” and the difficulties that arise from an overabundance of choice. Barry Schwartz’s book “The Paradox of Choice” was a major contribution to that debate, and as Anderson is talking about a market where there are literally millions of options open to us, choice management is an important question.

Anderson is clearly not convinced by Schwartz’ work, commenting:

I’m skeptical. The alternative to letting people choose is choosing for them. The lessons of a century of retail science (along with the history of Soviet department stores) are that this is not what most consumers want.

and appropriately citing Schwartz’s comment that:

A small-town resident who visits Manhattan is overwhelmed by all that is going on. A New Yorker thoroughly adapted to the city’s hyperstimulation, is oblivious to it.

Not having read Schwartz’s book, I want merely to note an interview I heard with Schwartz around the time of his book’s release. In the interview, he took his argument out of the arena of media consumption and into public policy where he argued that when it comes down to the decision between allowing patients the option of lots of hospitals, or ensuring a high quality of service in a single hospital, governments in Europe have been moving towards the former when patients are generally more satisfied by the latter. Such an argument is probably tangential to Anderson’s book since The Long Tail doesn’t directly engage with public policy at any point (other than by inference, such as in his argument for trusting the market) but should be taken into consideration when considering the appropriate scope of Anderson’s theory.

Beyond potential over-reach, however, there is a deeper concern that connects with the dangers of unfettered globalisation and with how we understand the formation and sustenance of community. In particular, Anderson comes across as very much a free-market thinker, arguing in Rule 8 of his “Long Tail Rules” (a chapter that provides clear evidence that the book is targeted at businesspeople) that people seeking to tap into the potential of ‘the long tail’ should “Let the market do your job.” While markets do work for the common good in certain areas, I have never been convinced that they are sufficient in themselves to sustain and advance the arts. While there must be a measure of public engagement with any art, a consumer culture is necessarily short-termist and doesn’t automatically provide for the development of artists or their work.

Informed patronage, or foundation or government subsidy can provide space for an artist to develop their work at a pace shielded from an instant gratification culture. While The Long Tail does talk about changes in consumption patterns, there is little in the book to indicate that that will be joined by a significant change in the nature of consumption such that long-term endeavours can be solely be supported by the market.

It may be, however, that The Long Tail can shed light on more open forms of patronage. As the oft-referenced Howard Dean US presidential campaign in 2004 demonstrated, large amounts of financing needn’t come entirely from wealthy benefactors but could instead be gathered from a ‘long tail’ where the wealthy give the principal donations but a significant proportion is gathered from smaller donations.

Moving to more general matters, there is little sense of the importance of local economies in this book, and at times it comes close to militating against them as it refers in glowing terms to the increase of choice offered first by department stores and now by online retailers. While Anderson is clearly not discussing core issues such as food, power, and so on, and the purest examples of the long tail are those that arguably have minimal environmental impact as they are purely digital creations, we must be very careful to interrogate any balance we make between depth and range of choice and the importance of locality. If we are to have a long-lasting positive social impact we need to be in touch with the rest of the world and to have some news choices forced upon us. In our day-to-day lives it is by being physically alongside people that we can begin to understand the reality of their situation and be reminded not to disenfranchise them. These ideal Long Tail systems, all so automated, could easily lack transparency.

And that automation could potentially present another cause for concern. While there’s considerable discussion of the ‘democratisation’ of tools for creation (witness the huge number of amateur video makers using youtube, or the ease of laying down some tracks with software like GarageBand), there’s little discussion of the democratisation of the aggregators, the vital tools that help us sort and sift through the huge catalogues of media now available to us. Present trends suggest that while successful aggregators are somewhat participatory (amazon’s reviews and ratings, google’s use of links between pages, etc) the core algorithms driving them are trade secrets. As the volume of information to be managed increases it becomes harder for new players to enter the game, potentially leading to a situation where we have not democratised choice but have simply replaced one set of taste-makers with another.

As the huge number of sales and volume of debate have shown, Anderson’s book has tapped into a very real phenomenon, and one that people are deeply interested in. He provides a detailed examination of many relevant issues, but the end result is a book that will tick many business boxes but does not do all it could to engage with the very real social issues that arise from its topic, and by neglecting some of them offers tacit approval of some trends whose implications should trigger considerable debate.

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Greenbelt

September 5th, 2006 by james | No Comments | Filed in Art, Life

For anyone who might be wondering, I have been meaning to blog about Greenbelt. It’s just that with over 3000 photos on flickr, 18 or so videos on youtube, and dozens of blog entries, there’s been plenty of Greenbelt content to distract me from adding my own here.

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Window on the West Bank

August 5th, 2005 by james | 2 Comments | Filed in Art, Front Page

Londonist draws our attention to “guerilla artist” Banksy’s holiday escapades. It seems he’s taken his trademark irreverence with him to Israel, where he’s helping decorate that rather controversial new wall.

I particularly enjoyed this exchange:

Soldier: What the fuck are you doing?

Banksy: You’ll have to wait until it’s finished.

Soldier (to colleagues): Safety’s off

The Guardian has a gallery of the what he was, in fact, doing. I very much enjoyed his New York escapades a few months ago, but this is something else.

New York Music Halls

June 25th, 2005 by james | 2 Comments | Filed in Art, Front Page, Life, Music

Capping off a walking tour of New York, our second night in the city saw us at two concerts: Susan Enan at Rockwood Music Hall, and Bell X1 at Sin-e.

Susan moved to New York earlier this year, but the way she greeted almost every member of the crowd assembled in Rockwood Music Hall made it very clear that she’s settled in quickly. Rockwood sits right on the edge of the East Village and has been operating for about six months, hosting intimate musical gatherings in a bar-space that will accommodate maybe 50 people.

Joined by an upright bass player who will be joining her to record in Vancouver this summer, Susan delivered an assured set that demonstrated the strength and breadth of her writing. Most of the songs were familiar, but a couple of newer pieces were also evident and I’m definitely looking forward to hearing the new recording.

From Rockwood Music Hall it was a quick dash (with Susan, and a few of her friends) over to Sin-e to catch the debut New York performance by Bell X1. The Irish band recently had a song featured in The OC and were making a quick trip to the US to capitalise on that. We were deeply impressed.

A five-piece, the band made good use of the variations their membership allowed, basing themselves somewhere in the 80s-revival, but bringing in a touch of punk, and on at least one track, some great harmonies. We weren’t quite so impressed with the song that had brought them to these shores (their most generic) but the tune they announced as being from their forthcoming album was delightful, and is likely to make a top-notch single.

To top it all off, the New York City live music experience is blessedly smoke-free.

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Kings & Queens

June 23rd, 2005 by james | 6 Comments | Filed in Art

Arnaud Desplechin’s Kings and Queens has been attracting a considerable share of critical attention. It’s not often that you get reviewers like Salon’s Andrew O’Hehir making statements like:

A lot of filmmakers talk about bridging the gap between high-gloss pop spectacle and independent auteur cinema, but “Kings and Queen” is one of the best, and most alive, attempts to do that in at least a generation.

The film tells the story of two ex-lovers. At the outset their paths are clearly divided, with Desplechin’s deft style-shifting providing most of the insight into who they each are, and the forces that drove them apart. As their stories unfold and become once more entangled, the style becomes more uniform, but the deftness remains.

We see layer upon layer of artifice stripped away as the characters’ self-perception and status in the eyes of their acquaintances are gradually laid bare, often in shocking ways. The film was not shocking and its twists and turns are never nail-biting, but the surprises are deeply felt. The exploration of identity is not novel, but it is allowed to unfold in a wonderfully sympathetic manner.

It provided a fine way to spend our first night in NYC.

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Downloadable Darks (and a little Stockman)

June 7th, 2005 by james | 2 Comments | Filed in Art

One of the many things keeping me busy of late has been the process of transferring the many tapes (!) of the various talks at this year’s Festival of Faith and Music into a digital form. We’re going to be making them available for download over the next few weeks.

You can find the first three installments — David Dark’s first keynote, David and Sarah’s joint workshop, and Steve Stockman’s contribution on “U2 and Justice” — at the Calvin Student Activities Blog.

You can call it podcasting if you excuse the fact that we’re not using RSS enclosures to facilitate downloading…

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Decemberists at the Intersection

May 22nd, 2005 by james | 2 Comments | Filed in Art

Our introduction to the Decemberists was back in September on their last trip to Grand Rapids. Displaying a delightful eccentricity, deeply literate lyrics, and a panoply of instruments, they left little doubt that we’d be buying at least one album before too long. From Thursday night’s showing it’s clear that we weren’t alone in being impressed as 725 people flocked to the Intersection to catch the band out supporting their new album Picaresque.

It was more than apparent that the Portland, Oregon band were in the middle of a tour that’s been going very well. The theatricality of their stage persona was both well rehearsed and effortlessly playful, and by and large the songs came across well, particularly the more crowd-pleasing numbers from that new album (”Sixteen Military Wives”, “We Both Go Down Together”). With the strong Irish folk strain running through much of the material, it was at times easy to imagine that I was back at mid-90s Greenbelt listening to one of many Waterboys-influenced bands. But that sound has been filtered through the succession of indie sounds that the past decade has seen, achieving its own identity, and resulting in a sound and a set that was highly entertaining.

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The True False Identity

April 21st, 2005 by james | No Comments | Filed in Art

I suspect I won’t be the only one excited to hear that T-Bone Burnett’s new album has a release date. It’ll be the first new album from T-Bone since 1992, and is due in August on DMZ (a Sony imprint). According to the story, there’ll also be a 2-CD career retrospective released around the same time.

“It is very primal,” Burnett says of his liberating new work. “It’s emancipation. Everyone who works in the record business is a victim of Stockholm syndrome, and I’ve finally been deprogramed. … We’re doing this to supply some liberty in the horrible environment we’re living in.”

I know what I’ll be listening to on the way to Greenbelt!

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