Showing posts with label performer-spectator relationship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label performer-spectator relationship. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 December 2009

Review of INX

Click here to view a review of INX by Claire Rousell on a-n interface.

Sunday, 1 November 2009

Filler at INX

Filler

By Paul Grimmer

Taking place at: The Star and Shadow Cinema, Monday 9th November

Between: 4 pm and 8 pm, bookings on the day

A work for one person at a time, adapted for the theatrical setting at the Star and Shadow Cinema during the INX event.

Placing one against another…

The work plays with the senses, exploring the psychological and unseen forces operating between two bodies in space. Exposing in the gaps between a primitive desire to fill and smooth space, interrupt and control time and cover up the silence.

Originally developed and performed during an exchange with Istanbul where participants memories and fears of interrogation transformed the work. This adapted version, in an overtly theatrical setting places the spotlight on the viewer. Taking a familiar space with familiar rules and etiquette and shifting the balance of power.

INX has been organised by 25 Stratford Grove, and is taking place as part of Wunderbar Festival 2009

INX is supported by Arts Council England, Grants for the Arts.

Monday, 1 December 2008

Grimmer&Steele Trust - Sessions at Proximity Effect

Images from sessions at Proximity Effect, Plymouth Arts Centre - November 2008

Grimmer&Steele Trust meet a Care Package User in Plymouth Arts Centre ready for their Personalised Care Package:





The Personalised Care Package treatment room:


Sunday, 30 November 2008

Grimmer&Steele Trust - Sessions at Proximity Effect, Plymouth Arts Centre

Are you a victim of your own over complicated emotional life?

The Grimmer & Steele Trust can help to provide you with a remedy.

We specialise in care enforcement, and can offer you a free perceptual augmentation session with the Trusts well-balanced carers. The session will provide you with a positive personalised package of sensory respite and reaffirmation - designed with you in mind.

Make yourself comfortable, relax and watch this...


Friday, 21 November 2008

Proximity Effect - The Grimmer & Steele Trust will help you to feel good about you!

Press Release -

29 November 2008 – 11 January 2009

You are invited to the opening event
Friday 28 November, 6.30–8.30pm
The exhibition opens with demanding performance by Leo Devlin curated by Red Ape, arm wrestling by Ray White and a performance by guests the Grimmer & Steele Trust, heralding the start of this daring programme.
ArtsMatrix and Plymouth Arts Centre are also supporting three artist-led projects in the city of Plymouth: Pilot, U:1 studios and new work by Café Concrete.

Exhibition
29 November 2008 – 11 January 2009
A series of performances, installations, videos and live music by visual artists from the city of Plymouth. The group is brought together for the first time, each with their own individual practice and curatorial experience, to consider the effect of their proximity to the city and each other.

Low Profile embark on a marathon performance: watching the entire 1st series of hit 1980s TV show MacGyver, back-to-back, cataloguing numerous ways of saving the day: rolling under doors, escaping burning buildings and fooling the guards.

Rooting contemporary music to locality and heritage, onec have invited bands and musicians to interpret songs of the sea for a compilation LP. Ray White creates an arm-wrestling forum in the galleries, alongside a relaxation room by the Grimmer & Steele Trust. Nick Grew, in collaboration with Heidi C Morstang, presents a new films, Grain Silo, featuring the erstwhile relic of Plymouth’s skyline. Marianne Torrance continues her research with people who share her passion for ecology, exploring art and marine science collaborations, in partnership with the Marine Biological Association and Plymouth City Council. Red Ape is an enquiry into the relationship between language and live performance. Curated by Mark Greenwood, the project explores issues around male identity and anxieties.

Curator Paula Orrell explains: "We have offered a selected group of artists the opportunity to curate/develop an exhibition in collaboration with Plymouth Arts Centre. The objective is to develop a critical space for the artists to examine their own context and offer up a broader understanding of their work. It encourages exchange and development of links between artists in the region, country and beyond, considering the current climate of the visual arts and the development of audience and profile within the city of Plymouth."

Wednesday, 28 May 2008

Performance Etiquette



Etiquette (one-to-one performance, 2008)

This shows the original plan for performance set up and an image of the actual set up captured at the Performance Time Festival. A 9 day festival of live art hosted by an organisation based in Istanbul, Turkey called GalataPerform. The work was performed in March this year as part of a group exchange organised by performance artist Carole Luby. The exchange was funded by Arts Council England, North East.

The work manipulates a very simple set of performative codes of conduct to consider structured interaction. I was interested in setting up a situation where the usual performer/spectator relationship, and the balance of power shifted. Considering the formally accepted etiquette of clapping - often completely inappropriately - at the end of a performance or piece of live art. Someone mentioned to me that clapping at the end of a performance originated in some cultures as a way to ward off evil spirits, as though silence itself was a dangerous thing. This has interesting comparisons in our culture, as silence, is something a lot of people have a problem with. Silence when in company is reserved for your very closest friends and family members. Maybe we use clapping in performance in similar ways, to mask ‘uncomfortable’ silence, perhaps to chase away our personal demons, make ourselves feel better or feel accepted, feel like part of an understanding group. Maybe we are simply playing our role as the viewer.

Interestingly enough I was able to chat informally with many of the Turkish people who had participated in the work immediately afterward. It transpired that the cultural differences between Turkey and the UK had completely altered the reading of the work. Though I had always been aware that the work would be a slightly uncomfortable experience for the viewer and myself I had not expected what actually happened. I have used the word 'interrogation' before to describe the primary focus or intended area of study within the work. However, the Turkish police force and their methods of questioning obviously charge the word with much greater significance for the Turkish people. Many of the individuals who I spoke to recounted very strong feelings of fear, all caught up with the idea of being interrogated by the police. Apparently in Turkey, questioning (interrogation) can happen randomly and was described as being almost like torture. Feedback was translated to me from a Turkish girl who said she had always dreamed of being in the spotlight, up on stage performing, but when the work placed her in this position all she felt was panic and discomfort.

Thursday, 21 February 2008

Video and istallation Work 2004 - 2007




Tenderness (digital video, 2004)



Negotiation 1 (single screen digital video installation, 2004)




33.3 (multi-screen digital video installation, 2005)



The Rules of Engagement (digital video, 2006)




Yours, Sincerely (digital video, 2007)