Anna, Emily, Johnny & Susan, Wakefield, 13 June 2012

Tuesday 29 January 2013

AJE old process








So back from the second residential in Leeds -









.... a very different affair from Wakefield...










Unfortunately Susan couldn't be with us, so SAJE  became three (AJE), with susan voice in attendence via Anna... reactions? All fine, although more critical feedback would be good.  Next step is to review what the mixtape is and how we distribute it.  I was very aware when we were presenting that this wasn't the format it was intended to be viewed in - somehow, in a presentation, it becomes too reduced, no rhythym, too regularr and too reductive...  The joys of a mixtape were always the unexpected, so lets think of:

  • rhythym and pace, 
  • editing (smooth or jarring)
  • volume (shouting or whispering) 
  • placement/distance (close or far)
  • level of completion or production: rough cut or polished
  • Clarity or distortion
  • and of course visual appearance - looking, reading, squinting, remembering, interpreting, translating
Anna - was forwarded this paper today, Value, Measure, Sustainability: Ideas Towards the Future of the Small-Scale Visual Arts Sector,  from Common Practice which I read and which i think will be of particualr relevance to you: (auld Emily was at the symposium which generated the publication) The publication looks at generating "ideas towards the future of the small scale visual arts sector", in relation to sustainability.  Overall a good document, which first problematises the 'ecology' model - i.e. that the fittest will survive, which of course favours those who are more able to survive (which i think and have formulated as being more akin to the 'Cultural Greenhouse' model - who gets brought in over winter...) but also that small orgs function is to serve large orgs... (the hierarchical ladder model)...

Worth a read - although one thing that seems missing to me is any investigation of where the resources come from, and what the money is intended to do...  If space in the symposium/publication was devoted to why we should fund public art in the first place - then maybe we could see how small arts orgs specifically particular serve that goal, which might be one approach within what is referred to as collective strategies...

Sunday 13 January 2013

thoughts on leadership


My work always starts from the interests, ideas, needs of project participants.  I usually try to work co-operatively, bringing everyone into the decision making, taking all contributions into account.  My thinking was that if I worked hierarchically, participants wouldn’t have a sense of ownership of the project.  What often happened though was a lack of direction.
                                 
Over the past six months, I have reflected on what was successful and unsuccessful, had discussions with participants from past projects and as a result planned a new programme of participatory projects.  I held focus groups to share the ideas and approach for this new programme.  By doing this as presentations, I turned around my usual approach.  Through this I found hierarchical and co-operative are not opposite approaches; presenting a clear idea then enables people to choose to get involved so at times working hierarchically may support co-operation at other stages.

Through this process, I have now written a three year plan with a clear vision and rationale.  I plan to use this to encourage further participation in projects with people with disabilities, artists and arts organisations.  From the Cultural Leadership Reader, the article that resonated most with me was about Connective Leaders: building “a sense of purpose across organisational boundaries, perceived connections between diverse people, ideas and institutions.”

I feel my role as a leader is to articulate a sense of purpose, I would also add to the idea that it’s important to build in check points to ensure the purpose is mutually held; that it reflects the interests off all involved.  Articulating a broad purpose is not the same as controlling all details, the broadness can allows for contributions, for their to be changes and areas of uncertainty.  I have been using the Disney model to separate planning; the vision, planning and evaluation; and found this useful for me and also for participants to know what is being asked.  During a focus group, one participant made a comment, which reassured me about my approach:

“Having a destination creates an archway to look through but as with all creative processes you don’t know how to get there, discussion shapes it.  Being involved in the process with the artist gives a sense of ownership and pride; you feel you’ve created it together.”

I also realised that I’m often trying to fix things when actually the work can set up situations that hint at alternatives without providing solutions.  Reflecting on past projects, I found that work successfully improved access for disabled people, not when advocating for specific changes but when projects brought people together.  This provided opportunities to share and discuss new experiences. 

Part of my leadership is my conviction that art releases the imagination; helps us consider alternative perspectives.  What those will be and what will happen next, you can’t know so you set up contexts and let things happen.  I don’t need to fix, control, document, but briefly bring people together in specific contexts and enjoy the surprises. 

Working on the group project has been really useful to share our practise and ask questions of each other.  Again, it’s not about fixing, or advising, it’s been about supporting each other to reflect and come to new understandings.  I’ve learnt this is a really valuable process and hope there are ways to continue beyond this project.  There has been a lot of sensibility; we made a plan but treated it flexibly by checking what we each needed at the time.  Reflection was aided by the context we had chosen, a wood burning stove, big pots of soup and country walks. 

The question I was asked was “How to put art at the centre rather than access?”  In response I’ve written a short statement that I hope succinctly explains my approach.  As this approach includes working closely with participants, I’ve also collected and presented quotes about experiences.  The statement and reflections on projects have informed a project blog which presents the new programme and an archive of previous work.

A question I asked Anna was, “What are the connections between all the things you do – and how do you make them work for you?”  I realised that the question I asked was relevant to me as I’ve stopped drawing which used to be really important for me.  I’m now using the project to motivate me to pick this up again as a reflective tool.

Wednesday 2 January 2013

Badges

Having agreed to make a badge for each of us which will underline the part of the presentation where we draw out relevant learning for the wider group we have each chosen a slogan to represent one aspect of our learning.
When it gets to the bit where we share that, we will offer the other groups a chance to select one of our badges, which hopefully will get them thinking about the relevance of our learning to their own experiences on the programme.
Susan's badge says Expert in...and people can add their own text. and comes from Acknowledge and use the expertise of everyone in the room, including yourself.
Emily's says Leadership is responsive and came from understanding about confidence in flexibility.


 Johnny's say equality/quality and mine says 'don' mind the gap - and comes from a realisation through involvment with the course that the job of the leader is not to always fill gaps, but might just be to recognise them.