Recovery Time is Labour Time (billboards)

Te Tuhi Contemporary Arts Trust, Pakuranga, Aotearoa (New Zealand)
A set of three billboard posters mounted on panels running along the wall of a modern industrial looking building. The posters are plain yellow with black lettering that runs across the middle of all thre boards, reading: Time is Labour Time is Recovery Time is

A site-specific installation of Recovery Time is Labour Time as a billbaord series on Reeves Road, outside the Te Tuhi gallery. Part of the exhibition Who can think, what can think curated by Bruce E. Phillips.

Read Bruce E. Phillips’ essay “Thinking Out Loud: On the development of Who can think, what can think at Te Tuhi” published in ArtNow.

Ableism of Networks (installation)

Te Tuhi Contemporary Arts Trust, Pakuranga, Aotearoa (New Zealand)
Two deep blue walls meet at the corner of a high room with a wooden floor. Large white lettering runs in a circles across the walls and over the floor with the words 'Ableism of Networks of' formign a never-ending sentence. The circle of letters is larger than the height of a person. A woman stands inside the letterng circle to one side of the corner.

A large text work occupying two walls of the gallery space as part of the exhibition Who can think, what can think curated by Bruce E. Phillips.

Read Bruce E. Phillips’ essay “Some struggles are invisible: Art, neurodiversity, and Aotearoa” published in Artlink Australia.

Publication

Download: The Ableism of Networks poster and Stimworks essay (2.3 MB)

Recovery Time is Labour Time (installation)

Collective, Edinburgh
A set of three billboard posters mounted on panels running along the wall of a modern industrial looking building. The posters are plain yellow with black lettering that runs across the middle of all thre boards, reading: Time is Labour Time is Recovery Time is

A site-specific installation of Recovery Time is Labour Time as a never-ending sentence painted around the central pillar of the Observatory on Calton Hill. Part of the exhibition Acts of Observation.

The installed work was accompanied by the publication of the essay “Stimwork” as a limited poster edition.

Publication

Download: Recovery Time is Labour Time poster and Stimworks essay (2.3 MB)

The Ableism of Networks / Recovery Time is Labour Time

Collective, Edinburgh
Picture of a horizontal white page with two large black squares placed horizontally across the top half. Inside the left-hand square are the words The Ableism of Networks in white letters. Inside the right-hand square are the words Recovery Time is Labour Time in white letters. On the white area of the page below each square is a block of text in smaller black letters.

Two texts written for the Not Going Back to Normal project and published in the Disabled Artists Manifesto.

Polemical pamphlets for feral distribution as we venture out of lockdown. Leave on bus seats and cafe tables, between magazines on news stands and stuffed between the pages of library books. Wherever you want to leave a reminder that things were never normal and we are not going back there.

Publication

Download: The Ableism of Networks / Recovery Time is Labour Time (70.6 KB)

Raik

Peacock Visual Arts, Aberdeen
Detail photograph showing various books jumbled with reindeer antlers and a glass fermenting jar lying on a felt rug.

A study of the Raik Road area in Aberdeen looking at its development since the end of the Ice Age through the lens of metabolic animism. This looks at the area as a site of metabolic flows and processes considering how the land and human and more-than-human lifeforms shape and are shaped within these. Natural resources, labour and culture act upon one another. This is seen most typically in relation to changing forms of food production but also in areas such as the oil industry.

The project consisted of an exhibition, public workshops and publication.

Publications

Download: Metabolic Animism (2.4 MB)

Download: Metabolic Evolution (2.8 MB)

Uncommon Slime Kraft

SSW, Lumsden
Drawing of primordial landscape in dark red superimposed with mediaval decorative shapes and lettering in gold.

A collection of four essays written as part of the Frontiers in Retreat residency at the Scottish Sculpture Workshop in Lumsden.

The essays include: ‘The Uncommonality of the Commons’, ‘The Biconditionality of Craft and Kraft’ and the two-part essay ‘On a Proletarian Soil’ which is written in the style of a walker’s guide following routes to two destinations on the outskirts of Lumsden. The essays explore and question the relations between politics and nature through sources ranging from Aristotle’s Athenian Constitution to Robert Kirk’s Secret Commonwealth of Elves, Fauns and Fairies and drawing on the work of Donna Haraway, Sarah Jacquette Ray and Alexander Reid Ross.

Publication

Download: Uncommon Slime Kraft (949.3 KB)

Generating All Trees

FoAM, Brussels
Photograph of a set of tree branches grafted into a single long branch and laid out on the floor. One end rests upon a book and grafting knife.

Grafting exercise. Part of Promiscuous Pipelines a work session about modularity in software processes as an “articulation between the universal and the particular” (Chantal Mouffe in: The Return of the political, 1993) hosted by Constant VZW and FoAM, Brussels.

The title, Generating All Trees, comes from an essay by the computer science pioneer Donald Knuth and the work itself was based on the grafting of tree branches from a random walk in one of Brussel's woodland parks.

Excursions into the Negative Field

Cesura//Acceso
Page from textbook showing a diagram of an irregular zig-zag line with the letters A and B at either end.

A visual essay published in Cesura//Acceso, journal of music, politics and poetics.

The essay juxtaposes conflicting tensions between creative pedagogy, behavioural modelling and free improvisation drawing on extracts from the work of Maria Montessori, the Arts and Crafts schools of the 1900s, and 1970s educational psychology.

The Uncommonality of the Commons

New Glasgow Society, Glasgow
Colour key from old map showing colours for different types of land ownership in Edinburgh

Transcript of a talk originally presented as part of Estovers Part 1: Urban and Rural, Historical and Contemporary, Commons and the Common a public discussion produced and chaired by Emma Balkind.

Publication

Download: The Uncommonality of the Commons (122.9 KB)

Stackwalker

CCA: Glasgow
Photograph of a sheep being sheared outdoors. In the foregournd is a large red platform surrounded by piles sheared wool on which a man shears a sheep.

Stackwalker is a collection of interviews collected over a period from August 2008 to June 2010. Most were recorded in the Hebrides and the North East of Scotland, with others in Edinburgh, Glasgow, and London. The material explored current forms of self-organised production in rural Scotland, the relationship of these to law and nature, and the various localised, often informal, forms of governance and social structure within which these exist. In particular, the project focused on the parallels between the experiences modern-day migrant workers in these areas and the impacts of migration and economic restructuring that many of these areas have experienced in the past.

A version of the film footage combined with transcripts of the interviews was presented as part of the exhibition Fields, Factories and Workshop, at the CCA: Center for Contemporary Arts, Glasgow, in August and September 2010. The film version was accompanied by music by Hanna Tuulikki, a set of vocal works composed from fragments of songs gathered from people in the locations where the interviews were made.

Stackwalker: Interviews 2008-2010

CCA: Glasgow
Photograph of a set of books with black covers displayed on a table.

A book edition of the interview material from Stackwalker was published in 2012 by CCA:Glasgow, entitled Stackwalker: Interviews 2008-2010 (ISBN: 9 780956 271389) and distributed by Cornerhouse Publications.

The subject matter unfolds from the bottom up, one interview leading to the contacts that became the basis for later interviews. Over the course of this process, the perspectives of the people speaking changes. Initially, more first-hand personal experiences were collected. As a whole, the interviews do not present a portrait of any one particular group of people, but rather are a complex of statements, offering many aspects of a process that is not easily bounded in terms of specific identities, periods, or contexts.

Print copies can be ordered from Cornerhouse Publications.

A New Kind of Commons

SCAN, Bournemouth
Photograph of 1970s suburban housing seen through a patch of gorse land.

A series of walks exploring the idea of the commons as it is understood and experienced today based around commons areas in Kinson, Townsend and West Howe in Bournemouth. These included an ancient historical commons that was the inspiration for Thomas Hardy, a new reclaimed commons woodland and the public green spaces of a council estate. The walks used photography and sound recording as a way of capturing and presenting responses to the areas and ideas of the project.

Free Social Foundations

FutureSonic, Manchester
Black and white map of Manchester overlain with boxes containing quotations from interviews.

A mapping of the current condition of spaces of free and open assembly in our cities, gathered from interviews and research with people in Manchester and Salford including the legacy of the Hulme squats, new collectivist approaches to allotments and the private policing of Manchester town centre. This was published as a free broadsheet that was distributed on an illegal walk through the city centre and back to Hulme.

Publication

Download: Free Social Foundations (2.7 MB)

Given To The People

GI Festival, Glasgow
Photograph of a group of people sitting on a dirt road to block a truck.

Given To The People is a film about the Pollok Free State. The Free State was initiated by the actions of a local resident, Colin Macleod, who began a tree top protest against the building a motorway through public woodlands in Pollok, Glasgow, in the early 1990s. Over several years this grew into a series of camps across the Pollok estate. The Free State sought not only to block an unwanted motorway cutting through one of Europe's largest inner city public commons, land that had been gifted to the people of Glasgow, but also raised issues over the rights of local people to determine the use and development of public space.

The film brings together interviews with a number of the participants and an archive of photographic material from the campaign. It was made with the support of the GalGael, an organization that grew out of the Free State, and features music specially composed for the film by Foxface.

Watch the film online.