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Remote Performances in Nature and Architecture
Remote Performances in Nature and Architecture
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€179.80
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A01=Bruce Gilchrist
A01=Jo Joelson
Age Group_Uncategorized
Age Group_Uncategorized
architecture
Arctic Foxes
art and nature
Author_Bruce Gilchrist
Author_Jo Joelson
automatic-update
Black Throated Divers
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=AMA
Category=AMV
Clack Clack
contemporary art in remote environments
COP=United Kingdom
creative geographies
creativity
Cuculus Canorus
cultural geography
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
Denser
ecological aesthetics
environmental humanities
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Fibonacci Sequence
fieldwork methodologies
Frank Fraser Darling
geography and art
Hedge Mustard
Inga Tillere
ISIS
ISIS Stronghold
LADA
landscape perception
Language_English
LCD
Loch Eil
Lois Keidan
London Fieldworks
National Library
PA=Available
performance
Price_€100 and above
Prospect Cottage
PS=Active
Remote Performances
rural creative practice
site-specific art
softlaunch
Swat
Technological Augmentation
Town Hall
Water Falls
Western Art Music Tradition
Wild Garlic
Product details
- ISBN 9781472453914
- Weight: 720g
- Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
- Publication Date: 28 Aug 2015
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
- Language: English
Outlandia is an off-grid artists’ fieldstation, a treehouse imagined by artists London Fieldworks (Bruce Gilchrist & Jo Joelson) and designed by Malcolm Fraser Architects, situated in Glen Nevis, opposite Ben Nevis. It is performative architecture that immerses its occupants in a particular environment, provoking creative interaction between artists and the land. This book explores the relationship between place and forms of thought and creative activity, relating Outlandia and the artists there to the tradition of generative thinking and making structures that have included Goethe’s Gartenhaus in Weimar, Henry Thoreau's cabin at Walden Pond and Dylan Thomas’s writing shack in Laugharne. Based on a series of residencies and radio broadcasts produced by London Fieldworks in collaboration with Resonance 104.4fm, the Remote Performances project enabled twenty invited artists to consider and engage in transmissions, sound performances and dialogues on their artmaking strategies immersed in this specific rural environment of mountain, forest and river; flora and fauna. Some artists engaged in dialogue with people living and working in the area with a range of specialisms and experience in, for examples, forestry, mountain culture, wildlife, tourism, and local history. This book explores the ways in which being in the field impacts on artists and permeates through to the artworks they create. It considers the relationship between geography and contemporary art and artists’ use of maps and fieldwork. It charts these artists’ explorations of the ecological and cultural value of the natural environment, questioning our perceptions and relationships to landscape, climate and their changes. The book is an inspiring collection of ways to think differently about our relationship with the changing natural environment. The book includes essays by Jo Joelson, Francis McKee, Tracey Warr and Bruce Gilchrist, and texts, images and drawings by the artists: Bram Thomas Arn
Tracey Warr writes fiction and non-fiction. She has published two medieval novels, Almodis (Impress Books, 2011) and The Viking Hostage (Impress Books, 2014). Almodis was shortlisted for the Impress Prize for New Writing and for the Rome Film Festival Book Initiative. She is currently working on two new novels: one set in 11th century southern France and Catalonia featuring a female troubadour, and the other set in the 23rd century on the south Wales coast, contemplating a future of climate change and its environmental and social impacts. Her publications on contemporary artists include A Study Room Guide to Remoteness (LADA, 2014), Setting the Fell on Fire (Editions North, 2009), The Artist’s Body (Phaidon, 2000) and essays in Women, the Arts and Globalization (Manchester University Press, 2013), Intimacy Across Visceral and Digital Performance (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), Sensualities / Textualities and Technologies: Writings of the Body in 21st Century Performance (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), Panic Attack!: Art in the Punk Years (Merrell, 2007), Art, Lies & Videotape (Tate, 2003), Marcus Coates (Grizedale, 2002) and London Fieldworks: Syzygy / Polaria (Black Dog, 2002), She also writes book reviews for Times Higher Education, New Welsh Review and Historical Novels Review. She is currently a commissioned writer in the Frontiers in Retreat project working with Jutempus in Lithuania and undertaking writer’s residencies at Centre d’Art i Natura, Farrera, Spain and HIAP, Helsinki, Finland. London Fieldworks (LFW) is the collaborative practice of artists Bruce Gilchrist and Jo Joelson, formalised in 2000 and based in east London. Having formed a notion of ecology as a complex inter-working of social, natural, and technological worlds, they create installation, sculpture, architecture, film and publications with works made for the gallery, the landscape and the public realm. Recent exhibitions and commissions include Dover Street Market New York; Microwave Internat
Remote Performances in Nature and Architecture
€179.80
