Mapping Spaces : Networks of Knowledge in 17th Century Landscape Painting

2015
Mike Leggett

Ulrike Gehring & Peter Weibel (eds) 
ZKM / Hirmer Publishers, Munich
504 pp., b/w, col. illus.

ISBN 978-3-7774-2230-5 (hc)

The two editors of this substantial volume, an off-shoot of what must have been a spectacular exhibition at ZKM (the Zentrum fur Kunst und Medien, Karlsruhe), provide the excellent introductory and closing essays to contributions by thirty-seven authors, mainly from German and Dutch academic institutions. ZKM is known mainly for its work with media artists, transdisciplinary research and collaboration internationally, the exhibition and publication bringing into the light artefacts and reflections from a previous age of exploration at the beginnings of the Enlightenment. The space of the title is the application of intellect to describing and representing the dynamics of distance, and thought.

Flook House

1971
10 mins

The 16mm film documentation of the performance was mostly shot ‘edited in the camera’ and later processed and printed at the London Filmmakers Co-operative. It was the first of many film experiments I conducted at the Co-op, where in the Workshop, processing and printing of shot material was under my control, enabling for instance, controlled superimposition, (seen here in two sections). The opening sequence drew on material shot at Flook, (trees wound with white tape) and formed the basis of the visual material in my film Shepherds Bush (1971) shown that year at the Edinburgh Festival and subsequently editioned and entering collections internationally.

The performance event at Flook House, Taunton, Somerset, was by students and staff of the Foundation Course, Somerset College of Art 1971.

Notes
The Foundation Course within the English art school system of the early 1970s was a response to the changes brought about following the Coldstream Reports of 1960 and 1970 (1); the second report was accelerated by the ‘revolts’ that took place at several art schools during 1968. Students and staff lobbied school managements and governors for a more open approach to art education that could embrace a wider range of theoretical, aesthetic and practical approaches to making art and training artists.
Somerset College of Art in Taunton, ran a one-year Foundation Course where students who had completed secondary education could ‘encounter’ the domain of the professional visual artist. In an intensive 7-months, working as individuals and within groups, a corpus of portfolio work could then be presented to selection panels at schools of art offering three-year Diploma (and later Degree) courses. 
Most students found the intensity of the course stimulating and responded energetically and imaginatively. Two full-time senior staff, Blanche Croydon and David Macfarlane co-ordinated a group of practising artists to introduce the students to their mediums; Rose Finn-Kelsey, Ian Breakwell, John Hilliard and Mike Leggett together with an additional stream of visiting artists were employed throughout 1971. The approach taken by the team was broadly speaking, to confound the ideas and attitudes students encountered at secondary school about visual and fine arts; and to encourage risk-taking and experimentation in the development of those skills they brought with them and skills they learned in the short time available.
During the second of three terms, a large extended thematically based group project would be developed alongside the accumulation of portfolio material. During 1971, the ‘wedding of the Arnolfini’s’ was developed with students, contributing to the event in a variety of ways and means, and presented in the gardens of Taunton’s own ‘stately home’, Flook House.
The Course at Somerset College of Art for those students who had decided to continue, had considerable success in enabling students to go on to a further three years of art school tertiary education.
——————————

Footnotes
1. British art education experienced a significant period of rationalisation and reform during the 1960s. For David Thistlewood (1981) art education prior to the 1960s had been a system devoted to ‘conformity, to a misconceived sense of belonging to a classical tradition,(and) to a belief that art was essentially a technical skill.’ Subsequently, it was transformed into to a new kind of art education that centred on a ‘devotion to individual creative development’. During this period of change, the National Advisory Council on Art Education, chaired by William Coldstream, produced two significant reports; one in 1960 and the second in 1970.  The first Coldstream Report was the template for contemporary art education. It brought about some significant changes in higher education in Art and Design including a clearer definition of core medium Art and Design disciplines and an unprecedented level of control for institutions over their curricula. The Coldstream reform was simultaneously valuable, and catastrophic, for art education in that it both validated and assimilated avant-garde practices in art colleges. The report also recommended that the new Diploma in Art and Design be ‘approximate in quality and standard and achievement to a university course of the same length’. 
From – Rebekka Kill (2010), Imperialist Legacy or Academic Strategy? Resistance to writing in undergraduate Art Education
Thistlewood, D (1981) Histories of Art and Design Education: Cole to Coldstream (Longman, Harlow)

Constructing an Avant-Garde : Art in Brazil, 1949-1979

2014
Mike Leggett

Sérgio B. Martins
MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass. and London, England (2013). 232 pp., col. b/w illus. 
ISBN 978-0-262-01926-2 (hc)

To anyone unfamiliar with the interventions made by avant-garde artists into the art world and occasionally wider society during the middle of the 20th Century, this volume delivers a very readable account. The artists, the objects they made and the discussions they generated are selected here in relation to the particular practices and contexts emergent in Brazil post 1945. (Leonardo Digital Reviews)

Raqs Media Collective: casebook

2016
Mike Leggett

Jeebesh Bagchi, Monica Narula, Shuddhabrata Sengupta (the
collective), with Philip Monk, curator and writer. Art Gallery of York University, Toronto (2014)

Raqs – the term comes from the whirling dances of Asia – regard other artists, researchers and writers as part of the complex interchange of their ideas and practice. Selecting strands from the international army of practitioners, the Collective have curated artists into specific institutions, festivals and biennales. (Leonardo Digital Reviews 2016)

The Extinction Poker Machine Series

2017-18

The interactive installation, The Extinction Poker Machine, proposes to animate a warning about the loss of biodiversity. In the first in the series, a selection from an online collection of 206 digital images of native bees is reanimated in apparent flights of the long dead, across three electronic screens, animated by a generative system. Not the model from biology, but one based on the integers favoured by computers. The system halts the flight of the bees on each of the screens successively, but randomly. A pause, before they take to flight again. Inevitably the generative system will align all three images to match. In preparation are Birds, Fishes and Bush. (Consultation and HTML5 coding by Adam Hinshaw. Bees first installed at Siteworks 2017, Bundanon homestead).

inn7o – Art & Economics (documentation)

1971 – 2012

"APG [Artists' Placement Group] was a milestone in Conceptual Art in Britain, reinventing the means of making and disseminating art, and anticipating many of the issues facing cultural workers today. It represented itself in a number of exhibitions and events, notably in the exhibition Art and Economics at the Hayward Gallery in 1971 with artistic interventions by Garth Evans, Barry Flanagan, John Latham and others.  Over three weeks, representatives from industry and government were invited to gather around a table at the Hayward to discuss APG's ideas with its associated artists. Exhibition visitors were not invited to participate in the discussions, separated from the discussants by PVC curtains, although the conversations were recorded on video and rebroadcast via monitors throughout the gallery. The video recordings shown for the first time since inn7o at Raven's Row in 2012 – were considerably deteriorated but revealing of a dramatic confrontation between artistic and corporate cultures – were made by Mike Leggett."