Monday, 27 February 2012

Arab Spring - Photograph Organization

This afternoon I've been working to identify photographs I want to use and to transfer them into a file for ease of use.  I've also done some edits on a couple of photographs - this is one I'm particularly pleased about:



This is a very early morning shot of Benghazi.  I've straightened it and cropped it - the colours are exactly as I took the photograph.






Working on other parts of the course

I've been working on the written part of the course over the past few days - this is partly to get it done but also because I am having 'work' done on my house and I can't get into my studio or find any of my art materials.  The written part is a Road Map planning out my next three years which I anticipate will be working in both UK and Australia. 

I've also started to update my website Lesley Peat Visual Artist uploading new photographs and rewriting the existing text.

Friday, 24 February 2012

Support from Peers

Over the past week or so I have been away but have also taken the opportunity to talk to friends, peers and artistic colleagues about my ideas for the "Arab Spring" project.  This has been very useful and has firmed up my strategy behind the project.  I was explaining what I was doing to one friend and said that it would be a pictorial representation of a journey - this harks back to the psychogeography of my last project - how one comes to a realisation of self via the journey.  I also said that I was thinking of producing something like a scroll - this references the original manuscript of Jack Kerouac's On the Road which I saw at the Barber Institute a couple of years ago.  Also referring to the manuscripts that I saw in the British Library (Illuminated Manuscripts) and the British Museum as part of the Islamic gallery visit we undertook as well as the Hajj - journey to the heart of Islam.  Interestingly enough there was an interesting review in The Week on this exhibition which I've temporarily mislaid but it gave me the idea of making the 'scroll journey' flow out of an 'ancient ruin' made of the bricks that I've been working on.




I've rejected the funerary statue/Jaume Plensa/clay heads from the queen's tomb - wife of Alexander I c.480BC + my own images of manikins modelling headscarves in Tripoli.  I feel more drawn to the 'book' idea and it has more resonances with my previous work.  I am going to work on the 'heads'  project after I've completed my degree.

Thursday, 9 February 2012

Arab Spring

I've been looking through my pictures and images from my trip to North Africa and have come up with some ideas:

  • Maps and representations of towns - this links to the recent Grayson Perry exhibition and also the images I saw in North Africa

  • Funerary statues "a typical Cyrenaican phenomenon.  They were certainly made locally (ie Libya), with small differences in shape and style on account of the various artistic influences, starting from the early 5th century BC up to Roman times.  Their meaning is certainly religious; they were all found near tombs, either in niches or on bases (sometimes with inscriptions).  They do not represent the dead people buried in the tombs, but a funerary divinity, may be Persephone, the Goddess of the Underworld, or the personification of the soul, which is invisible and this is the reason why in the first examples, the face was not sculptured"


I missed the Yorkshire Sculpture Park exhibition of Jaume Plensa recently but a friend sent me some information and this seems to 'fit' with the above.  Jaume Plensa's website  Also the clay heads I saw at The Ashmolean Heracles to Alexander the Great Exhibition last year. 


This is echoed by photographs that I took in Tripoli:




 A third strand might be mosaics and bits and pieces .... anyway this is all generating some good ideas.
 
 



Day 5 - 22 December

Visit to the Roman ruins of Sbeitla - reached through a huge triumphal arch built in 138AD while Antonius Pious was Emperor, all that is know about this town comes from the inscriptions on its walls and stones.  The most impressive ruins are those of the Forum, entirely surrounded by a well-preserved 70m x 67m wall and containing three temples dedicated to Jupiter, Juno and Minerva.  Ruins of the great baths, churches and two Byzantine fortresses can also be seen.  The prosperity of the town was ensured by the production of olives, the staple of Rome's legions.  Some of the ingenious olive presses can still be seen today.  Then onto Kairouan the holiest city in Tunisa and which, even today, retains a strong spiritual feel.  It is also the birthplace of great poets and doctors of religious law, echoing the traditional Islamic link between Art and Faith.

Monday, 6 February 2012

Arab Spring



Tunisia unveils Bouazizi cart statue in Sidi Bouzid


People gather by a statue representing the cart of Mohamed Bouazizi in Sidi Bouzid, 17 December 2011 Fruitseller Mohamed Bouazizi's ambition was to trade up from a wheelbarrow to a pick-up truck


Tunisians have unveiled a statue in honour of the man who set himself alight a year ago, unleashing a protest movement that ended President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali's 23-year rule.

Tunisia's new President Moncef Marzouki joined flag-waving crowds in Sidi Bouzid in commemoration.

Fruitseller Mohamed Bouazizi's suicide sparked a wave of unrest which swept from Sidi Bouzid across the Arab world.

He was rushed to hospital in a coma with 90% burns, and died on 5 January.

"Thank you to this land, which has been marginalised for centuries, for bringing dignity to the entire Tunisian people," said Mr Marzouki, who was named president earlier this week, after Tunisia's first free elections in October.

Thousands of people carrying flags and pictures of Bouazizi and other dead protesters had flocked from around the country for the anniversary in the under-developed town.

Poster of Mohamed Bouazizi Mohamed Bouazizi's image has been used to inspire protesters throughout the Arab world

The 26-year-old fruit and vegetable salesman had supported eight people on less than $150 (£100) a month, and his ambition was to trade up from a wheelbarrow to a pick-up truck.

His family say he refused to pay three council inspectors bribes, so they seized his goods and beat him. He was refused an audience with the governor so he poured a can of petrol over himself and lit a match.

The protests that ensued have ended authoritarian regimes in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen, while triggering months of deadly protests in Syria.

Day 3 - 20 December 2010

"Le Kef (the Rock) clings to Jebel Dyr, the largest mountain in the region.  From its Kasbah, its most beautifully preserved monument, constructed by Arabs and rebuilt by the Turks, are commanding views over the plains.  Some scattered remains date back to the Roman period including those of large baths, cisterns, fortifications, and Christian basilicas, as well as a few Arab monuments, including the Mosque of Sidi Bou Makhlouf. 

".... Bulla Regia.  This unusual Roman site is distinctive in that the villas were built underground to avoid the searing heat".

I was feeling quite under the weather at this point - our hotel in Le Kef was very hot and my stomach was reacting badly to the food.  However, I was able to appreciate the settings and ruins although it was bitterly cold - oh for a burnoose!

Day 2 - 19 December 2010

"Visit the Bardo Museum, housed in an old palace.  It is an excellent National museum brimming with treasures of Tunisian history dominated by the Punic, Roman and Christian periods and is said to house one of the best collections of Roman/Byzantine mosaics anywhere".

From my diary - the Bardo museum is undergoing renovation so only the mosiacs open, however, these just blew me away.  One was of a hand maiden holding up a mirror in which her mistress' face was reflected with great artistry. 





It reminded me of Miss Jones' decorations for the hall at Kenilworth Grammar School in the 1960s - roundells then Byzantine saints etc which she got us to fill in with "mosaic" squares.  As I remember these were absolutely stunning and fitted into the hall with its long floor to ceiling windows exceptionally well.  Maybe this was the start of my love for mosiacs? 

"Leaving the capital this afternoon, we drive to Le Kef, via the Roman settlement of Dougga.  This magnificent Roman city is perched on a plateau, surrounded by fertile land fed by abundant springs.  the capitol, dedicated to Jupiter, Juno and Minvera in 166AD is arguably the most beautiful Roman monument in North Africa".

Dougga very impressive.  Baths, amphitheatre, cisterns, houses etc and the streets paved with beautifully shaped blocks. 

To Le Kef - my room characterised by leaks from shower, toilet and wash hand basin so the bedroom floor was swimming with water.  The landlord came and looked at it and brought me a new floor mat but then our guide swopped with me which was kind of him.  I quite like Tunisia - nice people, very green country but the food is not as nice as Morocco (but I'm biased!)  A lot of men were wearing the burnoose (I looked it up - A burnous (also spelled burnoose, or bournous; from the Berber and Maghribi Arab. burnus) is a long cloak of coarse woollen fabric with a hood, usually white in color, worn by Berbers and the Arabs throughout North Africa) and there were women uncloaked in the streets.  Quite a liberal Muslim country.  Interesting to hear the guide (I do know his name but I am reluctant to use it on a public forum as I am reluctant to take photographs of the local people without their permission) .... interesting to hear the guide speak of Muslim's respect for other religions and people. 

Arab Spring - Additional Research

I wanted to check on the iplayer for the BBC if there were any programmes I could review about the history of the conflict between Islam and Christianity and lo and behold there was a series called The Crusades presented by Dr Thomas Asbridge - 1/3 Traces the 1st Crusade and was an excellent introduction to the period Programme One - The Crusades.  I'll be checking out the other two programmes over the next few days but of course today the news is of Syria and the effect that the Russian and Chinese veto of UN action has had on the population. 

Sunday, 5 February 2012

Day 1 - 18 December 2010

Carthage to Cairo - trip with Explore!
Looking at ancient Roman sites (this has been a bit of a theme with me over the past few years) + with the chance to see WW2 battlefields like el Alamein and Tobruk where my dad was during the Desert Campaign).  At this point it was impossible to go to Libya unless it was with a tour group.

Outline from the Trip Notes: " ... some of the most mportant sites of the ancient world, travelling in the footsteps of the Phoenicians, Romans, Greeks and Egyptians as we cross three countries and untold civilizations, learning more about people and events that have shaped history as we go. 

Day 1 - the metro to the magnificent ruins of Carthage which was founded about 814BC by the Phoenician Queen Dido.  Carthage grew to be the most important and powerful trading centre on the Mediterranean and in the known world.   The mighty fleet of hundreds of armed ships was an efficient deterrent against invaders for many centuries and its geographical situation as the gateway to Africa, made it a crucial strategic asset, which the Romans fought hard to attain.  After the 3rd and final Punic war the Romans sacked Carthage in 146BC, destroyed much of the old town and set about constructing the Pro-Consular capital of Africa from the debris".

Extracts from my diary:

A tour round Carthage - the skill of the Phoenician's miliary harbour was amazing.  (Check out Peter Connolly re: Punic Phoenician trireme sheds).



C just north of Tunis is quite spread out and is built over by quite alot of posh houses.  Saw the Antonine Baths etc.  Very pleasant and knowledgeable guide. 




By the sea.  Sun quite nice but it is not warm here.  Just got out of UK in time - whilst I was at Heathrow the flights to Amsterdam were cx and we see from the news that Britian is once again in the grip of snow and that we were quite lucky to get out.  PM caught the train to a lovely (albeit quite touristy) seaside village Sidi Bou Said in white and cobalt blue (bougainvillaea etc) - I was impressed by the mixture of people on the train from all sorts of areas.  Teenagers like those everywhere trying to impress the girls and show off - much laughter all round from the assorted passengers over their French accents!  We went into a traditional house - very large and interesting.  Evening at a reasonably boring restaurant (NB to self - don't have a starter AND couscous).  On way home saw some traditional folk dancing in front of the Arts & Crafts Theatre - apparently there's a festival on .... police pushing and shoving - as they do ....

(NB I might have a problem uploading all the images I want to .. as I made them high res - he ho!  Technology eh?)

Research for Arab Spring Project

I have started to get my photographs together whilst working out how I can get my laptop (I've transferred everything to this from my old desk computer which has ground to a halt).  I'm very excited about this project as I can see a number of routes:

  • Photographs
  • Journeys - a quote from the Grayson Perry exhibition "the journey has become a tired metaphor of reality television describing a transformative experience".  Diary
  • Faith, art, calligraphy and science (Islamic art at BM)
  • "To God belongs the East and the West" Qu'ran 2:115
  • Books
  • Combination of my own experience and news headlines. 
  • Maps (Grayson Perry) "we trust maps.  Maps are meant to be a trustworthy diagram of reality.
  • Prints of Relicts
This combines a number of areas in which I've had an interest

Another exhibition was the Leonardo Prints at BMAG - A map of the Pontine Marshes c1515 made of pen & ink, wash, blue bodycolour over black chalk.

Things I need to do:

Sort out photographs and scanning process
Transcribe my diaries from last year
Make a map outlining the journey
Research on the origins of the Arab Spring
Collagraph and Monoprints of key points

As I said - I am quite excited ....

Lost in Lace

This is a superb exhibition at the Gas Hall of BMAG - I originally went in Nov then again in Feb.  The weblink is Lost in Lace Exhibition

Saturday, 4 February 2012

Negotiated Project - New Direction

This week I went to London with my friend Catherine who was most helpful in helping me decide on the direction for my negotiated project.  This discussion was generated by our exhibitions - firstly the Royal Manuscripts - The Genius of Illumination at the British Library.  Exhibition Guide.  This was an outstanding overview of the quality of handwritten books associated with royalty from between the 8th and 16 centuries.  The over 150 richly decorated books are drawn principally from the Old Royal library that was given to the nation in 1757 by George II.  We not only found the quality of the books and their artistry (especially those produced in Bruges in the 15th century for Edward IV) amazing but also the range of subjects covered - from the lives of the saints, moral treatises and warfare manuals to bestiaries and literary, cultural and social texts.

As I have been undertaking some calligraphy 'classes' at The Pen Room in Birmingham I was also able to appreciate the hours of work undertaken by the copists.  I don't know if I've mentioned the new bible which was partially handwritten by Susan Hufton whom I meet a West Dean.  Well worth a look - St John's Bible

We then walked down to the British Museum where we attended a free talk on Islamic Art, followed by the Grayson Perry - Tomb of the Unknown Craftsman exhibition.

Also featured at the BM was an exhibition entitled Hajj journey to the heart of Islam in partnership with the King Abdulaziz Public Library in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. 

Our discussions centred round my visit to North Africa last year - Tunisia, Libya and Egypt just before the start of the Arab Spring.

This is quite an excited prospect and so I am going to start to do some research on the process as well as get out my photographs and notes from last year.

Friday, 3 February 2012

Australia and back

It's been quite an interesting couple of months - I went to Australia (Adelaide) via Hong Kong.  In Auz I stayed with my family and did all sorts of things to do with them.  A small bit of sketching and pastels as we were so busy with packing for a house move, Christmas and New Year, parties and visiting friends, a visit to Coffin Bay on holiday and in general having a great time. 

Sadly during my visit my mother in law Elsie died (2 Jan) at the age of 90 after five years of declining health.  When I returned, it was to the funeral and interrment arrangements and clearing her flat with my lovely sister in law Connie (who came over from Sydney).