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Archive for April 28th, 2008

Sally Waterman (art review)

- The Waste Land: PhD Work in Progress (Section II Game), Viewpoint Gallery, PCAD, until May 3
posted by Cptn

Sally Waterman - in the cage

It’s fitting that a show inspired by The Waste Land, TS Eliot’s 1922 poem about how bad everything is, should open in April, what with it being the cruellest month, an’ all.

But Sally Waterman’s personal interpretation of the text that’s on show at the Viewpoint Gallery, PCAD, focuses on part two of the poem, the Game of Chess. And Waterman picks up on the strategic battle of the sexes.

This is the second part of Waterman’s journey through the whole of The Waste Land, and the work is due for completion in 2010. Each section of the five part poem is intended to sit within a gallery and take the viewer on an emotional journey through the piece, plenty of which are based on the artist’s visualisation of past traumatic experiences.

It’s a fair old chunk to bite off; Eliot’s poem is renowned for its uncompromising allusions, oblique references and rich imagery. Waterman’s use of multi-media offers an opportunity to reflect that, but still she keeps her use of it quite tight: there are just four photographs, and four monitors with one film on a loop, other looped film and a soundtrack. All in all, it’s quite sparse.

Waterman’s Game slips straight to the miscommunication between the couple, with Hushing the Room Enclosed, where the spoken soundtrack echoes parts of the one-sided conversation (’Speak to me. Why do you never speak? Speak.) Four photographs fill in the rest (’What is that noise?/ The wind under the door.’)

Opposite the photographs, four monitors swirl the looped film Quartet Manoeuvres, where a crumbling wall, cockles, a church ceiling and gin bottles pursue each other on the screens.

Between these parts of the work, almost acting as arbiter, is the larger video installation In The Cage where “the non-communication between the poem’s speakers is conceptually interpreted as a series of gestures that are ‘acted out’ by Waterman, entrapped between two pillars”.

It’s the personal aspects of this piece that work most strongly. The Quartet Manoeuvres film feels personal to the artist but intangibly familiar to the viewer. The poem itself is at its most melancholy when external viewers offer their pub-fuelled commentary on a relationship. Maybe that’s something we should all remember (And still she cried, and still the world pursues,/ ‘Jug Jug’ to dirty ears.)

Sally Waterman will hold a public talk about her work at PCAD, Studio Theatre on Wednesday April 30.

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April 28th, 2008

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Keenly greenly

posted by Cptn

The building is not really green, but it is the Torquay Conference centre

Are you Keen to be Green? Then pop along to a free event at the Riviera International Conference Centre in Torquay today.

The do is part of the tourism industry’s attempt to square the circle of people wanting green holidays while keeping the spa bath, flat screen tv and patio heaters.

Malcolm Bell, chief executive of South West Tourism, told the PRSD: “With more green certified tourism businesses than any other region in the UK, the South West is already making good progress. However, both as a destination and as individual businesses, we need to get better at communicating this to visitors - telling them what we’ve done and motivating them to join in.”

And who will this motivation come from on the day? Well, Alastair Sawday, the inspiration behind Special Places to Stay, Neil Lewis from Marks and Spencer, on how building ethics into the business can transform how the customer sees you, and Caroline Scarles from the University of Surrey presents the latest national research on how the public feels about greener holidays.

Pop along and see if you can pick up any tips.

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April 28th, 2008

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Just the job

posted by Cptn

change your tools, from The People's Cube site

If Mondays are getting too difficult, maybe it’s time for a change.

Check out our jobs page which features all the latest from ethicaljobs.com, which lately have included an advocacy and campaign monitor for Oxfam based in Ghana, or work for the soil association in Bristol.

And if you’re quick you’ll be able to get your application in for a green workplaces project leader and part-time green workplaces project worker for the South West TUC.

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April 28th, 2008

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