Monthly Archive for April, 2011

Gorbals Skirmishes

Skirmishes have organised for a mobile FABLAB to visit Glasgow on Friday 6th May 2010 — you can get more details at www.skirmishes.org/?p=292 The duo who run the van will have traveled from the Netherlands…

Bring an idea of something to make, or a project to share that shows how useful digital fabrication can be! They would like to make this event into a handy meet up for the wide community of makers in Glasgow, to share, learn and make, in the same way that we could in the Glasgow Fablab (AKA Maklab). It will also be a great opportunity for those who are unfamiliar with these tools and methods to experience the fablab and get a sense of what it could be used for.

The event is an informal drop in and forms part of Skirmishes Edge City design charette being held on the same day [http://www.skirmishes.org/?p=263].

The details:
St Francis Community Center, 405 Cumberland Street. Gorbals. Glasgow. G5 0YT.

Myriad Editions First Graphic Novel Competition

Myriad Editions is pleased to announce the first ever competition for a first graphic novel in progress. The entry may be by a single author or may be a collaboration between a writer and artist.

The winner will have the opportunity to develop their work in progress with Myriad’s creative and editorial team with a view to being offered a contract and publication by Myriad in 2012/13.

The winner will be announced in January 2012 at the First Fictions Festival.

The closing date is Monday 1st October 2011.

The winning entry will be an extract from a narrative work in progress – fiction or non-fiction – and will be chosen purely on the strength and promise of the art and writing by a panel of expert judges, including:

Steve Bell, cartoonist (Guardian)
Hannah Berry, graphic novelist (Britten & Brulightly)
Ed Hillyer (Ilya), cartoonist (King Lear, Skidmarks) and author (The Clay Dreaming) Corinne Pearlman, Creative Director, Myriad Editions
Ian Rankin, author (Inspector Rebus series and other novels)
Bryan Talbot, graphic novelist (Grandville, Alice in Sunderland, The Tale of One Bad Rat)

More Information can be found at the Myriad Editions Site.

For lots of other comic and illustration themed competitions check the Things to Do section of Paul Gravett’s website.

Us Do Part

stamp

Degree Show Tip #274: Careful what you perforate.

School of Commons?

Proposal 1:
Self-organisation in Education:
with Stevphen Shukaitis and Glasgow Open School.
Saturday 30th April 6pm-8pm at the Glue Factory, 22 Farnell Street, off Garscube Rd.


We present the first in a series of two events aiming to bring together people interested in holding experiments in education this summer and anyone struggling with ideas and practices of learning, democracy, collectivity, curatorship, culture and knowledge production. We aim to combine space for open discussion of ideas and pragmatic arrangements for collaboration.

The event has been organised by Glasgow Open School, Glasgow People’s Assemblies, the Free Hetherington and thiscollection. A more detailed outline of the event can be found at the Glasgow Open School website.

Piloti’s Nooks and Corners

Private Eye’s Piloti has kindly granted me a three month licence to reproduce this article about the Stephen Holl building project .

Glasgow School of Art, designed as part of a competition in 1896 by Charles R. McIntosh, then a young assistant in the Glasgow firm of Honeyman & Keppie, is one of the most famous buildings in the world.

This subtle and eclectic stone structure, with its echoes of Scottish castles, Elizabethan architecture and “Queen Anne” and Arts and Crafts buildings in England, is gawped at constantly by hordes of starstruck architects. Its creator, “Rennie Mackintosh”, as he became known, has become a figure of myth as well as the patron saint of the Glasgow tourist industry. And two years ago, to mark the centenary of this truly wonderful work of architecture, the school announced a competition for an adjacent new building to replace the brutal concrete tower which the Mackintosh successor firm, Keppie Henderson & Partners, contrived to erect on the opposite side of Renfrew Street in 1970, when Glasgow was busy destroying itself.

Any new building on this sensitive site might be expected to respond to the character of the city and be deferential to poor old Toshie’s masterpiece. But no. Faced with 150 entries, including several from respected Scottish practices, the assessors surrendered to cultural cringe by plumping for a fashionable international superstar, Steven Holl of New York.

Holl paints as well as designs and is responsible for modishly angular and arbitrary new museum buildings in places like China, Norway and the US. He says things like: “Building transcends physical requirements by fusing with a place, by gathering the meaning of a situation.” But Holl has come up with a design which is scarcely respectful to Mackintosh.

At least the new building will run along the street line of Renfrew Street and incorporates the 1930s Assembly Hall. But that’s as far as it goes. Holl’s creation will rise much higher than Mackintosh’s block and, by having the top storey jutting forward, will overshadow it.

Whereas the original block is carefully and delicately detailed, Holl’s is a crude composition of plain surfaces and awkward angles. Facing Mackintosh’s facade, with its big north-facing mullioned and transformed windows, Holl proposes a recessed “landscape loggia… that gives the school an exterior social core open to the city. Natural vegetation with some stonework routes water into a small recycling water pond which will also reflect dappled sunlight on to the ceiling inside” — which suggests he has little understanding of Glasgow’s weather, especially in winter.

Mackintosh managed to provide practical, well-lit studio spaces that still work. But Holl, who drones on about a “new language of light”, proposes to waste space by having “Driven Void’ light shafts” inside the building to provide “direct connectivity with the outside world through the changing intensity and colour of the sky.”

Worst of all is the fact that this banal conception will be “coated in a thin skin of matte glass referencing Mackintosh’s stone skin”, whatever that may mean. Holl denies that all this southfacing glass will reflect too much light on to the old building, for: “This material is almost like alabaster. It is soft, without reflection.” As the Iron Duke once said, if you believe that, you’ll believe anything. But why glass at all? The character of Glasgow is of stone, and it is not necessary to imitate Mackintosh’s style to produce architecture which could be both original and yet harmonious — as the original School of Art was to the neighbouring tenements and villas.

Depressingly, this crude and insensitive design has met virtually no criticism in Scotland. Of course it was clever of Holl to team up with the Glasgow office, run by Ian Alexander and Henry McKeown (both graduates of the school), of the firm of JM Architects (not to be confused with RMJM who recently hired Sir Fred Goodwin [Eye 12551), for in Glasgow nobody likes to rock the boat. Naturally Seona Reid, director of the School of Art, considers that “the inventive use of light, material and section make it a worthy companion to Mackintosh, a striking building of which we will all be immensely proud”; but there has been remarkably little dissent from kow-towing to the American superstar among her members of staff. Ranks have closed: the Charles Rennie Mackintosh Society has rolled over, as has the Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland. Naturally the city council is all in favour.

Almost the only dissent has come from the distinguished Scots film-maker and pioneer in the rehabilitation of once-despised Toshie, Murray Grigor, together with Professor William JR Curtis, the (English) historian of modernism and the author of studies of Le Corbusier. In an open letter to the governors of the school and its staff and students, Professor Curtis writes: “The Holl project is lacking in urbanity and would not be out of place in a business park in China or the USA, but it is completely alien to Glasgow with its grid, urban grain, and sombre facades in stone and glass. Above all it fails to harmonise with Mackintosh’s marvellous building opposite. To respond to a historical context does not mean copying the existing, but it does mean interacting at several levels from overall volumes, to proportions, to materials”. I could not have put it better myself.

If Steven Holl’s arrogant matte glass lump is built, it will not just be a waste of £50m but another of modern Glasgow’s far too numerous architectural foul-ups.

‘Piloti’

GLASGOW School of Art, designed as part of a competition in 1896 by Charles R. McIntosh, then a young assistant in the Glasgow firm of Honeyman & Keppie, is one of the most famous buildings in the world.

This subtle and eclectic stone structure, with its echoes of Scottish castles, Elizabethan architecture and “Queen Anne” and Arts and Crafts buildings in England, is gawped at constantly by hordes of starstruck architects. Its creator, “Rennie Mackintosh”, as he became known, has become a figure of myth as well as the patron saint of the Glasgow tourist industry. And two years ago, to mark the centenary of this truly wonderful work of architecture, the school announced a competition for an adjacent new building to replace the brutal concrete tower which the Mackintosh successor firm, Keppie Henderson & Partners, contrived to erect on the opposite side of Renfrew Street in 1970, when Glasgow was busy destroying itself.

Any new building on this sensitive site might be expected to respond to the character of the city and be deferential to poor old Toshie’s masterpiece. But no. Faced with 150 entries, including several from respected Scottish practices, the assessors surrendered to cultural cringe by plumping for a fashionable international superstar, Steven Holl of New York.

Holl paints as well as designs and is responsible for modishly angular and arbitrary new museum buildings in places like China, Norway and the US. He says things like: “Building transcends physical requirements by fusing with a place, by gathering the meaning of a situation.” But Holl has come up with a design which is scarcely respectful to Mackintosh.

At least the new building will run along the street line of Renfrew Street and incorporates the 1930s Assembly Hall. But that’s as far as it goes. Holl’s creation will rise much higher than Mackintosh’s block and, by having the top storey jutting forward, will overshadow it.

Whereas the original block is carefully and delicately detailed, Holl’s is a crude composition of plain surfaces and awkward angles. Facing Mackintosh’s facade, with its big north-facing mullioned and transformed windows, Holl proposes a recessed “landscape loggia… that gives the school an exterior social core open to the city. Natural vegetation with some stonework routes water into a small recycling water pond which will also reflect dappled sunlight on to the ceiling inside” — which suggests he has little understanding of Glasgow’s weather, especially in winter.

Mackintosh managed to provide practical, well-lit studio spaces that still work. But Holl, who drones on about a “new language of light”, proposes to waste space by having “Driven Void’ light shafts” inside the building to provide “direct connectivity with the outside world through the changing intensity and colour of the sky.”

Worst of all is the fact that this banal conception will be “coated in a thin skin of matte glass referencing Mackintosh’s stone skin”, whatever that may mean. Holl denies that all this southfacing glass will reflect too much light on to the old building, for: “This material is almost like alabaster. It is soft, without reflection.” As the Iron Duke once said, if you believe that, you’ll believe anything. But why glass at all? The character of Glasgow is of stone, and it is not necessary to imitate Mackintosh’s style to produce architecture which could be both original and yet harmonious — as the original School of Art was to the neighbouring tenements and villas.

Depressingly, this crude and insensitive design has met virtually no criticism in Scotland. Of course it was clever of Holl to team up with the Glasgow office, run by Ian Alexander and Henry McKeown (both graduates of the school), of the firm of JM Architects (not to be confused with RMJM who recently hired Sir Fred Goodwin [Eye 12551), for in Glasgow nobody likes to rock the boat. Naturally Seona Reid, director of the School of Art, considers that “the inventive use of light, material and section make it a worthy companion to Mackintosh, a striking building of which we will all be immensely proud”; but there has been remarkably little dissent from

kow-towing to the American superstar among her members of staff. Ranks have closed: the Charles Rennie Mackintosh Society has rolled over, as has the Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland. Naturally the city council is all in favour.

Almost the only dissent has come from the distinguished Scots film-maker and pioneer in the rehabilitation of once-despised Toshie, Murray Grigor, together with Professor William JR Curtis, the (English) historian of modernism and the author of studies of Le Corbusier. In an open letter to the governors of the school and its staff and students, Professor Curtis writes: “The Holl project is lacking in urbanity and would not be out of place in a business park in China or the USA, but it is completely alien to Glasgow with its grid, urban grain, and sombre facades in stone and glass. Above all it fails to harmonise with Mackintosh’s marvellous building opposite. To respond to a historical context does not mean copying the existing, but it does mean interacting at several levels from overall volumes, to proportions, to materials”. I could not have put it better myself.

If Steven Holl’s arrogant matte glass lump is built, it will not just be a waste of £50m but another of modern Glasgow’s far too numerous architectural foul-ups.

‘Piloti’

Lava Graphic Design, 6th May

Lava, Friday 6th May.

3pm—4pm
Discussions: On flexible identity and some other related topics.
In the Second Year Studio. All welcome, please come along.

4pm—5pm
Tutorials:
If you’d like to speak* to one of the folk from Lava about your work, please email n.mcguire@gsa.ac.uk

Lava are speaking at Longlunch on Thursday 5th May, Tickets here. This visit kindly arranged in conjunction with Longlunch.

Talks: Fri 22nd April, 4pm


I don’t want to be overly dramatic about it, but this might be the last Vis Com talk in the Foulis. Friday 22nd April, 4pm prompt, Second Year Studio, all welcome, great to see as many of you as can make it.

Hack Scotland

Culture Hack Scotland looks like a good day out?

From the london version:

But is it really hacking?

Space for Everyone

A student was talking yesterday about an idea for a space agency for the East End of Glasgow, (Glasgow East End Space Agency, or GEESA for short, I felt it should be called) which put me in mind of the Open Source Satellite Initiative. My awful name idea in turn put me in mind of Geezer Gotta Flame Thrower, by GSA staff Beagles and Ramsay.

GSA Pecha Kucha V

GSA Pecha Kucha V is the last of this academic year, and the last in the vic as we know it.

Roy’s got a 3D Printer

Roy Mohan Shearer, previously a talker in Vis Com, has a new service using a MakerBot Thing-O-Matic 3D Printer Kit. Details below, might be a cost effective way of making prototypes. I believe GSA might also have this facility, though I’m not sure.

Affordable 3D Printing:

We can print your 3d model in hard plastic using our Makerbot
Thing-o-matic printer
[http://store.makerbot.com/makerbot-thing-o-matic.html].
The Thing-o-matic is a miniature factory that makes almost anything up
to 100mm x 100mm x 150mm out of ABS plastic.
Perfect for replacement parts, rough prototyping, and hacking-type activities!
Just email me an .stl file and some outside dimensions for a quote -
roy[at]zero-waste.co.uk or get in touch for more info.

New Media Scotland

Lots of interesting things to do during April, from New Media Scotland.

Lava Lunch

work

Tickets for the next LongLunch talk by Lava, (taking place in the Mac Lecture Theatre at 7pm on 5th May), are now on sale. There are 15 free tickets for GSA students, allocated to the first 15 people to email me at n.mcguire[at]gsa.ac.uk with the word LAVA in the subject line.

Blindness and Visual Communication

Last year I participated in an artist residency programme called And’art in Marrakech. As part of the residency artists were given the opportunity to help facilitate workshops at a Blind School.

Here’s a quick summary of what happened in the workshops written by the organisers of the residency.

The workshops were part of And’Art Marrakech held by Terre Sans Frontière and were based at the University of Law in Marrakech. The idea of doing this project stemmed from trying to break the boundaries between the visually impaired and the sighted. This was realised by bringing the sighted and the visually impaired together in the same space to share their experience of the surrounding environment.

Photography Workshop

Four visually impaired students were given disposable cameras to document twenty four hours of their everyday life. They were to take a picture by their senses, for example when they heard or smelt something that triggered a memory or idea.


The students made a description of the reasoning behind each photograph by Dictaphone or Braille.


After processing the pictures, a textual annotation was added in Arabic, English and Braille near each picture.



Atika -
“I felt the warmth coming from a lamp and I am stood under the light while taking a picture of it.”

“I was lost on an empty pave then I took the picture so you can tell me where I was.”

“Picture of five fountains that I used to take pictures of when I was not blind, and now I’m taking a picture of them and I’m blind.”

Mostapha -
“I take a picture of the sky because when I’m thinking I look up.”

“I heard a sound that only comes from something that seems to be over the wall but I don’t know what it is.”

“What you can see in my pictures is that I am an introverted person because all the places I took in my pictures are closed.”

Fatima Ezzahra -
“This picture was taken at 11am because I was hearing a lot of noise that showed me that the place was full of tourists and Moroccan people, I heard voices and chants and storytellers and then I felt like if I was drawing a picture in my head of everything I was hearing.”

“This picture was taken at 11.15 am near the jewels shop, I touched some jewels with my hands to see them.”

Badr -
“I remember, we watched a soccer match and I am sad because my team its losing (Real Madrid).”


Their work was exhibited in Remp’Art Gallery, Gueliz, Marrakech 24 September – 5 October 2010. The Photography workshops for the visually impaired were led and facilitated by Amy Smyth, Saad-Eddine Said and Thea Panter, with much appreciated help from Fouad Said and Salah Bekri in collaboration with the visually impaired students who are members of IDMAJ at Qadi Ayad University (Marrakesh).

Atika -

“I felt the warmth coming from a lamp and I am stood under the light while taking a picture of it. ”

” I was lost on an empty plave then I took the picture so you can tell me where I was. ”

“Picture of five fountains that I used to take pictures of when I was not blind, and now I’m taking a picture of it and I’m blind.”

Mostapha -

“I take a picture of the sky because when I’m thinking I look up. ”

” I heard a sound that only comes from something that seems to be over the wall but I don’t know what it is. ”

” What you can see in my pictures is that I am an introverted person because all the places I took in my pictures are closed.”

Fatima Ezzahra -

“The picture have been taken at 11am, that was because I was hearing a lot of noise that shows me that the place was full of tourists and Moroccan people, and I hear voices of chant and storytellers and then I felt like if I was drawing a picture in my head of all was hearing. ”

” The picture have been taken at 11.15 am near the jewels shop, and I touch some jewels with my hands to see them. ”

(What is) Graphic Design?

Can you not not communicate? via Critical Graphic Design. Try playing them all at once for a graphic design meltdown.

What are other art schools doing? #1,342

Creative Review report on the New look for Bauhaus Dessau Foundation.