history of art.

POP

In February when I started this blog I bought the February 2007 Spring/Summer Pop magazine.

The front cover is neon green and has 'RAVE' written down it.

Inside it was exactly what I wanted- the background and the words to what I had already found out- but it's written by someone else, which can confirm (?) what I think and say, and make me feel that it's not just my opinion.

On page 244 of the glossy, bright, trendy-vogue type magazine is an article, titled 'One nation under a glitterball'.

I quote from the article (by Paul Flynn):

"Something slightly manical in London's margins has been afoot for the past 18 months. Its patrons are bold and bright and excessive and refusing to go to bed at bedtime. Some of them are making clothes, some pictures, some music and all of them are throwing parties...

Facilitated by clanestine, word-of-mouth MySpace bulletin boards and soundtracked by a riveting amalgam of disorganised, futuristic chos, New Rave has taken one small leap out of the suburbs and into the next millenium... A brilliantly idiotic new youth culture has emerged from the kids that want fashion, music, are and popular culture formulated their way.

The unofficial opening of New Rave happened four years ago, in the City Cars squar in east London. NIYI, on the first of his two expulsions from Central St Martins, put the party together. He was 18 years old and the party was called Gauche Chic. 'It's weird,' he says now, 'because the nights were so empty at first, but everyone was there. Patrick Wolf, Carri Mundane,' (Cassette Playa) 'Mei Hui Liu.'

Matthew Stone, figurehead for southeast London art terrorists !WOWOW! is a little more sanguine on the matter. 'I don't think that it even matters what you want to call this thing. New rave is just a buzzword that has stuck. This is about creative people doing thing they're absolutely passionate about.'

For the more cerebrally inclined, Matthew Stone's !WOWOW! parties have become a gateway drug between New Rave and high art. They began in the back room of The Joiner's Arms, between Camberwell Green and The Maudsley Hopital in southeast London, 'as a joke. I hired a PA and 30-odd people came down. It was a bizarre mix od the local community and art students. Alongside painters, video installation and performance artists we had a woman who sand show tunes mostly from My Fair Lady, and a man called Melvin who'd campaigned against the Euro from a shopping trolley in Camberwell. Instantly the parties were about new ideas and optimism. Everyone was playing electro at the time and we'd play a little bit of that, but with everything else we wanted to hear: weird charity shop finds, movie scores, Baltimore club music."

Over the page is a 'crash course for the ravers'. It is a diagram- similar to the one I did earlier, but this shows the links between 'old rave' and 'new rave'.
This is it:

(Again I apologise for the size of it and difficulty in reading it)

It includes people which I have included on my diagram, and has names which are related to names on my diagram. Really this whole thing could go on forever, there seems to be more and more to talk about- everyone knows and relates back to someone.

Networking the 'scene'- easier than you think.

After a brief discussion of my blog earlier, I realised that this whole 'scene' which I have tried to explain, and being a part of it is a lot easier as it may seem. Obviously like a lot of things there are founders and important members, who spend a lot more time than others within this 'scene' doing the things which put them there.

It seems to me, that to be a part of a network all you must neccessarily do is be at a certain place at a certain time.
There are millions of other 'scenes' around- it's just that they have phases, and it seems that whatever is 'Shoreditch' is what is 'cool'. These are the hyped scenes- often the ones that can be made to be more and more obscure. They seem to be what people aspire to be, part of this scene. Like I say, there are the extreme cases, which can grab themselves as much good as bad publicity, and there are the rest, which may perhaps stumle accross this 'scene'.

Foals are not nu-rave, they're not glowsticks and neon themselves- but their fans seem to be. It's what I think has to do with the 'network'. Bands get asked to play nights- i.e The Insomniacs Ball night- Foals will play, along side The Young Knives (Indie, Oxford friendly pop) and Queens of Noize (Neon and big hair). This immediately associates them within this group of bands, particularly if they play along side them more than once, thus forming a network just from this.

'Here we glo again'

I found the following article which is from The Sunday Times Style magazine on November 12, 2006 by Paul Flynn. It seems to have said everything I have been trying to say in my previous blog, only ten times better.

"Here we glo again
A bunch of crazy kids in crazy outfits is shaking up the zeitgeist. Paul Flynn reports on the rebirth of rave for the Noughties
In the summer of 2005, at their ad hoc London club night Gauche Chic, the party people Niyi and K-tron pulled out a best-of-1990s-rave-hits CD and played it to a crowd of teenagers and twentysomethings. The kids were too young to have felt the full force of Let Me Be Your Fantasy the first time around. But they liked what they heard. Playing old rave tracks alongside demented new disco, ragga, crunk and arch pop music chimed with the nightlife lunacy that was building. Rave felt like a fresh source of inspiration in an emerging club culture.
From its inception at the end of the 1980s, “old rave” (as it is now called) gradually degenerated into a dreary free-party scene, where men of a certain age cavort to increasingly chin-stroking dance music. But the early spirit of rave never died; it was just waiting for its time to come round again. New rave is a second coming: not just a throwback to the lawless euphoria of its golden age, but an aesthetic focus for a new generation of club kids, artists, fashion students and night-time celebrities who just want to dress up and get down.
New rave was publicly christened by the singer of its fluoro-coloured flagship band, Klaxons, who are at the tipping point of crossover success. The scene has thrown up a raft of great, slightly idiotic new pop groups and DJs, including Trash Fashion, Shitdisco, Silverlink, WarBoy and Namalee ’n’ the Namazonz. It has its own pin-up — Jet Storm, the singer from Trash Fashion — and its own couturiers, in Gareth Pugh, fashion’s current golden boy and an architect of out-there clubwear, and the directional designer Carri “Cassette Playa” Mundane, who borrows the cartoon style of Sega, Pac-Man and all manner of gaudy neon ephemera and turns it into joyous club clobber. Her manic designs can be seen in the London retail palaces of Kokon To Zai and Dover Street Market. The movement also has an in-house publication, the fashion zine Super Super, and a Factory-style creative collective, !Wowow!, whose unofficial leader, Matthew Stone, has been described as a walking zeitgeist. “We think about new rave on a daily basis here,” says Steve Slocombe, founder of Super Super. “I can look at a plant pot and think, ‘How new rave is that? And can I wear it?’” To which the answer is? “Yes, clearly.”
Not everyone is so enthusiastic, however. The clubbing magazine Mixmag has dismissed new rave as just being about a few silly kids in east London. But they are missing the point. All radical shifts in nightclub culture are about silly kids somewhere. The Haçienda was about a few silly kids in Manchester, Taboo was about a bunch of silly west London woofters in the early 1980s, and Studio 54 in New York was about Bianca Jagger, Liza Minnelli, Michael Jackson and Andy Warhol mostly being a bit silly. This group of silly creative mates is no different. A new club moment is upon us.
“New rave is about absurdity, comedy and randomness,” Slocombe says. “Everyone commenting on it is getting a bit overconcerned about the rave element and forgetting about the newness. But this is the beginning of a new way of looking at pop culture.” He believes that culture needs a shake-up, and that new rave, with all its potty styling and weird music, might just be the thing to do it. “There is so much rigid conformity to culture. We will look back at the fake smiles of celebrities on magazine covers in 10 years’ time and think, ‘God, they looked weird.’ Music and fashion are pillars of British culture. And they’re up for grabs again.”
It is not difficult to spot the similarities between the end of the 1980s, when old rave emerged, and the current socioeconomic climate. It’s all there: the demonisation of teenagers; the imminent end of a political era; a trenchant fear of global collapse. If the Great British youth knows how to do one thing, it is how to throw a good party at a time of tension and fear. If it is going down, it is going down smiling, in neon, with one unholy racket playing behind it.
In east London, a succession of collapsible parties — All You Can Eat, Anti-Social, Teens of Thailand, Young Turks, Boom Box — have given the scene its magnetic new playgrounds. Some play rave records. Some don’t. But the spirit remains the same. The !Wowow! art gatherings in New Cross have became a thing of legend, and Stone has emerged as the enigmatic, Warhol-ish figurehead for it all, with Mundane his acid Nico. “What I love about these people is that they have followed their dreams,” says Ben Reardon, the editor of i-D magazine. “They have made something happen. They squatted, had no money, sometimes didn’t eat, but all with the purpose of making art, making clothes, making parties — and they have done it all off their own backs.”
“There is something tangible and spontaneous going on here,” says Alex Needham, of NME. “We haven’t had that for a long time. Club culture had got so tied up with the superannuation of everything — superclubs, superstar DJs — it needed to let a new generation take over. It isn’t about neatly packaged nightclub spaces any more. And everyone looks brilliant.”
What is happening in east London has parallels with what happened in the East Village of New York in the 1980s — a youthful convergence of art, club, fashion and music people collecting under an outré (and cheap) umbrella. “It is about a magpie approach to creative theft,” Slocombe says. “A £400 coat is not going to make you look stylish any more. The new-rave ethos is about going to some weird shop in Finsbury Park where they sell 1980s sportswear. Everyone wants to look more Day-Glo and loonified than the next person.”
But can new rave survive the transition into the mainstream? After all, once a scene goes overground, the people who started it often lose interest. “It isn’t about owning it and fencing it off,” Slocombe says. “It’s about steering what is essentially the next wave. It hasn’t reached mass uniformity yet.” Needham agrees: “You’ve yet to get a hit record from Klaxons. But the time feels totally right for it.” Reardon sums it up, saying: “Leigh Bowery and Rachel Auburn were laughed at in the 1980s for trying something new, and now they are heralded as icons of an era. Why not herald the people we have now and their scene while it’s happening? We shouldn’t have to wait for things to be over before we celebrate them.” Grab your glowsticks before it’s too late."

Nu- rave?

It seems that my blogs have become more of an update of gossip and news recently. I've tried to keep them connected in some way or another, using the gossip to link people who I know, who they know and so on. I've become very interested in this idea of 'networking', especially when it has something in it to benefit both sides of the partnership.

It seems networking can just happen. I guess it's a lot to do with being in the right place at the right time, and knowing the right people, which often comes up in shared and similar interests.

Some of the links I've tried to make haven't been as direct as others, but what I have tried to do is draw a picture of links which have created some what of a new 'scene' and almost a new era (is that too strong?) in popular and underground culture.

This culture, I would say has stemmed from what's been left behind, britpop- an influence from indie bands and the indie scene from before. There seemed to be a strong party scene. I'd say a less glamorous one, but one where having a good time was the focus of life. Drug taking and alcohol binges happened and there was a kind of 'care-free' atmosphere.
Everything that happens now is never going to be 'original', everything has been done before, and obviously influences and links will be made to history.

The scene that I say is happening now, is linked to 90s rave. Electro music, parties, drugs but a lot more 'posing' and in a way- showing off with it.
They call it 'nu-rave'- 10-6a.m clubs, with various stages of bands- electro and indie followed by electro d.j's. It seems, as everything does- that it has all stemmed from London. In the depths of Hoxton- clubs like antisocial at Shoreditch bar music hall, and boombox at 333 seem to be the place where people would go to first to show off their 'new look', often bright neon colours, glitter, big hair, make-up and glowsticks. The ones which were the 'coolest' seemed to be the ones who had either gone to the extreme/ looked like they had walked out of American Apparrel in their latest silver láme leggings and body suits. Along with this there seems to be a lifestyle, other than one of clubs and nightlife that accompanies it. A lot of these people are art students, the ones who are 'different' and 'individual' (not really when everyone in the club is wearing the same leggings as you).

I've read some articles about it all which I am going to refer to in a seperate blog now. Hopefully this can back-up and explain what I have been saying some more.

Transgressive Records

Because of the headliners, Larrikin Love's split, the Transgressive record roadshow has been cancelled.
Foals were to play these dates with them.

Larrikin Love, Foals and The Young Knives, among others all signed to Transgressive records- part of and funded by the massive record label of Warner bros.

Foals do Zane Lowe

Foals were on Radio one on Wednesday 9th May, they recorded three live tracks at Maida Vale studios, and Edwin and Yannis did an interview.

!!! Larrikin love split/ Patrick sacks drummer & other gossip.

On Tuesday 8th May I got an invite from my friend Craig 'Template' to be in his video which he was recording that night, at 143 The Strand, in a place called The Continental.
I went down for the recording. The people present included Ingrid Z of Residence Gallery and Patrick Wolf ex girlfriend fame, Ed Larrikin, Alice- his girlfriend, Russ- who recorded Craig plus fay and i of 'The Lovecats'.
We just had to be part of an audience in the background, sitting around, conversing.
Someone there told me about Patrick's performance where he sacked his drummer- Zach. He had passed out on stage, and Patrick had got quite furious about this, ending in hitting him around the face with his cymbal and sacking him on stage. My source told me to watch the You tube video of it.
These can be found here:
an interview before the show, clips from during the show and the clip of Zach passing out:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tHdU7IZXzvU
Patrick sacking him on stage:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TR2TCcXddeo


Larrikin Love have split up. On Friday 4th May they left the following announcement, via a myspace(http://myspace.com/larrikinlove) blog:

"Larrikin Love have announced today that they have split up. The band would like to thank all their fans for their support and love over the last two years and assure them that all is amicable between the four members.
Further details of ongoing projects from all members will be announced in the fullness of time.
Love The Larrikins"

Music/Art Artist/Musician

Musicians who are fine artists, and fine artists who are musicians that I know of the top of my head, include:
Brian Eno, whose work was/is (?) on show at the I.C.A, The Secret Public exhibition,
Devandra Banhart, whose work I've seen exhibited in 'Uncertain states of America',
Patrick Wolf, uses his own art work in his music releases,
as does Bat for Lashes, singer Natasha Kahn who studied film and music at art school, and early influences on her work led her to sound installations, performance and animations.
Bat for Lashes have played alongside Devandra Banhart and CocoRosie. CocoRosie has been joined by Antony, of Antony and the Johnsons and Patrick Wolf, who sang Antony's part at a London show.

It seems the links are endless, musicians/artists seem to form a group, through shows and colloborations, the links grow and grow.
The musicians I talk of are artists in my eyes. I don't know if there is a criteria which makes music art, I think art is a blur, peoples perceptions of it are different and there is no real definition of 'art'.
Music paints a picture in our minds, it uses words and melodies to form a picture for us, is it another language of art? Another one of expressing ourselves in an 'artistic nature'.

Foals- YMSS- ATP festival.

Foals are a band, originating from Oxford.
The five members have been friends for a while, Jimmy and Walter, the bassist and one of the guitarists, were at school together and had a previous band together. Jack and Yannis were in the band 'The Edmund Fitzgerald', when Jack met Walter at Oxford Brookes University, where they both did their Art foundation together (I studied my Art Foundation at Oxford Brookes the following year and met Walter there, as he studied his first year of a BA hons in Fine art at Brookes), and Edwin, studied at Oxford university, with Yannis, which is where they met, after Foals were formed. Edwin joined the band as the 'one that plays the synth/ the one with the gay moustache/ the one with the young gentleman outfits'. He joined, Andrew, who was the singer for a while, left and Yannis took on the role of lead vocals, and guitar.

Andrew left Foals to concentrate on his other band Youthmovie Soundtrack Strategies- another Oxford band, who were formed in 2002, and have created quite a stir, possibly not so much as Foals though. I'm not sure if you can compare their successes. I know neither band would really like that very much.

Their Myspace can be found at http://www.myspace.com/youthmovies, from it I found the following which I found interesting:

'To date they have released two mini-albums, three singles and three limited edition tour-only CDRs.
Amongst others Youthmovies have toured with iForward, Russia!, 65daysofstatic, Hope of the States, Oxes, Redjetson, Adam Gnade and Blood Red Shoes... Played shows with the likes of Mission of Burma, Biffy Clyro, Bloc Party, Death Cab for Cutie, Trans Am and Cursive... As well as playing both improvised and regular sets at Leeds (as Saul Williams backing band), Reading, Bestival, All Tomorrows Parties, Truck and Latitude festivals, earning them a reputation as one of Britains most exciting live bands.
Youthmovies are currently writing their full-length debut, to be recorded in April and released in late 2007. '

Al, the bands guitarist has his own record label; Try Harder Records (http://www.myspace.com/tryharderrecords), releases on the label include:
Foals, Blood red shoes, Red Jetson, Tired Irie and Jonquil.

Al and Ham from the band are quite involved with the festival ATP (All tomorrows Parties), which is a music festival which happens 3/4 times a year. Youthmovies played after headliner Yoko Ono before, and are playing the fesitval this May, alongside Patti Smith, Echo and the bunnymen, Mogwai and Explosions in the sky. The festival takes place at a Butlins/ Pontins and is a lot of fun. I've been to the festival three times. 'The nightmare before Christmas in December of 2005 which is where I infact spoke to Walter and Jimmy (Foals) for the first time. The time after this I went in the Summer of 2006 and the December of 2006.

ATP also put on gigs, mainly in London. On the 23rd May they have Modest Mouse playing, with support from Billy Childish.

Here, we can see that there is quite a link between artists, playing for ATP as musicians, this is something I'm interested in looking at. It seems that a lot of artists are infact involved, or strongly passionate about music and vice versa.
A lot of musicians infact do the art work for their records themselves, this includes Patrick Wolf, I think nearly all of his releases have contained drawings which he has done himself.
Devandra Banhart, a folk musician who has played ATP, had his work in the exhibition 'uncertain states of america' at The Serpentine Galley.

I'm going to continue writing about this in another entry, as I don't like the confusion of too many things happening in one blog- for ease of finding entries, etcetera.

Foals review Patrick Wolf.

My friends; Foals, were asked by playlouder (www.playlouder.com) to do a single review for them, on the 10th April, the singles needing to be reviewed included Patrick Wolf's- The Magic Postion. The following is what Edwin and Yannis said about the single

"Patrick Wolf - 'The Magic Position'A bit like the sort of music someone who used to be friends with you would make. Irritatingly, you know girls will love it but you hate him all the more for it. To be honest we have nothing to say about it... It's one of those things that's so beyond worth commenting that I'm actually falling sleep. Not in a bad way though, he does it well. 4/10"

I'm unsure if it's just this song or every thing Patrick Wolf, that they dislike. I introduced Jimmy from Foals to Patrick Wolf a while ago, he really liked him and said something about "You'll have to make me meet him."
Funny how the roles reverse.

!!! Patrick to retire...

Recently there have been rumours that Patrick Wolf was to be retiring.
On the 27th April 2007, Pitchfork (www.http://www.pitchforkmedia.com) published the following interview with him about the alleged 'retirement'.


"Patrick Wolf is not quitting music. Despite his recent post on a fan message board saying, "My final concert will be this November... I am not sure whether there will be anymore public communications after that. In fact, I am pretty sure there will be none," it turns out Wolf just plans to take a little break from the cycle of touring and promoting records.Even Wolf's break looks to be busy, though. He already has two albums' worth of material written for his follow-up to The Magic Position, which doesn't even come out in the U.S. until May 1. His tour has expanded as well, with the addition of Amy Winehouse-free headlining dates in New York and L.A., and a promise of more West Coast gigs.We spoke to Wolf to get the full story on his non-retirement, and we also asked him about the shape of that next record (or two), how he wants to model his career after Gustav Mahler and Liberace, how he became friends with Kelly Osbourne, and why he feels a kinship with Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera.Pitchfork: Will this orchestral concert in November really be your last?Patrick Wolf: Um, yeah. I really want people to know that I never released a press release about this issue. I wasn't trying to get published by anybody. I was just writing a very close community of fans. Somebody took that and turned it into a big story, and it's gotten out of control. I just want people to know that, first of all, I never said I was quitting music, and second of all, I never did it in a public way.I wouldn't know what to do if I didn't have music in my life, and this is going to turn into some kind of horrendous Mariah Carey speech, but the music has led me through many adventures and disasters and good times and total lonely times and for me to say I was going to quit music is like saying I'm going to commit suicide. It's the most extreme thing that could happen in my life. That would make me miserable, so I would never say I was quitting music, because I would never know where to start.Pitchfork: So what did you mean by that message board post?PW: This year's been strange because The Magic Position is about a relationship that happened a year ago, a very serene and magical time, between me and an artist called Ingrid Z. And I'm having to come and be like a vessel for all these songs, but I'm an honest performer as well. I don't even like to use the word "performance." I don't want to be a traveling businessman or salesman for my work. I want to be a musician that sings and feels and makes people feel, and when something becomes too repetitive, then I feel like I'm not doing my job. The bad habit that I've had in the last six years since I released my first EP was to not even think that I'm a human being, that I need to sleep or to eat or to go to the toilet or have sex or anything. I just go, "Okay, I'm going on tour for the next year. Goodbye, everyone." And then I say, "Yeah, sure I'll do seven hours of interviews before a show." I do all this, and I enjoy it, but there's a certain time in every musician's life, you've got to realize-- I'm kind of like Britney Spears in a way. I've been doing it as a teenager, so I'm kind of trying to start thinking about being a human so I can start to make my work again."

11. Ingrid Z and The Residence Gallery

Ingrid Z, I first knew at Patrick Wolf's ex girlfriend. I think when I met them last summer it was close to when they broke up.

She owns an art gallery called 'the residence gallery', which was formerly in a shop front, but has moved due to the property being too expensive to rent and it being too far out of the way.
http://www.myspace.com/residencegallery

Patrick's mum; Imelda Apps has shown in the gallery before, as well as a friend of mine; Jack Bevan, who is the drummer for Foals, showed some of his work there before.

I will talk about Jack and Foals in more depth later.

Ingrid and Patrick were together for about two years, from what I gather. She did the photography for his Wind in the Wires album and other promo shots which can be found on his website and myspace.
A lot of 'The Magic Position' is about the found love and the lost love between them.

10. Craig Template

Craig Template, I've spoken before about how I met him at the club night which he and his friend Alex put on, called Club Myra.

I've asked Craig how he knows Patrick. Craig knows a man who they call 'John The Rapist' (He's not a rapist- it's a name given to him as everytime he goes out he usually gets with someone). John the Rapist met a girl called Ingrid Z when Craig was with him that night. Ingrid and John went home together. I'm not sure what happened inbetween this, but Ingrid then met Patrick. Patrick and Ingrid got together and John met Patrick through Ingrid. John then introduced Craig to Patrick.

Craig is also a musician, his myspace is:
http://www.myspace.com/craigtemplatemusic

9. Mapping links



Unfortunately my mind map has come out a bit difficult to read. I have written the main links I know of between Patrick Wolf and people I know, or people I know who know people who know so and so.
It's quite clear that there are 'scenes' and there are certain important people to know to be a part of these 'scenes', as well as important places to go (Shoreditch?) and a certain way to dress.

The 'scene' which I'm trying to paint a picture of, which Patrick Wolf is a part of, is that of a glam, club kids parties. There is a whole new 'music genre' taking over, but it's more than just the music, it's a way of living, dressing and acting. It's called 'Nu rave'.

8. We are 'The Lovecats'

Yesterday (Sunday 25th March), me and two of my friends; Fay and Jerri, went to a recording street on Southgate road, near Angel/ Old Street.

Our friend Craig (Template) who I have spoken about before (he runs Club Myra) was recording his single.

He'd heard me and four of my friends singing on our friends Foals' (who I've also spoken about before) record. In the summer of 2006 five of us went to Truck recording studios and sang some backing vocals for some of their songs, which include 'balloons' and 'french opening'.

French Opening has been played at clubs around London, Oxford, Nottingham, Brighton and elsewhere. It's also on a c.d which came free with NME dated 2nd December 2006.

We called the five of us 'the lovecats', due to a joke about singing love like cats purring. We made ourselves a Myspace account which has drawn attention from people who have listened to Foals and not known what was going on in the background, as well as grabbing attention of other bands. I played Craig one of the songs last year and he said about using us for backing vocals. We've also been sent a message by a band called 'Tiger force', asking us if we would sing on their single, when they have a new song.

The 'lovecats' thing is all a bit of a joke, we can't really sing, we can try to though, and it's just quite fun girly giggily type melodies- if you can even call it that. More chanting.

Our myspace is:
http://www.myspace.com/wearethelovecats

Craig is recording with a guy called Russ/ Junk scientist. His myspace is:
http://www.myspace.com/junkscientist

He has produced/ recorded The Rakes, Larrikin Love (who I will talk about in quite a bit of detail soon) and others.

!!!

Since Patrick Wolf's 'The Magic Position' has been released he has become quite a celebrity. He has appeared on T4's music show, in newspapers and magazines all accross the nation and set to appear on The Charlotte Church show on Saturday 24th.

Patrick was in the London Paper's spotted out and about section today. It's odd to think people are excited about him being at these places. But like I say, he has become quite the celebrity.

I've brain stormed the links I can think of off the top of my head. I plan on showing these and talking about each link. In this I hope that the public and private institutions will crop up; record labels and venues, as well as the idea of sound as an art coming in to conversation.

7. www.myspace.com

I've realised that most of the links which I have used are links to peoples Myspace profiles.

I looked up the term 'public institution' and found the following defintions of public and private institutions:

'The commencement or initiation of anything, such as an action.
An establishment, particularly one that is eleemosynary or public by nature.
An institution can be any type of organized corporation or society. It may be private and designed for the profit of the individuals composing it, or public and nonprofit.'1

www.Myspace.com runs on the public using it. If it weren't for 'us' then there would be no such thing as Myspace, just Tom, with zero friends and it wouldn't work.

The owners must be making money somehow (from advertising, one would imagine). But it does not charge the public to use it.

I have found an article at
http://blogcritics.org/archives/2005/07/19/133937.php

It tells how Myspace was sold almost two years ago to Rupert Murdoch's 'News corp' for over $580 million.

Myspace has been creating a massive hype for the past couple of years now. I have personally had a love/ hate relationship with it. I've been a member of Myspace for about five/six years now. I started on 'Friendster' and spoke to people who had been to the same gigs as me or who liked the same music as me. It was all a bit weird really. I spoke to my first major boyfriend on Myspace after I met him to make arrangements to meet up. I got hassle from his ex- girlfriends on Myspace. I hated it for a while, especially after we split up. The problem is that it is public. You can read things which your ex boyfriend has written to his new girlfriend. It's enough to make you go a little insane/ make everyone around you think you've gone insane when you tell them about how your ex told his new girlfriend he loved her on myspace yesterday and how today he said he was going to go to her house, etcetera. You basically are stalking people.


It has its down points, but I've now realised, in my more-mature years, that if used properly (ex boyfriends are deleted as are any links made to him and you cannot view his or any of his friends profiles and you don't get yourself in to ridiculous relationships with arseholes) then Myspace is an amazing source for information.

Artists, musicians, galleries, companies, t.v programmes all use Myspace, and why not?
Myspace is a great way to get yourself seen. With the click of a mouse you're trying to get someones attention and for them to look at your profile. This is all free. Free to put up a profile, free to put up music/pictures, free to show when and where gigs are, free to add fans to. Really, it can be an amazing source.

The Arctic Monkeys were spotted thanks to Myspace, and I'm sure it has made many a band much more popular.
There are special Myspace mixes now, C.d's, events and gigs.
Myspace is a generation of mini-stars to be, for whatever you do.

You can literally make yourself, create someone or something, all with a huge help from Myspace to back you.


1.http://www.answers.com/topic/institution

6. How I met Patrick

Around early summer of 2006 I saw a flyer adveritising Patrick Wolf D.J'ing at a club night in Soho called 'Club Myra'. My friends and I went down to the tiny venue 'Push bar'. Almost as soon as we entered the venue we were approached by a woman taking our photographs and a boy who I recognised.

I recognised the boy from a Patrick Wolf show at Bloomsbury theatre on 30th March 2006. He was sat next to me shouting things at Victoria the violinist. Kelly Osborne and Kele Okereke of Bloc party fame were also sat a few seats away.

The boy, named Craig danced with us for the rest of the evening. Wolf turned up later, Craig introduced us to him as well as other friends 'Mama Peaches' and Ingrid Z ('Patrick's ex girlfriend who owns 'The Residence Gallery'). After Patrick had d.j'd his sister Jo Apps (see blog 5. The family) d.j'd and Patrick danced with us for the rest of the evening.

Craig exchanged numbers with us and we went to the next Club Myra in September 2006 when I had moved to uni. Patrick played a few songs this time, Lady Patricia Quinn (of Rocky Horror fame) joined him on stage.

The following is a link of video footage from the evening.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rhmMCfF91po

The 1st October I saw Patrick play at the Zodiac in Oxford, then the 4th I saw him play at Koko club in Camden. I met up with Craig after this and we went to a bar called 'The Crescent'. Among others were Alice, Victoria- Patrick's violinist and some others.
We moved on to 'The Black Cap' where we met Edward Larrikin (singer of band Larrikin Love) who is Alice's boyfriend, Lady Patricia Quinn, John and some others. Patrick turned up later but we all had trouble with the club and left this place for a place in Camden high street. More people turned up including Jo Apps, Bertie (Alice's best friend who is also at Camberwell with her) and Ingrid Z.

On October 17th I met up with Craig and went to Kentish town. We met up with Edward Larrikin and the rest of Larrikin Love in a pub near to The Forum. They'd just played a gig with The Kooks and had met up with friends afterwards. I met a new friend of theirs Tom Beard who is a photographer and Lauren, who is folk musician 'Mechanical Bride'- signed to Transgressive records (Larrikin Love started on this label and Foals are also signed to them).
Mechanical bride myspace can be found here:
http://www.myspace.com/mechanicalbride

(I plan on writing a lot more later about all of these artists, clubs and Transgressive records.)

That evening Craig, Ed, Alice (Ed's girlfriend- at Camberwell college of art, doing Graphic design) and I got a taxi from Camden to Push Bar. Tour manager and friends were there.

When leaving the club Ed and Alice invited me to their house warming party which was that Friday. I went along to a small gathering of friends. Tom Beard, Patrick and Ingrid, Craig and his boyfriend Dan and a couple of others. I got extremely drunk and tried to force feed Patrick sponge cake. He applied make up and wigs, then we all left to go to Kash Point, held at 'The Eve club' (Patrick also filmed his video for Accident and Emergancy in this club). He guestlisted us all and d.j'd around midnight, he also sang 'accident and emergency' in a circle in the club, Ed joined in with his guest vocals.

Later Craig introduced me to his friend. I asked her her name, she replied 'Kelly'. Later I realised it was infact Kelly Osborne. Who wasn't too impressed with me asking her such a question.

For Craig's birthday in November we met up in Soho and went to Push Bar again. Alice and Ed came out, as did John, Ingrid and others.

The next time I saw Patrick was at The Old Blue Last in December 2006. He and Jo Apps were d.j'ing, Foals were also playing this evening.

A little later, on the 19th I saw Patrick play London Union Chapel in Islington. An extremely good show. I met up with Craig, Lady Patricia Quinn, Ingrid and others at a small bar. We all headed our seperate ways, on the way meeting one of their friends 'Holestar' (also at camberwell university. A lady transvestite... looking like a man wearing makeup.) The first time I met Patrick I was wearing a heavily beaded top which he asked for. I had only worn it this once so decided to give him it. Unfortunately he didn't come out this evening so I gave it to Craig to give him.

I then saw Patrick play the Zodiac on the 6th February, 'No Bra' supported him, another friend of his who has been at events like Club Myra before. Craig was at the show and ended up singing on stage with Wolf to 'accident and emergency.' Which I filmed and can be found here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OaC2g9zb7Do

Saturday 17th I saw Patrick play at Nottingham Rescue rooms. He is currently on tour supporting The Arcade Fire.

Craig is a musician, known as Craig Template. I plan on writing about him next.
His music myspace is:

www.myspace.com/craigtemplatemusic

!!!

I don't know how I should do this.

I am trying to show background links and the stories behind everything, but I also want to keep up to date with media attention, news and gossip.
I think the best way to show this is to use three exclamation marks as the title.

Today, Patrick Wolf's third album- 'The Magic Position' was released. I imagine it may do quite well. I picked up two of the common three free London newspapers (The Metro, London Lite and The London Paper) Patrick Wolf's album was reviewed in both of these.

Last night I met up with my friends in the band 'Foals'. (I'll speak about these properly later and the links with them and Patrick) They've been asked by Peaches Geldof herself to play her birthday party alongside Xerox teens and Patrick Wolf. The boys have said for me to go along with them. I'm unsure of dates of this but I'll keep it posted.
Foals' myspace is:
http://www.myspace.com/foals

5. The Family

First off I thought it'd be good to start looking at people which were around Patrick for most of his life. His family.

Patrick's dad was a jazz musician, I've searched 'patrick wolf's dad/ father' and other guesses for hours on Google and cannot find a name for him.

However, I do know the name of his Mother. The first I heard of her was a while ago when Patrick had left a message on his myspace saying that his Mother had an art exhibition at The Residence Gallery and that he'd see everyone there for the private view. A public invite for a 'private view'.

Imelda Apps, an artist, the mother to Patrick Wolf and Jo Apps and the wife of... a jazz musician, is an ex- student of Chelsea College of Art.

2. Painting by Imelda Apps - Patrick on last day of June 2004
You can find her website here:
http://www.imelda-apps.co.uk

Jo Apps, Patricks sister is another musician in the family. She is a singer and instrumentalist. She plays clarinet aand sings for Wolf, among other things. She has sang on Venetian Snares record 'Dance like you're selling nails', played bass with Capitol K and recently released her own single- 'A Kausikan'. As well as d.j'ing. Her myspace address is:
http://www.myspace.com/joapps

This is the family.
There are so many other links to go through, I'm unsure of the best way to do so. No matter how awful everyone thinks it is, it is by no doubt an amazing source to use for things like this. It's Myspace. It can bring out the worst in people, but becase it is so public it means making links like these is easy.

4. Artist- Patrick Wolf

1. Photo of a friend, me and Patrick Wolf from 2006



Patrick Wolf (born June 30, 1983 at St Thomas' Hospital, London[1]) is an English singer, songwriter from South London. Wolf plays many instruments including harp, harpsichord, guitr, piano, autoharp, organ, theremin, ukulele, viola and violin. [1]

There is a more information about Wolf's time making music, from the age of 11 on his Myspace, which you can find at:
http://www.myspace.com/officialpatrickwolf

Wolf who is friends with musicians all over London has toured with Bloc Party, and has recently been announced to tour with The Arcade Fire.

The Magic Position, his third album, is to be released this Monday (26th Febraury) the album includes guest vocals from Marianne Faithful and friend, Edward Larrikin (singer of band Larrikin Love). His sister- Jo Apps features on the album with backing operatic vocals. Apps is often onstage with Wolf when he is touring, adding vocals and being in charge of electronics from her laptop. Apps is musically talented as well, I will speak later about her in a blog entry specifically written about her.

The family which Wolf has been born in to are an incredibly creative family. Again I will I'll save this for later as this is an introduction to Patrick.

[1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patrick_Wolf

3. My decisions part two

The main, and nearly only medium I am truely interested in is concept and ideas. I love drawing and photography. But without the concept there they just become something which is 'pretty' to me. There's nothing wrong with liking something because it is pretty, but I've come to the conclusion that there is more in life to liking something because it is pretty/ nice. It seems too easy to be nice and it's just quite meaningless and shallow. I like thinking and I want to be stimulated by work and things going on around me.

My 'favourite' artist who I absolutely adore for the concepts behind her work is Sophie Calle.

I have decided to use Sophie Calle and her concept work as the medium for my work.


Now that I have briefly spoken about what/who I am interested in studying and why I feel that I should explain who these people are and what they do and how I am going to use them to study.

2. My decisions part one

I am going with my initial idea of the 'artist' I would study for this project.

The artist is Patrick Wolf.

In the past couple of years I have grown very fond of his music. More recently I have met him on a few occasions and know of him through friends and know people who he is friends with. Through friends of friends.
When this project was explained to us we were told to think of a spiders web, with cross overs and links. Some spiralling on to each other for a long time, some with loose ends. Patrick Wolf seemed like not only the most interesting person for me to look at, but also one of the most interesting people I could think about. There is a lot of links he has to a whole 'other world' which is happening in London which I love looking in to. I feel using him as a starting point will bring a whole lot of links.

From this I have been thinking about the institutions I would be most interested in looking at. I think the way I'd like to look at this is to do it in the style of a spider web, with one starting point, central to this and spirals coming out. Institutions would then include clubs which he has d.j'd at, parties he has attended, places he has played at, etcetera.

This would work with journals as well. Rather than looking at journals, I want the decision to come from the 'artist' being in the journal. These journals could range from Dazed and Confused and I.D to NME, music reviews in newspapers- local and worldwide.

I still need to think some more about what medium I will use to present my work. I already have one idea in mind, I'd just like to think about this idea some more and what would work best with what I'm trying to present.

1. 'What is an artist'?

Is a 'musician' an 'artist'?

I 'googled' the word artist these are the definitions of an 'artist' that I have found:

'1.a person who produces works in any of the arts that are primarily subject to aesthetic criteria. 2.a person who practices one of the fine arts, esp. a painter or sculptor.
3.a person whose trade or profession requires a knowledge of design, drawing, painting, etc.: a commercial artist.
4.a person who works in one of the performing arts, as an actor, musician, or singer; a public performer: a mime artist; an artist of the dance.
5.a person whose work exhibits exceptional skill.
6.a person who is expert at trickery or deceit: He's an artist with cards.
7.Obsolete. an artisan.
—Synonyms 1. Artist, artisan are persons having superior skill or ability, or who are capable of producing superior work. An artist is a person engaged in some type of fine art. An artisan is engaged in a craft or applied art.'

'1581, "one who cultivates one of the fine arts," from M.Fr. artiste, from It. artista, from M.L. artista, from L. ars (see
art). Originally used especially of the arts presided over by the Muses (history, poetry, comedy, tragedy, music, dancing, astronomy), but also used 17c. for "one skilled in any art or craft" (including professors, surgeons, craftsmen, cooks). Now especially of "one who practices the arts of design or visual arts" (a sense first attested 1747). Artistic first recorded 1753; artistry 1868.'1.

'An "artist" (one skilled in a fine art) can also be an "artiste" (public performer), but an "artiste" is not necessarily an "artist." '


'Artist is a descriptive term applied to a person who engages in an activity deemed to be an
art. An artist can also be unofficially defined as "a person who expresses themselves through a medium". The word is also used in a qualitative sense of a person creative in, innovative in, or adept at, an artistic practice.
Most often, the term describes those who create within a context of 'high culture', activities such as
drawing, painting, sculpture, acting, dancing, writing, filmmaking, photography and music — people who use imagination, and talent or skill, to create works that can be judged to have an aesthetic value. Art historians and critics will define as artists those who produce art within a recognised or recognisable discipline....
There is no consensus about what constitutes "art" or who is, or is not, an "artist". Often, discussions on the subject focus on the differences between "artist" and "
technician" or "entertainer," or "artisan," "fine art" and "applied art," or what constitutes art and what does not. The French word artiste (which in French, simply means "artist") has been imported into the English language where it means a performer .'2

I think the last definition (from wikipedia) of 'artist' is the best. I feel that art is a personal interpretation. I read something along the lines of 'Art is art if who has made it has called it art', at the time I was unsure if I agreed with this statement. I think with good reasons behind the art being called art then this is true. Without this thought and concept however, I feel it's all a bit of a con.

Footnotes:
1. "artist." Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1). Random House, Inc. 21 Feb. 2007. .
2."artist." Antonyms. Answers Corporation, 2007. Answers.com 21 Feb. 2007. http://www.answers.com/topic/artist

The beginning...

Contemporary Art and Critical Writing: HAA 1906

I am excited by this project.

We have been set the task of developing 'a general knowledge of contemporary art and its representations and criticism.' We are to 'build a specialised portfolio of investigations and critical writing both collected by you (us) and written by you (us)'

The portfolio and discussion is to be based on the following:
- A private/ commercial gallery including artist run spaces.
- A public or National Gallery, or Public Art Project.
- One artist. The artist is to be tracked through professional life, exhibitions, statements, cocktail parties etcetera.
- One art journal.
- A medium

The 'artist' may be a group of artists, a fashion designer etcetera.

The first thing for me to think about is:
- What makes a public institution.
- What public institution excites me the most.
- What artist excites me the most and who I would enjoy/ get the most out of studying.
- If I am to stick with what I already know and am interested in and develop this further and learn more, or if I am to run with a new/ different idea.

-I have a few ideas, in which i will carry this out.
I want the medium which I study to almost form a piece of work itself.
I want to use the way I study and present ideas to take on the medium's role.

For now I will research and I shall update as soon as I have more knowledge on what it is I want to do.

I feel this is a very exciting project which I potentially can learn a lot from and have fun with, therefore to not mess it up from stage one would be a good idea.
Time, research and not rushing is how to resist downfall.