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Document : 983
Title    : Brave New World in the Dear Green Place
Author(s): Mark Fisher

Copyright holder(s): Mark Fisher

Text

IMAGINE if everyone in Glasgow was mad about football but only a fraction
had heard of Celtic. Imagine if Scotland was a nation of music lovers but
only a tiny elite knew anything about Franz Ferdinand. Imagine if Scottish
audiences flooded into cinemas but only movie buffs had caught on to Ewan
McGregor. 

It sounds unlikely, but it’s not a million miles from the situation in
the visual arts. On the one hand, the city of Glasgow is celebrated as one
of the world’s key creative centres. On the other hand, when the Glasgow
public flocks to see art - and flock it does - it is rarely to see the
names that have made the city famous. 

While the prestigious art prizes acclaim the likes of Douglas Gordon, Toby
Paterson, Kenny Hunter, Clare Barclay, Christine Borland, Roderick Buchanan
and Alison Watt - Glasgow graduates all - the people of the city are rather
more likely to show up at the Glasgow Art Fair, where they can buy into the
work of a rather less fashionable roster of artists. 

Something in excess of 16,000 art lovers will pass through the canvas
galleries of George Square this month, browsing and buying work from 60-odd
galleries including Newcastle’s Biscuit Factory, London’s Flying
Colours and Glasgow’s Cyril Gerber Fine Art. No harm in that, but it’s
curious that some of Glasgow’s best-known names have produced the least
seen work in their own city. 

I recently met a commercial gallery owner in the Highlands who didn’t
recognise the name of Douglas Gordon. She was clued up on all sorts of
Scottish painters and was doing a roaring trade, but the work of a Turner
Prize-winning Glasgow artist who had been exhibited in Paris, New York and
Venice had passed her by. It’s like someone working in a Scottish
bookshop being ignorant of James Kelman or Janice Galloway. 

The arrival of the Glasgow International Festival of Contemporary Visual
Art is an attempt to reconcile this odd state of affairs. It is not that
Glasgow gallery-goers are conservative or narrow-minded, argues Francis
McKee, the curator of the new festival. You have only to look at the
success of Glasgow’s Gallery of Modern Art (GoMA) - the second most
visited contemporary art gallery outside London - to prove that’s not the
case. Rather, he says, it’s that Glaswegians have had too little
opportunity to see the home-grown work that art lovers take for granted in
Los Angeles, Hanover and Amsterdam. 

"The problem was always that people couldn’t actually see the work," he
says. "When you see work by Douglas Gordon or Roderick Buchanan it’s not
difficult to understand. They’re Glaswegians making work and they’re
very down to earth. People get it when they see it. The problem was when
you couldn’t see it and you read all this pretentious writing about it."


Far from being elitist, these artists talk in a language that is easy to
understand. It’s just that their voices haven’t always been heard at
home. "When James Boyle [chair of the Cultural Commission] says we
shouldn’t have art for art’s sake, he clearly hasn’t been looking at
art for the last 10 years," says McKee. "Douglas Gordon is making work
based on James Hogg, Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and Robert Louis Stevenson;
Roderick Buchanan is making work about football; and Christine Borland is
making work about the Hunterian collection in Glasgow. How much closer can
you get to Scottish culture?" 

For a long time, it was easier to market Glasgow’s award-winning art
abroad than at home. That is changing as GoMA and the National Galleries in
Edinburgh are making more concerted efforts to purchase and display work by
the most recent generation. "GoMA was showing the artists from the ’80s
for a long time, so people were familiar with Steven Campbell, Adrian
Wiszniewski, et cetera, but not with Christine Borland and Douglas Gordon.
Now GoMA’s the kind of place that can introduce people to those artists
and make it comfortable for them to understand and not be intimidated." 

This is the shifting context into which the Glasgow International Festival
of Contemporary Visual Art has emerged. Running in parallel to the Glasgow
Art Fair, the new festival embraces galleries large and small, from the
tiny Modern Institute to the cavernous Tramway, showing new commissions,
recent work and retrospectives by artists from near and far. 

"Part of what we wanted was to celebrate international artists in Glasgow,"
says McKee. "The programme has some international artists from Glasgow and
some from abroad. It’s a mixture of bringing artists in and highlighting
artists who are already here." 

SO WHAT’S EXCITING him about his inaugural programme? "Pretty much
everything," he says without hesitation. "If it doesn’t excite you,
don’t programme it. That’s how I work." 

When pressed, he highlights Minerva Cuevas, who is creating a mural for the
show drawn from Mexico’s Jumex Collection at the Tramway, and the new
work being created by Glasgow artists Smith/Stewart at 64 Osborne Street.
He also name-checks Douglas Gordon and Jake and Dinos Chapman, who are
contributing to the show at Glasgow Print Studios, and mentions the
Campbell’s Soup survey of Scottish work from the 1980s at Glasgow School
of Art. 

The last is as good a place to start as any. Twenty years ago, Steven
Campbell spearheaded the international renaissance of Glasgow art, being
part of a generation that reacted against the abstract and expressionist
tradition that had held sway in Scotland for many years. Campbell’s Soup
not only showcases Campbell’s work, but puts it in the context of what
came before it - Alasdair Gray, John Byrne and Alexander Moffat - what
emerged at the same time - Adrian Wiszniewski, Mark Kostabi and Alexander
Guy - and what followed - Keith Farquhar, Michael Fullerton and Lucy
McKenzie. 

Duly grounded in the recent Scottish tradition, you should grab an
international perspective by swinging up to the Tramway to sample McKee’s
own selection from the vast Jumex Collection. Put together since 1997 by
Eugenio Lopez, director of the Jumex juice business, the 1,200-strong
collection is a remarkable survey of the international scene. "I spent a
week just looking at all the works," says McKee, still heady with the
excitement of it all. "It was a real education. The task was to see an
exhibition within it that would make sense, rather than just a series of
works from the collection. There is a theme about landscape and power: how
landscape can influence the history of a country and how history, politics
and power can determine the landscape." 

From there, the city is yours, whether you choose to check out the
provocative slogans of the US’s Barbara Kruger at GoMA, the political
confrontation of RISK at the CCA, or the emerging names at galleries such
as Sorcha Dallas and the Transmission. McKee, who is already planning next
year’s festival, is confident that the city can only build on its
reputation as a global force. "We’ve got over the bump of it being a
one-off, flash in the pan in the mid-90s," he says. "It’s proved itself
again and again. That’s important and it has happened right across
Scotland now." 

Glasgow International Festival of Contemporary Visual Art, throughout
Glasgow, April 21-May 2; Glasgow Art Fair, George Square, April 28-May 2


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General public: Audience size: 1000+

Text details
Method of composition: Wordprocessed
Year of composition: 2005
Word count: 1261

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Published: Publisher: Scotland on Sunday
Publication year: 2005
Place of publication: Edinburgh
Part of larger text: Contained in: Scotland on Sunday

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Author
Author details
Author id: 879
Forenames: Mark
Surname: Fisher
Gender: Male
Decade of birth: 1960
Educational attainment: University
Age left school: 18
Upbringing/religious beliefs: Catholicism
Occupation: Journalist
Place of birth: Bromborough
Region of birth: Merseyside
Country of birth: England
Place of residence: Edinburgh
Region of residence: Midlothian
Residence CSD dialect area: midLoth
Country of residence: Scotland
Father's occupation: Librarian
Father's place of birth: Birkenhead
Father's country of birth: England
Mother's occupation: Teacher
Mother's place of birth: Liverpool
Mother's country of birth: England

Languages:
Language: English
Speak: Yes
Read: Yes
Write: Yes
Understand: Yes
Circumstances: 
Language: Scots
Speak: No
Read: Yes
Write: No
Understand: Yes
Circumstances: