haptic/tacit

Why I choose to collaborate.


Collaboration and why I choose to work with others?



Collaborating with other artists and makers has become increasingly important to me.
A couple of years ago five of us from the Crafts Councils hothouse programme in 2012 met in a pub in Southwark to begin discussions about organising an exhibition on our own terms.  To be able to make work we wanted to make without having to write a proposal or fulfil a brief.

At that time our aim was an exhibition, after several meetings and many email conversations between us all we had secured two venues to show this new work and called it Haptic/Tacit. 

We applied for an Arts Council grant and was successful, we invited Kimberley Chandler
http://arts.brighton.ac.uk/research/doctoral-centre-arts/student/kimberley-chandler
to write an essay for us and invited our mentors from Hothouse to exhibit along side each of us.

The exhibition was about strengthening artists networks, encouraging conversations and critical observation.

With the grant we were able to produce a catalogue to accompany both exhibitions, in this we included a conversation between each pairing giving a deeper insight into the working relationships between mentor and mentee. 

The entire process between meeting in Southwark and opening the first exhibition in London was two years. 

During the take down in London we were discussing where to go from here as this had become something more than simply five artists and two exhibitions. 

The title of our exhibitions soon became our collaborative group name.
Haptic/Tacit




We set the exhibition up in Oxford in January 2017 during the 7 weeks there we ran a collaborative making workshop for adults and a Q&A chaired by Kimberley.

During this time it gave us some time to begin to think about how we go forward.
The idea of continuously working with different artists and makers was something we found exciting because it keeps the process fresh by introducing different ideas, working methods, materials, and pushing the group dynamic. 

So the core of the group remains the same including Kimberley and each exhibition or event we will each individually invite another artist or maker to work with us. 
Based around a subject or theme. 

Each pairing can work however they choose they can make a collaborative piece of work together or make work that responds to one another. 
This is collaborative working on multiple levels.

The catalogue is another element we intend to continue with Kimberley, we will also invite professions, curators, scientists, architects.... to contribute around the subject we choice.

Together we have a stronger voice, we draw on one another strengths, we can explore the possibility of making work that we personally want to develop and It's always about the group and not the individual. 

The next step for us is updating our website but in the meantime 
for more information about our work to date follow the links to Instagram and twitter 

https://twitter.com/haptic_tacit?lang=en
https://www.instagram.com/haptictacit/



Perpendicular studio 




Is my other collaboration.
Perpendicular was founded in 2011 shortly after Sasha and myself finished our MA at Central Saint Martins. Together we felt that we are able to make larger more ambitious spatial work.

https://twitter.com/perpendicular14?lang=en
https://www.instagram.com/perpendicularstudio/?hl=en

We have a wonderful harmony in the way we work together, collaboration is often about pushing the work beyond your own solitary vision, throwing ideas around until you are able to find a resolve. 
Listening to the other person taking everything into consideration and working through different viewpoints.

Collaboration for me is about sharing thoughts, moving forward to achieve the same vision. to have another pair of eyes, to challenge, to share the workload, and to push you out of your comfort zone. 

Otherwise we remain small and inward looking. 



Haptic/Tacit exhibition at the Leyden Gallery and The Old Fire Station, Oxford.



The opening paragraph from our introduction written by Bonnie Kemske


In October 2016 Haptic/Tacit opened at the Leyden Gallery for one week. http://leydengallery.com/haptictacit2
It was always our intention to have a short run for London and a longer run outside of London.

Just as a reminder as my last blog post talking about this was back in April.


Haptic/Tacit is a collective including five makers who met in 2013 on the Crafts Councils development programme Hothouse.

What we all have in common is an innate fascination with making and material language.
Some of us are bound through process or material others by concept or exploration.
This opportunity has enabled us to develop creative networks and to be able to involve our mentors or buddies from the programme to showcase these working partnerships.

Exhibitors


Kim Norton http://www.kimnorton.co.uk
Laura Ellen Bacon http://lauraellenbacon.com

Jane Cairnes http://www.janecairns.co.uk

Annie Turner http://www.galeriebesson.co.uk/turner.html

Laura Grain http://www.lauragrain.com

Shelly Goldsmith http://shellygoldsmith.com

Tomas Appleton http://www.thosworks.com

Giles Macdonald http://www.gilesmacdonald.com

Grant Aston http://www.grantaston.com/#0
Bonnie Kemske http://www.bonniekemske.com



Install begins







Group discussion before opening 


Opening night 




We were given some Arts Council funding which enabled us to print an exhibition catalogue. 
We felt this was an important element to support the two exhibitions, as it helps to build a deeper understanding and greater insight into each partnership. The catalogue includes five conversations between each maker and mentor and touches upon elements around working practice that can't possibly be completely visible just by experiencing the work.

The key element that holds the catalogue together is Kimberley Chandler's essay called Material Talk. Looking at how we have come to work together and the importance of the collective voice. 
The conversations and dialogue we have ignited with Kimberley will continue in Oxford where you can hear us in conversation where Kimberley will be chairing the evenings event. 



Shelley Goldsmith


Laura Grain 


Giles MacDonald


Thomas Appleton 


Bonnie Kemske


Grant Aston


Laura Ellen Bacon


Kim Norton


Annie Turner 


Jane Cairns

Haptic/Tacit opens in Oxford on January 13th at the Old Fire Station and can be visited until March. 

During the exhibition we will be running a workshop and a Q&A. 
More information can be found on the website. please note although these events are free to attend tickets will still need to be booked in advance. http://www.oldfirestation.org.uk/exhibit/haptictacit/


The Old Fire Station, Oxford 



Setting off from Vanguard studios to pick Grant up.


We finally arrive after an epic six hour journey from London to Oxford the day of the train strike.


Day 2 of install we Laura and Giles.





The decals installed after much fear they maybe too large.



 Our catalogues ready for the opening Becki kindly made a shelf for them to be neatly displayed throughout the duration of the exhibition.


Giles MacDonald and Thomas Appleton


I changed my collection to scale it down slightly for the space. This was discussed with the gallery at the very beginning. Collection 2 was three renditions of brick ranging from the found object to fired and unfired porcelain creating small assemblages.

Collection 3 was exhibited on grey slate instead of mirror glass showing a handmade rendition of the brick form in black and white. Made from porcelain and black clays the cracks and stresses reveal the making process and hi-light the evidence of my weight applied to the material.






Laura Ellen Bacon



Laura Grain and Shelley Goldsmith




Grant Aston showed different work in Oxford as his previous work was being exhibited overseas.


Bonnie Kemske



Jane Cairns 
Jane remade this piece, changing the darker lines than ran through the work shown in London. 



Annie Turner 


Collaborative making workshop 




Jane and Grant ran a collaborative making workshop for adults one Saturday afternoon. 
The idea behind this was to get everyone thinking as a group. 
Architecture was given as a starting point as this lends itself to structural building methods, it immediately triggered ideas of scale.
Additional props such as wood, bamboo canes, string etc were used to help create a foundation and the clay could be introduced in and around that.

The exhibition












The Window

We were given the opportunity of having a dedicated window to introduce the exhibition from the gallery shop entrance. 
In order for this to have an impact we decided that CaCO3 was to be hung in two parts as it filled the entire space and is a piece of work that talks about material, scale and locality.
The chalk for this work was gathered from Sombourne chalk quarry in Hampshire. One of the last chalk quarries in the UK.