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This is the net as it appeared, rag by rag, at Model Citizens. |
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Pam Hall has worked for years on a series of site-specific installations around the theme of women's labour but also prayer.
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On Saturday afternoon at Model Citizens vintage and
specialty clothing boutique in St. John's the usual ebb and flow of shoppers
was augmented by waves of art-inclined visitors. Installed for the special occasion of the 24-Hour Art
Marathon was Pam Hall's A Wish and a Prayer. It was quite literally a handmade net
to which visitors were invited to tie a strip of cloth after they had written a
wish on it. Pam called the cloth
strips "rags" and in the female tradition of crafting that term would
be appropriate (as in rag rug) but there was something that wasn't everyday or
cast off going on. It was
ritualistic and the taking something used and worn and reclaiming it and then
elevating it with near prayer-like reverence was a far cry from the status
denoted by "rag". The
humble white strip of cloth and the devotional aspect of writing a wish and
then submitting it to the wall of netting has a resonance that goes back
throughout human history and across cultures. It is a meaningful act that transcends what many would
consider the function of art–but not me.
Without the authority-laden atmosphere of the art gallery, Pam Hall's
installation has a meaning accessible to a wide audience. It is interactive as opposed to the
"do not touch" environment of the institutional art gallery. It afforded the public an interactive
role and valued that contribution.
In short, it made art the conversation that, I believe, it ought to
be. And for that reason, Pam
Hall's A Wish and a Prayer did my
heart good.
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An example of Nelio's eye popping mural art. |
This year's art marathon had a theme: Dreamworlds, that really seemed to help focus and energize the
series of events and activities that made up the festival. As Mary MacDonald, Director of Eastern
Edge Gallery, which is the epi-centre and hub of the art marathon states,
"A dreamworld can be many things: a utopian paradise perfect and
untouched, the stuff of nightmare or perhaps an alternate universe where all
your wildest fantasies come true."
I think of the surrealists and also the Inuit Art's shamans skilled at
transformation. The unconscious is
the home of the dreamworld and I guess, in many ways, what the art marathon
does is make dreams come true.
Either way, the visionary capacity of the artist is a role in society
that holds hope.
Eastern Edge is to be congratulated for the breadth and
scope of the projects by this year's invited artists. From Nelio's sophisticated yet energetic wall art, to Damien
Worth's creative manipulation of free ware to fashion shimmering, living worlds
from crowd sourced images, to Pam Hall's interactive installation not to
mention the films, bands and so much more the diversity of contemporary art
practice was unavoidable. And a
regular feature, and a crowd favourite, is the 24-hour art marathon itself
where members of the public could float through the open spaces and see artists
from junior to veteran working in clay, wax, paint, video and found
objects. The opportunity to ask
questions and engage in conversation about inspiration and process, in short to
share art, is a welcome break from the daily isolation of the studio for both
artists and members of the public.
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Prayers by Stephen Hiscock, who was one of the younger artists participating in the marathon. His pencil and ink drawings explore duality with fantastic creatures often with a brooding authority. |
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