Will Gompertz in conversation with Rana Begum RA

Event date: 27 May 2023
Review by Danusia Wurm

 

Rana Begum RA

 
 
 

Organised as part of the Norfolk & Norwich Festival 2023, ncas was delighted to host a conversation between the Barbican’s Artistic Director, Will Gompertz and acclaimed visual artist, Rana Begum RA.

Born in Bangladesh in 1977, Rana Begum is a London-based artist whose work distils spatial and visual experience into ordered form. Through her refined language of minimalist abstraction, she blurs the boundaries between sculpture, painting and architecture.

 
I realised that my connection to light began very early on.
— Rana Begum RA
 
 

In a wide-ranging conversation, Begum described her earliest influences and the development of her practice, focussing on the importance of light which is fundamental in her work. She attributes her fascination with light to her childhood in rural Bangladesh, which she left when she was eight, to settle in the UK. Begum states “I realised that my connection to light began very early on. I found it fascinating just to watch the change of light in the rice field, or the water of the bathing pool, which was always flooded in sunlight – I remember my mum telling me off when I sat there staring.”

Her first visual memory of the UK was light reflecting off snow, as the plane landed on the snowy airport runway. The enchanting, myriad ways that light gleams from different surfaces and spaces have remained her abiding obsession.

 
 

Educated at the University of Hertfordshire, the Chelsea College of Art and the Slade School of Art, Begum paid tribute to her tutors who encouraged her to work and experiment in various disciplines and mediums. While a student at Hertfordshire University she was particularly drawn to the work of American abstract artist Agnes Martin, it was also that year that she first became interested in the relationship between light, colour and form. Her visual language draws from the urban landscape as well as geometric patterns from traditional Islamic art and architecture. She is a huge proponent of maquettes which help visualise the interplay of light within and outside her installations.

 
 
 

Begum was first recognised internationally in 2017 when she was awarded the prestigious Abraaj prize at Art Dubai for her installation No 764 Baskets, which was subsequently installed in St Peter’s Church in Kettles Yard, Cambridge in 2018. Typical of her work, the resulting cocoon-like installation drew on childhood memories, in this case, of basket weaving in her village in Bangladesh, as well as time spent reading the Qur’an at the local mosque, where the dappled morning light, sound of the water fountain and the mesmeric recitation created an atmosphere of peaceful concentration.

Begum also discussed other installations including Piece No 670, rhythmical steel layers, part of her Space, Light and Colour show for the Sainsbury’s Centre 2016, No 814 coloured glass panels at the Frieze Sculpture Park, Regents Park London, 2018, Infinite Geometry No 1066 , an intricate brick pathway at the Wanas Art Foundation Sweden 2021, Catching Colour, suspended sprayed cloud like mesh at the Botanic Square, London City Island 2022, and, most recently, No 1225 Chainlink, an ephemeral yellow painted chain link fence structure at Desert X 2023, in Los Angelos’ Coachella Valley.

The variety of mediums used are a tribute to Begum’s early training and inclination to experiment. Her works effortlessly absorb and reflect varied densities of light to produce an experience for the viewer that is both temporal and sensorial.

 

Will Gompertz is a world-leading expert in the arts. Having spent seven years as a Director of the Tate Galleries followed by eleven years as the BBC's Arts Editor, he is now Director of Arts and Learning at the Barbican Theatre. As someone who did not develop an interest in art until adulthood, Gompertz is determined to dispel the layman’s fear of the modern art world and those who inhabit it. In his own words “I was a late starter” and only developed a life-long love of art after encountering Willem de Kooning’s, Rosy-Fingered Dawn at Louse Point in Amsterdam’s Stedelijk museum when visiting with his then girlfriend, who he went on to marry.

Throughout his career, Will has focused on driving innovation and change, opening up the arts to the widest public. He has interviewed and observed many of the world's leading artists, actors, writers, musicians, and directors. He is the author of See what You’re Missing (2022), Think Like an Artist (2015) and What are you Looking At? (2012)

 

Will Gompertz

Review by ncas trustee Danusia Wurm

 

An evening with OUTPOST and the work of artist Hazel Soper

Event date: 9 May 2023
Review by Danusia Wurm

 

I lived here once and you killed me, Hazel Soper

 
Committed to the uncompromising presentation of contemporary art
— OUTPOST
 
 

Facilitated by Norfolk based artist Carl Rowe, Norwich School's Blake Studio hosted a fascinating talk on OUTPOST, an arts run charity presented by OUTPOST Committee Chair Maddie Exton and the work of one of its alumni, multimedia installation artist Hazel Soper. 

‘Committed to the uncompromising presentation of contemporary art’ OUTPOST was founded in 2004 under the inspiration of Lynda Morris, then Norwich University of the Arts (NUA) Professor of Curation and Art History, in response to the recognition of a lack of affordable studio space, and as a means to keep graduating artists in Norwich.

Run by a Steering Group of volunteer creative members, OUTPOST runs 85 affordable studio spaces in Gildengate House in Anglia Square, as well as the OUTPOST Gallery, which stages about five exhibitions a year.

OUTPOST has been exceptionally successful in nurturing young talent who often have been selected to show at prestigious art shows including Frieze and its members have attracted significant arts grant funding. Additionally, the curatorial and administrative skills acquired by members have led to new careers in small galleries across the country.

I think imagination is imperative to create a different, alternative, inclusive future for us all
— Hazel Soper
 
 

Hazel Soper is a video installation artist, exploring the effects of technology and capitalism on women’s autonomy. Referencing traditions of female labour, she often uses textiles to create installation elements, alongside close-up, non-narrative video pieces. Collage also has a strong presence throughout her work, both with analogue collages, and through the juxtaposition of appropriated text in video, audio and print form.

Her latest haunting installation I Lived Here Once And Then You Killed Me explores women’s histories and British folkloric traditions. It specifically looks at the local legend of the ‘Somerton Witch’, who was buried alive inside St Mary’s Church. Before dying, the Witch cast a spell on her wooden leg which grew into a tree that eventually destroyed the Church, as such the centre of the community and symbol of the control and values that repressed her.

“I think imagination is imperative to create a different, alternative, inclusive future for us all. Folklore and stories also reflect our beliefs as a society, and which roles we are expected to play. As an angry feminist, I think it's important to revisit and re-examine which roles we are cast into and why - and if we want to be one of someone else's story at all”.

 
 
 

Review by ncas trustee Danusia Wurm

 

A talk by Harriet Loffler, Curator of the Women’s Art Collection, Murray Edwards College, Cambridge

Event date: 4 April 2023
Review by Danusia Wurm

 

Hebe and Her Serpent, Maggi Hambling CBE

 
 
 

Harriet Loffler, Curator of the Women’s Art Collection based at Murray Edwards College, Cambridge, delighted a discerning audience with an insight into her work as Curator, including the history, nature and significance of the Collection - and its future. 

The superlative Collection, the largest of contemporary art by women in Europe, is a celebration of women’s agency and creativity, an art historical record and a living, evolving body of work. At the heart of its founding mission is the principle of collaboration and community in which women take centre stage.  

 

Today the Collection includes over 600 works by leading international artists, including Barbara Hepworth, Dame Paula Rego, Maggi Hambling CBE, Lubaina Himid CBE, Judy Chicago, Tracey Emin CBE and Cindy Sherman. 

Housed, not in a traditional gallery, but in the working college environment, Harriet explored the challenges this brings to maintaining the Collection, including those of deterioration, vulnerability and storage but also its advantages as an integral part of student life. She also raised issues of adding to the Collection, what criteria to adopt to reflect the collaborative nature of its origins, and whether to change from receiving donated work, to purchasing works. 

 

Built as a “manifesto for the education of women”, the Murray Edwards (formerly New Hall) College is a fitting recipient for the Collection. The iconic brutalist building was designed by architects Chamberlin, Powell and Bon , who went on design the Barbican Centre in London.

 

The Collection is open to members of the public and is free to visit, 7 days a week. 

The ncas talk, held at the Blake Studio, was one of a series of ncas talks kindly hosted by the Norwich School.

 

 
 

Review by ncas trustee Danusia Wurm

 

A talk by Carl Rowe, Artist and former Head of Fine Art, Norwich University of the Arts

Event date: 21 March 2023
Review by Danusia Wurm

 
 
The objects that I deploy in my artwork remain constant and have appeared repeatedly over the years, each time in a new guise, sometimes as metaphor and sometimes as themselves
— Carl Rowe

Exceeding Limits of the Box, Carl Rowe

 
 

What influences an artist's work? The audience at The Blake Studio were treated to a fascinating insight by Norwich-based artist and academic Carl Rowe whose work, over the years, has consistently featured cans, sticks, pipes, food, dust and traps "like the most reliable actors in a repertory theatre group". 

Graduating with a MA in Fine Art from Manchester Polytechnic in 1985, and a former Associate Professor and Course Leader in Fine Art at Norwich University of the Arts, Rowe creates paintings, prints, drawings and objects. He describes his art as switching back and forth between an engagement with socio political issues and subconscious renderings. "Despite this seemingly disparate approach, the objects that I deploy in my artwork remain constant and have appeared repeatedly over the years, each time in a new guise, sometimes as metaphor and sometimes as themselves". As such, they might be described as "hero" objects. 

Rowe often uses a surface layer of humour, absurdity and the arcane to mask a strong undercurrent of concern for humanity. A memorable example is Banquet for Ultra Bankruptcy, (2013) based on the Marinetti manifesto and, Synaesthesia /3 developed in collaboration with Simon Davenport for Art Laboratory Berlin, where the two artists combined the performative with artistic research on a cultural history of the senses.

 

Rowe explained that more recent works wrangle subjects such as gases, particulates, pollen, eels, traps, calibrations, marker points, fonts, logos and domestic objects within seemingly nonsensical and vexing associations. At times, geometric forms, lines, and shapes intersect or abut exactly. Elsewhere, they misalign, glance or overlap. Real space coexists with imaginary space in an implausible graphic paradigm. There is a strong sense of duality and unseen forces at play. Colour is notable, in some works naturalistic and low key, but in others it is ramped-up to a feverish vibrancy. 

Rowe has an international profile as both an artist and an academic. He is an artist member and studio holder at OUTPOST in Norwich and member of the Printmakers Council. His work has been exhibited widely in the UK as well as in Germany, Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Canada, US, Estonia, Japan, Malaysia and Egypt. In addition to studio production he has also worked on public art including billboards, print portfolios and hospital art including work for Woodlands Mental Health Unit at Ipswich Hospital and  Northside House Forensic Mental Health Unit. 

 
 

Carl Rowe

 
 

Review by ncas trustee Danusia Wurm

 

Laurence Edwards In Conversation with Derek Morris and Andy Campbell

Event date: 19 November 2022
Review by Derek Morris

 

The Yoxman, Laurence Edwards

 
 

A reflection on the evening by Derek Morris.

On the evening of Saturday 12th November, a sizeable audience of ncas members, students, staff and sixth formers from the Norwich School gathered in the school’s Blake Theatre to watch a film about the making and installation of a new work by Laurence Edwards, the Suffolk based sculptor. After the film, 3D Design and Creative Projects Co-ordinator Andy Campbell and I asked Laurence questions about his practice and his journey to arrive at the point of being one of the most significant figurative artists of our time.

 
 

The film gave us clear insights into the creative development and manufacture of the work, The Yoxman, the eight-meter high bronze figure which is permanently based by the A12 road at Yoxford in Suffolk. The extraordinary vision and intense energy required to achieve such a successful work continued to be evident as Laurence’s answers to the questions asked by Andy and me revealed Laurence’s intellectual and imaginative energy, not to mention his physical energy, in creating such a truly monumental and heroic figure.

The possibilities for Laurence himself in making such a large sculpture in bronze lie in the many years of experience he achieved as a jobbing bronze foundry man, and the accumulation of equipment and appropriate spaces that allow him to be completely in control of the conception and construction of his sculptures. This makes for an element of spontaneity in the working process (which is unusual in bronze casting) and that the special qualities of bronze as primarily a fluid material go a long way towards achieving the unique qualities of his sculptures.

 

Laurence Edwards in his studio

Review by sculptor Derek Morris