A reaction and reflection.

An audience’s reaction

 

 

 

I asked my partner and some friends to come to The Collection. I merely said we were going to look around the museum and meet them there, I said I would meet them in the café.

 

 

I wanted to find out their reactions without expecting some sort of performance.

 

 

When they spotted me outside of the café, I kept one eye on them. They looked at me in confusion and looked around the whole “exhibit” until they clocked that it was a performance.

 

 

I asked them after it was finished what did they think and did they understand what we were doing.

 

 

My partner agreed with Dan’s criticism and said the mimic up top didn’t seem to be part of it and she didn’t understand what was going. She did however once looking around notice it was an exhibit, and I was a piece of art.

 

 

When I asked my friends they agreed with the general observation and they said once they stared closely at Jennifer and I they noticed we were mimicking the people inside the café.

 

 

My partner as a person, who is not interested in drama in the slightest, said site specific was highly interesting.  They have never been drama people but they understood that what we were performing was the location.

 

 

As Kaye (2000, p220) said, “Finally, it is to this end that site-specific art so presciently works against its own final or definitive location, as, though this wide variety of forms and strategies, it speculates toward the performance of its places.”

 

 

Even people oblivious to drama and was site specific is understood that we were an art gallery showing café culture and understood perfectly what we were trying to do.

Bibliography:

Kaye, N., (2000). Site-specific Art. Oxton: Routledge p220.

Gabriel Davies

Recollection.

A few days after our piece I have now sat down to recollect about the performance, I went through all my old blog posts as well as the people in my group, and sat down to really think about the progression and final result that was our performance.

 

 

Looking back on our piece I see a lot now that I would like to improve. Though I enjoyed our piece, I felt we strayed away from our painting. We were more focused on showing Café culture, though I felt that was very well done for a site-specific piece, I would like to have seen more of our painting in the performance.

 

 

Though we wore white shirts to match the people in the painting, I felt that was the only thing that happened to be from the actual painting, everything else was more focused on the site. Which is not a bad thing but I would have personally enjoyed to have put more of the painting into our performance.

 

 

Bound by Love

 

 

In our original idea, we had the tree in the outside area serving as the flowers. We also had string tying up the buildings to represent the stitches, and the idea that like the people in the painting the buildings were bound together.

 

 

Due to many complications such as unable to get the okay in time for us to tie up strings, we ended up having to take the string out of completely and tree just didn’t quite fit into our new idea. If I could go back and get the time to practice with the string I would have liked to add it to our piece, to make it part of our exhibition.  I also believe it would have made our piece much bigger. We were quite subtle in our piece and I would have enjoyed the string to catch people’s eyes then bring them in to us actually performing.

 

 

I also would have if I had no expenses and money wasn’t a problem, I would have enjoyed putting myself, Fran and Jennifer in glass boxes, so we mimicked our small exhibitions.

 

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I felt that would have really given the exhibition feel to us, so we melded more with the pieces.  One criticism that Dan said which I agreed with was that our pieces did not fit like a jigsaw, there seemed to be three different parts. With Holly and Shellie upstairs, Us three downstairs and then these art pieces.  I felt any passer by wouldn’t see it all as one performance. I think if we were in glass boxes then we would have look all the same, (with everyone in glass boxes).  Considering Holly and Shellie, were in a glass window, which looked like a glass box, if us three down on the ground were in boxes we would have looked more together.

 

 

I think we improved on our original piece by moving outside, in between the café and the museum, and becoming a melting pot of the two rather than staying inside the café. By moving outside we also had a lot more movement and freedom of the whole space.  Even getting to make our mimic stronger by instead of just being in café with a special board, we got to make our own and enforce what we were trying to do. Which was turning the café culture into an exhibit outside. In our original piece we also had no props or extras being in the café itself but by moving outside we got to add the small exhibits such as the cake stand and the tea. I believe those small props made all the difference. People generally do not like to notice someone acting strange, but they had to come near us to view the props, and that is when they started to notice that we were chatting away to ourselves. I think having the props greatly improved more people noticing the piece.

 

 

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Though I believe our performance was a big success and I did thoroughly enjoy it, I wouldn’t mind going back and improving on it. Looking back on my blog posts you can see how vastly our ideas changed and we ended up doing a completely new performance. Performance wise I wish we would have had some consistency and some reminisce of our original idea in our piece.  Though in the end I really did enjoy our performance and would more than happily do it again, merely for my own enjoyment of seeing people react to the piece.

 

 

Gabriel Davies

 

 

Our final performance

Well it has finally come to our final performance, we have become a long way from our first initial plan of being in the cafe, and tying up the building together.

We turned the outside into an exhibition, even while we were setting up people wanted to know what was going on. At one point we had our other “exhibits” set up, though we weren’t performing as we were getting changed, and I could see people curiously looking and wanting to know what was going on.

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As the women went by it I could see her saying to her husband she did not understand what was going on, it was highly interesting to see that before I went outside to perform.

I believe that the most amazing aspect about site specific is the audience, with ours as there was no set audience just people walking by, and as it was a nice sunny day a lot of people were. There were an interesting mix of interactions from people smiling awkwardly even to one old couple telling us to shut up and it was highly annoying.

(We continued, though that was quite a shock!)

It reminded me of https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AmnaZrQIymU (Lonetwin, 2008)

As with John Stevens, our audience was anyone passing by, and their comments and reactions ended up being part of our performance.

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The audience would see this sign and come in for a closer look before they saw our performance and they would see Fran, Jenny and myself talking to our invisible companions. Then they would look up to see Holly and Shellie having a tea party. It was motion after motion, and I believe they were unsure what to do.

I mentioned in a later post about cafe culture and being in your own personal bubble when you enter one, strangely enough though a lot of people noticed us outside, the people in the cafe’s (though I was seated right next to them just outside) ignored my presence, even though they could glance outside and right next to them I was talking to myself.

Though many people sat at that window seat while I was performing, I did not notice a single person look up from their conversation or book. Even though at times I was mirroring them with my timing of turning my page of my book, and putting my book down. Yet they were completely oblivious as they were in their own cafe bubble.

As an exhibit it was quite a success! With many people having their interests piqued in our little gallery.

I believe it could have been easily very different, with no one paying much attention at all but because we were performing on a hot Saturday afternoon at lunchtime, many people stopped and ended up becoming part of our piece. I would be interested to see if people would have bothered stopping to take a closer look at us if it was raining or cold.

Site Specific was an incredibly interesting performing piece, one I would like to experiment again with some day.

Bibliography:

Lonetwin, (2008). Town Crying: My name is John Stevens. [online video] available at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mmUn2ZTzeY0 [accessed 06/05/2013]

 

Learning.

Our group has decided to turn the cafe of The Collection into an Exhibition.
We first tired out to make small plaques like in an art gallery.

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Though once in place we noticed that they were far too small, and though we were planning for subtle, it was far too subtle, so we have now decided for big letters, made out of plastic.

We then noticed the cafe was a far too small place for now a much bigger performance, so we have now moved the “exhibition” outside the cafe, though we are still mirroring the cafe, and having our text come from the conversations we heard in the cafe.

Learning but doing is a valuable form.

Our performance now reminds me of this video

(Homotopiafestival, 2007)

Like him with his salon, we are now mirroring the cafe culture but in a more exaggerated way. This similarities do not stop there, like him we are performing with text from actual customers.

As we start anew we are unsure where our near ideas will lead us, though I believe being more bigger with our acting and plagues will hopefully become an effective piece for people to understand that we are mirroring the cafe.

Bibliography:

Homotopiafestival, (2007) Salon Adrienne. available at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mmUn2ZTzeY0 [accessed 16/04/13]

Music affecting the piece.

As our group is in the Cafe, many variations can change the mood of our performance.
Whether it be the weather, how many people or the music.

Music effects the tone of the piece, and the Cafe through my many days of me sitting there plays many different types of music.

I believe the classical music played will go with out piece nicely, as an exhibition of art and classical flow well together.

Jazz will make the piece more lively and jarring, with an upbeat tempo our pieces will seem happy, Will the audience in the cafe look around more if the music isn’t relaxing?

The last music I hear was Adele’s album, the music is often about sad relationships, will that make people put a story to out art pieces?

For example some of our exhibits, are people reading alone, another is sipping a coffee alone, will being alone with Adele playing make people think there is a realtionship story to out piece.

11 Someone Like You

If you can imagine those exhibits with that song, a story starts to become for the characters, a story about lost love.

Though we don’t get to choose the music on the day, I believe this will be interesting on how it effects out piece.