n quentin woolf

critical feedback specialist; writer; arts broadcaster

artistic consciousness

Mural

Mural: The Battle of Cable Street

Today’s show went like a dream, which is to say I seemed to be asleep for most of it. On the night before the recording I’d discovered Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas, and it was with a sense of horror that I realised 3am had snuck up on me. Consequently, I wasn’t on coruscating top form come recording time the next morning. Fortunately the excellent cafe into which I always call on the way to the studio brews a mean coffee. With a couple of two-shot lattes injected into my eyeballs, I achieved a definite, if fleeting, spring in my step.

My guests on this show were a fascinating bunch; I could easily have spent the whole day talking to each one; it seemed mighty unfair to squeeze all three of them plus acts and the show’s arts listings into only an hour. In fact, since last week’s overrun, I’ve been thinking seriously about extending the format to allow some more in-depth investigations into questions surrounding the guests’ art.

Malcolm Jamieson

Malcolm Jamieson

Malcolm Jamieson wasted no time in establishing himself as the raconteur of this week’s show. Even before any of the other guests arrived, Malcolm had the station staff under his spell. I walked into the ‘green room’ to discover him regaling a starry-eyed researcher with acting anecdotes. He proved every bit as entertaining during the interview itself, both on- and off-mic; we’d have needed a show an hour long to cram in everything he brought up. Here is truly a man who has experienced something of life and is able to profess it elegantly and effectively, a man suited to the vocation of poet if ever there was one. Malcolm was kind enough to share a little of his mnemonic technique with me – something from which I could only profit. I hope I remember to try it out when I get home. Boom boom.

Ash Gardner

Ash Gardner

Ash Gardner seemed to be Malcolm Jamieson’s opposite in almost every way. A slight, unassuming figure, who was far more comfortable sitting on the floor than having someone fetch a chair for him, I rather got the idea that Ash was unused to having his motives probed. I must confess that there’s a point in more-or-less every show when I catch myself wondering whether I’m imagining what’s being said, and, once I’ve assured myself that I am indeed hearing it correctly, whether I am on the receiving end of a wind-up. Usually this is down to the experimental nature of the art under discussion: Jemma Skidmore’s non-existent museum was a case in point. This week, I’m afraid the tiredness had gotten to me, giving everything that surreal quality and  the conversation seemed to have turned to recreating a scene from the Gremlins film, using volunteers as Gremlins, and a wave of confusion hit me. What was the man talking about? Was this all for real? I wonder if it could only have been more confusing to have had the same experience whilst in attendance at the event itself. Having listened to the recording of the show at a day’s distance, none of my bewilderment seems evident, I’m pleased to say. Ash is a frank, unassuming and positive-minded type, Gremlins or no Gremlins. What’s not to like?

Andreas Grant’s poems about poetry were splendid and clever, with lots of

Andreas Grant

Andreas Grant

dynamic and surprising phrases. Paul Squire’s electronica was exciting and fresh. As for Inky Quills’ comedy: well, comedy is a specialised taste like nothing else, so let me just say that I found it extremely funny.

The thing that impressed me most about Katherine Hayes was her soldier-like approach to the practicalities surrounding her art. There is no question that she is true to her tastes and form, but without her writing there to speak for herself what really struck me was her stamina. Katherine is obviously an artist with the ability to run the long race. One of the reasons I do the show it the insight it gives into the many different ways there are to process the artistic experience; there are at least as many outlooks as there are artforms and oftentimes artistic production of the highest calibre can be brought down by a failure to ally it correctly with the right mind-set or expectations. Strategies for coping with rejection; being smart in how one labels oneself: these abilities can be, I think, almost as important as the art itself. Staying conscious, too, seems like a smart skill to practise, and whilst my Ivanov-style sleep deprivation this week has been interesting, I think for the broadcast of…zzz…

Katherine Hayes

Katherine Hayes

Broadcasting, apparently, functions best when allied with staying awake. Besides the obvious suggestion of disrespect it’s very difficult to clean snoring out in the edit.

Listen to this edition of The Arts Show.

Posted 9 months, 4 weeks ago at 4:04 PM.

reach

This week’s show was big on music. My headline interview was with

James Hesford

James Hesford

composer James Hesford, a genuinely charming fellow who, like all of my guests this week, is completely committed to his art. His collaborations with artists Ivanov and Chan, which take place non-stop over 24-hour periods, sound exhilarating and exhausting; James’ descriptions of the process reminded me of marathon runners, when they talk about breaking through ‘the wall’. I gather I + C are stationed up in the Orkneys, on Papa Westray; apparently a group of about 70 folk from the local community gathered around the laptop, WW2 fashion, to hear James’ piece. Certainly a wider reach than I’d anticipated our East End station achieving. But that was before I started getting emails from our Canadian listeners…

Lucy Tomlins and Marsha Bradfield turned up in a whirlwind of press releases and highlighted scripts – by far the most

Lucy and Marsha

Lucy and Marsha

organised interviewees to date. Their HTAP project sounds like an invaluable resource for future historians, quite apart from its relevance right now. The democratisation of urban planning manifest in Lucy’s board game artwork really appeals to me – as an architect chum agrees, a big part of the challenge with buildings is seeing it through the eyes of the people in and around them, rather than from the perspective of some deity playing with his model town.

I can’t wait to see what David Snoo Wilson does with his disused Heathrow warehouse – I’ll be following progress, and

David Snoo Wilson

David Snoo Wilson

 maybe we’ll try to get some pictures of the artwork onto the blog. Dave has an intensity and seriousness about him which leaves one in no doubt that he is the real deal; some artists get caught up in grant application jargon, but with DSW there is no intermediate layer between the artist and the world. For me, the enduring image from this

Hackney Game

Hackney Map

week’s show is that of DSW attempting to explain, in gestures, to German border police, why he was taking away some soil from the site of a WW2 massacre. A sentence I predict I will never again have cause to write.

Posted 12 months ago at 4:33 PM.