An exploration of sculpture’s relationship to landscape and the body as viewed through the lens of the artist-traveler.


Our workshop will examine the notion of travel through such examples as Baudelaire’s flâneur, the Situationists’ theory of Psychogeography, and artists ranging from Robert Smithson and Richard Long, to Francis Alys and Olaf Breuning. We will conduct a series of exercises, expeditions, and missions including the creation of livable shelter-sculptures to inhabit on a weekend camping trip in the Scottish Highlands. Bedouin tents, arctic research stations, camper vans, Hoovervilles, hunting blinds, and interplanetary spacecraft serve as our inspirational points of departure...


Participants:

Matt King (Instructor), Andrew Cobb, Zoe Golden, Rebecca Henderson, Elise Isom, Mitchell Petersen, Cameron Robinson, Andrew Schmidt, Emily Stokes


The Glasgow Artists and Writers Workshop

Virginia Commonwealth University

Glasgow, Scotland, June 22nd - July 23rd, 2010

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

I HEART THIS

Tree Tent

Hours of Operation...

Good news - the fabric store is open until 7pm tomorrow.


Studio Day #3

Lots done, lots to do. Good work everyone.







Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Glencoe Weather

I don't know about anyone else, but I've been getting kind of nervous about how cold it is actually going to be... so, I decided to look it up. Tomorrow, the area we're going is between 8-13 degrees celsius, which translates to 46.4-55.4 degrees fahrenheit. It was actually a really helpful website.
Go to
http://www.mwis.org.uk/
It had information on wind conditions, precipitation, cloud coverage, snow, temperature, and some general overview stuff. I'm probably going to check it regularly as we get closer to the trip.

MAPPPS



















Took a few quick snapshots of our first lil' assignment.



Monday, June 28, 2010

Valley of Weeping...

The Glencoe Massacre took place in the early hours of 13 February 1692. Government troops, led by the Campbells, slaughtered the MacIans (a sept of the MacDonalds) in their settlements in Glencoe in Argyll, Scotland.

On the anniversary of the Glencoe Massacre the Glen is haunted by the Glencoe ghosts who re-enact the massacre. The screams and cries of men and women can be heard throughout Glencoe whose name in Gaelic means "The Valley of Weeping."

http://www.aboutaberdeen.com/glencoeghosts.php



Glen Coe Massacre
okay. did some research on said massacre and quite a few accounts. decided to go with the bbc facts
  • Clan Donald was a huge force within the Highland clan system, of which, the MacDonalds of Glen Coe (or MacIains as they were more specifically known) were only a small part. Glen Coe had been home to the MacDonalds since at least the early 14th century when they supported King Robert the Bruce. The chief of the MacDonalds of Glen Coe was Alasdair MacDonald, known as MacIain. He was a huge man with flowing white hair, beard and moustache. He was well respected by own clan and feared by others - very much an old-school highland chief.

  • The MacIains were constantly involved in trouble with the law and with neighbouring clans for their consistent raiding, pillaging and cattle rustling. The clan had particular trouble with neighbouring Campbell clans.

  • There were many Highland clans at the time who were a possible threat to the new regime in London under King William of Orange, and many who openly swore their allegiance to the deposed Stuart King - James VII. King William himself was more concerned with his war against the French King, Louis XIV. Problems in the Highlands were little more than a nuisance to him.

  • The order came through that the chiefs were to sign an oath of allegiance to King William by January 1, 1692. Although this oath was originally packaged with the promise of money and land for the clans, by the time it was circulated publicly the terms were much more threatening - the clans would sign the agreement or be punished with the "utmost extremity of the law". The man who used this deadline to his own political ends was the Secretary of State, John Dalrymple, Master of Stair, who was a Lowlander and a Protestant. He disliked the Highlanders and viewed their whole way of life as a hindrance to Scotland, which would be better served, he thought, in union with England. He had a Glen Coeparticular dislike for the MacDonalds of Glen Coe.

  • Another problem for the clans at the time was the fact that many of them were bound by an oath to James Stuart, the deposed King in France. It was December 12 before James had released the clans from their oath and December 28 before a messenger arrived in the Highlands with the news - leaving only three days until the deadline.

  • As the worst of winter swept through Glen Coe on December 31, MacIain, fearful for the safety of his clan, left for Fort William to sign the oath. From here he was turned back by Colonel John Hill, who explained that the oath had to be taken before a sheriff. This involved a 60 mile trek to Inveraray: the principle town of his enemies, the Campbells. Still MacIain could have met the deadline had he not been captured by Campbell soldiers serving in Argyll’s regiment. They detained him for a day, whilst he was detained for several more days in Inveraray due to the absence of the Sheriff, Sir Colin Campbell. Even then, MacIain had to plead with the Sheriff to accept the late oath.

  • In Edinburgh, the Master of Stair with his legal team declined the late-delivered oath. Everything was ready for the fall which Stair had engineered for the clan. The orders were explicit: the MacDonalds were to be slaughtered - "cut off root and branch". Three commanders were to be involved - two from the Campbell-dominated Argyll regiment and one from Fort William. In the end, two of those never arrived in time, claiming delay through bad weather. It was Captain Robert Campbell of Glenlyon, a desperate man who lost his all through gambling, who carried out Stair’s final order: "to put all to the sword under seventy".

  • The soldiers arrived at Glen Coe 12 days before the massacre, as friends, seeking shelter due to the fact that the fort was full. The MacDonalds, honouring the Highland hospitality code, duly gave the soldiers quarter in their own houses. For 12 days they lived together with neither the clan nor the common Argyll soldiers knowing what lay ahead.

  • On the night of February 13 a blizzard howled through Glen Coe, giving whiteout conditions. As the clan slept the house guests gathered, received their orders, and set about systematically killing everyone they could. 38 lay dead the next morning, including the chief, MacIain. Many more escaped into the hills, some finding shelter before the elements could kill them, some, including MacIain’s Glen Coe Massacreelderly wife, dying on the mountainside.

  • It seems certain that some of the Campbell soldiers, disgusted with their orders, alerted the families who had been their hosts, giving them time to escape and at least wrap up against blizzard. Many historians also claim that the lateness of the other two companies of soldiers who were to help in the slaughter was deliberate - a ploy not to be involved in such an atrocity.

  • The nation of Scotland, although used to war and murder in its many forms, was outraged by the callousness of the massacre of Glen Coe. For the Jacobites in Edinburgh it was a powerful piece of anti-government propaganda. An inquiry was held and Scottish Parliament declared the whole affair an act of murder. John Dalrymple, the Master of Stair, resigned and the matter was forgotten by the government. In Scotland it passed into legend. The Campbells were accursed in much of the Highlands and even to this day the old Clachaig Inn at Glen Coe carries the sign on its door, 'No Campbells'.

from BBC, History, Scottish History
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/scottishhistory/union/trails_union_glencoe.shtml

Scale Models...





And to think that this is the easy part...

Glasgow culture: the Hidden Lane festival


http://thehiddenlane.co.uk/
Went to a pretty wonderful little festival yesterday with elise. It took place in a small artist's colony called the hidden lane because it is...well sort of hidden. There were shops, tons aof live music, good eats, and a lot of heavy smoking and drinking.


I've discovered ust about all of the UK is really into festivals. I was listening to BBC 1 on the radio and they dedicated an entire hour and a half to the many many festivals that occur throughout the summer. Whereas in the US we only have Coachella, Bonnaroo and a few other notables, across the pond festival-ing is a heavily integrated aspect of summer life (though there are many throughout the year). The hidden lane was a one day event, but most festivals last for several days and include some impromptu structures. This reminds me of the intro to CAMPS, where the author mentions refugee camps and the like as an aspect of camp and space culture.
The co-host on the radio reminisced about the three day camping with no shower, an experience that all Brits and Scots know- what she called 'a craving for a bath like no other".

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Etymology

shelter Look up  shelter at Dictionary.com
1585, "structure affording protection," possibly an alteration of M.E. sheltron, sheldtrume "roof or wall formed by locked shields," from O.E. scyldtruma, from scield"shield" (see shield) + truma "troop," related to O.E. trum "firm, strong" (see trim). The notion is of a compact body of men protected by interlocking shields. Fig. sense is recorded from 1588; meaning "temporary lodging for homeless poor" is first recorded 1890 in Salvation Army jargon; sense of "temporary home for animals" is from 1971. The verb is first attested 1590; in the income investment sense, from 1955. Sheltered "protected from the usual hardships of life" is from 1888.

Check out altro-studio, the inflatable house. It's definitely a cool concept...


Hey- you guys might want to check out Kosuke Tsumura- he made these jackets called 'final home'. Basically, these survival jackets with mad amounts of pockets and storage- which can double as insulation.
Check it out at this link
http://www.dhub.org/object/351991


Walks of identical total length of 1,000 unit steps are shown drawn to scale. Lévy flights (or walks) have ultra-long steps, which are absent from Brownian walks. b, A close-up of the Brownian walk, in which the walker returns many times to previously visited locations (a phenomenon known as 'oversampling'). By contrast, the Lévy walker occasionally takes long jumps to new territory. This reduction in oversampling is part of the theoretical basis for interest in the Lévy-flight foraging hypothesis, which predicts that Lévy flights offer higher search efficiencies in environments where prey is scarce. Humphries et al.2 show that marine predators often move in patterns that are consistent with this hypothesis.


(Do animals ever get lost?)

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Sign on a bus window...

I think we Americans should use "mind" as a verb more often.

Beach Wolf

Hey I dont really know how to use this blog thingy, but ill figure it out i guess! scotland is a good time, though we might not make it home after this camping trip we're going on. i had no idea this was going to be so for real. but i am siked. goin into the scottish hills to live for a couple days sounds good to me! Apparently there are these mosquito things called midges that are going to eat us alive, this is a pic of one of them. cool hair. hopefully they like americans, we'll see.


Just two more pictures from last class- massive tent pile. I feel like height could be a really interesting component to our shelters- multilevels. Maybe we could build multilevels for storage into our shelters- not to support our own weight, but maybe to hold food or something off the ground...





Photos from the first day- tent pile