Wednesday, 27 January 2010

THE POWER CLASS by Michael Parker

Great project by Michael Parker about his experiences training as a Lineman -  Ange brought my attention to it....


This spring I enrolled in the electrical lineman class at the community college a few blocks away from the art program I am also enrolled in. In the class, while recording pictures, video, and oral histories with students, I began what has become a 6-month investigation into the potential of art in the micro society of the spring 2009 lineman class.
The class taught fifty, 18-46 year old students, how to become power-pole technicians; a highly skilled and well-paid trade. In the class, I met a food scientist in need of change, laid off construction workers, a Zen monk, ex-cons, warehouse box movers, recovering addicts, veterans of Iraq/Afghanistan, the children of border crossers, descendents of American slaves, slackers, jokers, and serious men who love to work hard.
When the lineman trade began (during the Tesla – Edison wars for alternating versus direct current AC-DC) one in three linemen were electrocuted or fell to their deaths. The trade still attracts risk takers, but now abides by detailed safety regulations that make death on the job much less common. The class at Los Angeles Trade-Technical College focuses on wooden pole climbing. Longtime lineman teacher, Ken Bushman, who is also a trained hypnotherapist, regularly instructs students on how to focus at the tops of power poles. Breathing exercises keep them directly in the moment and able to work as high as 120 feet off the ground. Linemen work in teams, and as students, they seek out others to critique their climbing. The class adopted the saying, “I am my brother’s keeper”. They formed a bond relaying this phrase daily like a secret mantra. With real work to be done and hopes to gain better employment, differences among people’s backgrounds seemed to be of no importance. Korean, Black, Filipino, White, Mexican, Guatemalan; people genuinely worked and socialized like friends and family. Though each individual would say that they were there to step up for themselves, each student constantly gave support (through criticism or encouragement) to their class (classmates). Through the fluid evolution of fifty men working together 8 hours a day, 5 days a week, as diverse a class of people was formed as I have ever experienced, heard, or read about.

On May 1, the class mounted a public exhibition of the work we made together -May Day: Follow the Energy – Control the Power at a University of Southern California art gallery. The exhibition included two class portraits each showing 46 linemen-to-be on three poles smiling into the future and a 2-channel video. In the video, linemen-students passed a double-camera-baton between the grid of power poles simultaneously creating both portraits and self-portraits. A second public presentation was planned on June 2; this time, a live event at the “poleyard”. On the Sunday before this show of climbing, DJ-ing, feasting and the release of Lineman (our 60-page newspaper/yearbook (1)
), I received a phone call from Will Gillespie relaying a situation quickly unfolding. Local Union IBEW 18, the lineman union for Los Angeles’ Department of Water and Power (DWP), was opening their books, hiring certified climbers for 25 jobs on Wednesday morning.
Jay Yang rode his bike by the Union Hall off Normandy a few hours earlier and found five guys with beach chairs, sleeping bags, and coolers with three days of food and supplies – they were camping out for this job. Jay began a phone chain through the class; 15 of our guys were already on the street with more on the way. It looked like our art presentation was job line delayed. The current economic crises led our class to jobs, to follow the energy towards the fluid charge of energy at its source.
Over the next three days as the final students passed their climbing competency exams and joined the job line the thrill of togetherness, self-confidence and agency was overwhelming. Much of our class, eager for work, was at the front of a line that eventually grew to 315 people. There was lots of coffee, waiting and reflection. It felt like a class camping trip that happened to take place on a side street in Koreatown opposite an elementary school.
It rained the second night. Lementry Simmons’ wife was going to give birth any moment as he slept sitting up. Tuesday morning at the poleyard, eight students finished their climbing competencies. Cody Patterson finished his at 9am and was then in line trying to get a job within 15 minutes. All 230 pounds of Dwayne Hogue did a jumping bear hug onto Marc Cardenas who days later quit his grocery store job for his training with DWP.
In July and August, Damon Hughes collected photographs from the class, edited and set them to Akon’s R&B hit, Over the Edge, and posted a four-minute video onto YouTube. He also sent an email note: Looks like most of the class will be DWP. As you know we had many go to the 1st training class and the second training class starts Sept 28th, which I'll be a part of. But the guys are having a blast out on the streets of L.A. working. A lot of 'em are working 6 days a week- not bad, not bad at all- if you like to work. And then there’s going to be another class after ours- date unknown to me right now. But things are looking good for our class. Well, you take care and have fun out there...
When Damon Hughes created and sent us that YouTube video, he contributed to culture without any special concept or art degree. I’m unsure of my willingness to accept the limitations of “classes”. There are no more borders to cross. We’ve come to the final frontier between people and it’s within our minds. The 20th century myth of the loner artist frontiersman genius is over. Our fifty person collaborations proved to our class that each of us are as capable of making art as any of the “artists” in my graduate “art” program. The 21st century is about these collaborations –it is the billions of connections between points, as opposed to the points themselves. “Classes” are an outdated concept.
I initially had the false impression that lineman students are conservative. Their hunger and value placed on art-making was so utterly unexpected. To hear artist/lineman Josh Mullen’s complex vision of Los Angeles’ infrastructural grid of transmission lines, aqueducts, freeways, mountains and palm trees, from the105 - 110 carpool transition and South LA high point, while bussing to class was a perfect empathetic aesthetic moment. Hearing of lineman/artist Chris Sotelo’s high school walkout, two years ago on May Day, that was better than any performance I’ve done. My friend Christian Cummings says it best “Follow the Energy”— art is where you make it…

1.
Lineman includes collaboratively written text/bios from each member of the class, hundreds of color photographs, and a bit about our other art projects together. It was printed in an edition of 2,000 so everyone had a stack to give out. To get one please email mp(at)routesandmethods.org.



Article source: Journal of Aesthetics and Protest Issue 7

http://college.lattc.edu/blog/2009/05/12/electrical-lineman-projects/

Artists Day Jobs article

This article talks about practitioners from visual and performing arts and what they do to get by financially and the contrasts that brings up. I found the case studies towards the end really interesting.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2010/jan/24/artists-day-jobs

Tuesday, 26 January 2010

Michael Landy and his big bin

Check out the art bin - they don't know what real bin art is - see Fraser's project!!

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/8480833.stm

Monday, 18 January 2010

AU TRAVAIL / AT WORK

Nine Trades of Dundee artist Ange Taggart has brought this project by Dominic Gagnon to my attention. I looks really interesting http://www.atwork.enter1646.com/
AU TRAVAIL / AT WORK is a project based on a call for collaboration which is open to all. This experimental project urges artists and workers to consider their workplace as a site of artistic residence. In all cases, the place of reflection, production or intervention becomes the space of the employer.The members of the collective appropriate the culture of their work environment within the very framework of their daily lives. Utilizing or subverting the cultural or technological means that are available to participants in their workplace.


Here is a funny one which seems to say that telesales workers might be taking out their frustrations on their disposable cups! http://www.atwork.enter1646.com/ccd.pdf

Chris Dyson award

We would like to congratulate Nine Trades of Dundee artist Chris Dyson on his award from the Scottish Arts Council for the development of new works. Well done Chris and we look forward to seeing the work! Chris has been researching the industrial past of Dundee and we are working on finding a host organisation for his project.

Thursday, 14 January 2010

Deacon Brodies for welcome lunch

As a big get together and welcoming for new Nine Trades of Dundee artists David and Ange we had lunch together with Ben and Alan who have been working on their Nine Trades project for a while. Deacon Brodies was the location - and we were served by Kate who had given David the low down on they life of the bar earlier in the day....its a potential partner venue for his project.

Here is a picture of the outside of the bar - its on Ward Road. I was wondering what the name comes from and found this text online explaining whay the respectable tradesman Deacon Brodie may have been the inspiration for Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde! A larger than life, 18th century Edinburgh "character", William Brodie was a pillar of the community by day. But he led a dissolute life of drinking and gambling by night which was leading to his bankruptcy. So he turned to burglary and by taking wax impressions of the keys to houses in which he was working legitimately as a wood-worker, he was able to perpetrate some spectacular thefts. He was eventually uncovered and sentenced to hang. But afterwards, there were rumours that he had cheated (or bribed) the hangman and was said to have been seen later living in Paris.
The double life of Deacon Brodie as the respectable tradesman and daring thief is said to have been the inspiration for Robert Louis Stevenson's story of "Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde".

Nori Salon visit

It was very good to visit Nori Salon yesterday and see the works in the staff room and chat to Alan's colleagues. Nori himself commented that it was great to have Alan around and that it was sparking off lots of conversations. We saw the staff portraits that Nori and DJCAD graduate Steven Crichton had taken in the photoshoot they had set up.

Alan's been thinking about the work involved in the trade of hairdressing and has posted a special Comment of the Week this week - a text about the skills and dedication needed. There is more info on his blog:
http://ninetradesalan.blogspot.com/

Advertures in Clubland


We went to Fat Sams with Nine Trades of Dundee artist David Yu last night. First time in years. There were about 500 people having fun.
This is kind of what it looked like (taken from Fat Sams website). David has walked miles through the streets of Dundee, checking out pubs and bars and speaking to the owners and patrons. He has come up with a list of a few who are up for doing the project so its all coming together.
David took some photos so hopefully those will be on his blog soon!

Tuesday, 12 January 2010

Ange and David settling in!

We welcomed Nine Trades of Dundee artists Ange Taggart and David Yu to Dundee yesterday. Both are working on finding host organisations and have meetings with different businesses this week. We had a good tour around a few of the town's pubs and bars to check out locations for David's project http://www.ninetrades.com/projects/DavidYu.htm and we heard some stories and saw some sights (and some unusual decor!). We are hoping something comes together for him soon so we can announce asap. There are some great bars in Dundee - here is a couple of pictures of The Speedwell / Mennies (Laura from the Nine Trades team used to work here!) Images courtesy Speedwell-bar.co.uk

Wednesday, 6 January 2010

Jordan Baseman's film Born to Run

Brilliant film by Jordan Baseman, featuring interviews with two people at work in their roadside food stall

http://www.jordanbaseman.co.uk/index.php?id=8

Tom Hackett

I have just been made aware of this artist's work, here are two photos of a project he did, toiling on the riverbank then installing in the gallery... examining 'notions of work and recreational escape'

http://www.tomhackett.org/tomhackettanother%20place.html
both images copyright Tom Hackett



Tuesday, 5 January 2010

apexart project inspired by Artist Placement Group

Antony Hudek has curated an exhibition, 'The Incidental Person' at apexart, NYC, which strikes a chord with the ideas we are dealing with within Nine Trades of Dundee (my bold): 
The late British artist John Latham referred to the 'Incidental Person' as someone who invests a situation, observes it and responds to it in a specific, though not necessarily tangible or practical, way. For Latham and some of the other artists involved in Artist Placement Group (APG) between the 1960s and 1980s, the Incidental Person allowed the emphasis to shift from the person's identity — 'artist', 'theorist', 'worker', 'politician' etc. — to her or his engagement in a given context. Hence APG's axiom 'Context is half the work.'

In recounting the origins of APG, Barbara Steveni has said that the initial incident occurred when Robert Filliou and Daniel Spoerri, who were staying with her and John Latham to prepare an exhibition in London, needed some found material. Despite the late hour, Steveni offered to collect whatever she could find at an industrial site beyond the city limits. Sifting through debris while the factory was in full activity, she experienced a “eureka” moment, as she put it: “Why aren’t we here? Not to pick up buckets of plastic, but because there’s a whole life that we don’t touch. This is what people go on about — academics, artists, politicians — but they go nowhere near it.” This exhibition includes projects by people who attempt precisely to “touch” what is “out there”, who, while meticulously attentive to the context at hand, refuse to hew to such distinctions as art/non-art, art/life or art/politics.

Joana Bastos images