Linder: Collages and Collaborations - 27th October 2015


Linder and Kenny in conversation
 
Diagrams of Love : Marriage of eyes at the British Art Show 8, Leeds Art Gallery

 
Linder Sterling is an artist whose work I’ve come across before. I saw some of her earlier and her recent pieces at the Hepworth Gallery in 2013. She is primarily recognised as a collage artist. To be honest I found her work really quite unengaging when I saw it at the Hepworth. It was a response to Barbara Hepworth herself, but seemed to lack any finesse. Her flat, quite minimal collages were very removed from Barbara Hepworth’s conceptually complex, solid structures. However, Linder’s piece in the British Art Show 8 – Diagrams of Love : Marriage of Eyes  - is a gorgeous, sumptuous spiral carpet which seemed to me to be quite at odds with her earlier pieces. So I went to her talk with an open mind, to try to find out more. 

Linder wasn’t at all like I’d expected. As she remarked during the talk, she was brought up near Wigan, and I expected her to be a lot more brash than she was, particularly she’d been active in the punk scene in Manchester (Ellis-Petersen, 2015). In fact she was quite reserved and well-spoken.
 
Linder’s 1970 collages dealt with the portrayal of women, in particular the tension between fashion photography of that time – which often portrayed women outdoors – vs the adverts which portrayed the woman’s place as in the home. Her work, by her own admission, is minimal; she considers “images are fragile… constructed. Here I realised why I don’t engage very well with her work; I like a lot of visual complexity to give me some kind of challenge in what I see. Linder was simply not aiming for that goal. To quote her, she wanted to “send the images where they shouldn’t go by the least addition possible”.
 
She explained that she “fell in love” (her words) with Hepworth when she was invited to explore Hepworth’s sculptures in her garden in St Ives one night in the rain; they had to be explored by touch. She began intensive research into Hepworth’s work, trying to respond to it with a modern narrative. For example, could Hepworth’s “Family of Man” (1970) now have a non-typical family? This led to her collaborating with Kenneth Tindall (whom she referred to as “Kenny”), a choreographer who works with the Northern Ballet (Northern Ballet, n.d), on a 2013 performance piece called “The Ultimate Form”. Quite how this collaboration came about wasn’t made clear, but Linder said she had been looking to give form to her research into Hepworth and it came about in this new way (so I am not the only creative practitioner who does a lot of research and then wonders what to do with it all!).
 
For the British Art Show 8, Linder had worked with the Edinburgh carpet studio, Dovecot, to create the carpet, which was inspired by a visit to a London flat with 1970s carpets (Ellis-Petersen, 2015). She confirmed this had been a challenge for both herself and Dovecot – it “raised the bar” for both parties, as she put it.
 
Kenny then joined the conversation and the pair started to talk about their upcoming collaboration, another ballet called “Children of the Mantic Stain” (Linder’s title). This is a piece concerning a group of friends, based on Hepworth and her associates. Kenny was effusive about Linder; he praised her detailed research but stressed that it had taken him a long time to digest. However, she “helped him find a way in” (his words) and the creative process “started to happen” – he admitted this was a very different way of working for him and he wasn’t sure what this process was (so, again, I’m not the only artist who wonders if and when something will ever happen in the creative process!). The pair worked with a composer called Max Sterling (unclear if he is any relation to Linder), and the three of them developed the ballet with the dancers. By having three different creative viewpoints, Kenny made it very clear that the ballet broke new ground. Everyone involved in the project had to push boundaries and find creative solutions to new problems – not least that of dancing with the spiral carpet, which, according to Kenny, never behaves in the same way twice. (a good example of practice-based research!). Also, the costumes the dancers will wear are actually pieces from the collections of the fashion designer Christopher Shannon, rather than the usual minimalist dancewear, which will potentially alter their movement once they rehearse in them. The performance is on November 20th in the Tiled Hall at Leeds Art Gallery.
 
This was a really good example of a creative collaboration which had led to an rather unusual outcome. It is one for me to continue to refer back to for inspiration.
 
 
 
Except where stated, sourced from my visit to:
Linder Sterling and Kenneth Tindall, Tuesday Talk as part of British Art Show 8, 27th October 2015, Leeds Art Gallery, Leeds

Ellis-Petersen, H., Linder Sterling : ‘I have a library of every perversion on the planet’ at http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2015/oct/07/linder-sterling-art-punk-feminism-performance-art?CMP=share_btn_tw  (accessed 8th October 2015)
 
Northern Ballet (n.d.), Kenneth Tindall : Premier Dancer at http://northernballet.com/biography/kenneth-tindall (accessed 2nd November 2015)
 

No comments:

Post a Comment