RESEARCH PAPERS | Leading through practice | £5
framing the discussion
the artist and power
humility and leading
autonomy
criticality
Edited Anne Douglas and
Chris Fremantle
Publisher Louise Wirz
Design blueriver.co.uk
© writers and a-n
The Artists Information
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ISBN 0 907730 75 2
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partnership
organisations
introduction
On The Edge Research was launched by a major AHRC award
in 2001. OTE is practice-led research. By this we mean that
artistic practice is both a subject and a way of testing ideas
and new approaches in the production of new knowledge
through grounded, evidence-based experience. OTE frames
and develops a space between the field of practice and the
academic to support shared learning and public pedagogy. This
space acknowledges that cultural landscapes are constantly
changing. Learning and articulating the relevance of the artist’s
role through ongoing practice and research is therefore a
constant, unfolding and dynamic dialogue. The OTE research
programme is increasingly working within a national and
international network of artists, writers and policy researchers.
www.ontheedgeresearch.org
Artist as Leader is a programme that aims to
understand the ways artists lead through their
practice with a view to informing and developing
a critical understanding of the role of creativity
in culture. There are two complimentary parts
to the Artist as Leader programme.1 The first is
the research which takes the form of in-depth
interviews with a range of artists and managers
who work with artists. The interviews focus on
practice and the perceptions of the interviewees of
‘leading through practice’. The second part is the
development of a laboratory space. Over seventeen
years Performing Arts Labs (PAL) has evolved a
methodology for bringing together individuals
increasingly from different disciplines, in the
development of new work. The Lab draws together
artists and policy makers with a view to exploring
scenarios. The policy makers will offer their
key challenges in the social, economic, cultural
sphere within the next ten years as a basis for new
collaborative work.
Cultural Enterprise Office (CEO) is Scotland’s only specialist
business development support service for Creative Businesses,
Individual Artists and Industry Freelancers. It has four offices
across Scotland – Glasgow, Edinburgh, Dundee and Aberdeen
– and is currently looking at expanding the service into new
territories. It provides a high quality Advisory Service, up to the
minute Industry Information and a Professional Development
Programme of seminars and networking events to support
the growth and development of the sector in Scotland. The
service also provides training in core business skills such as
Negotiation, Getting Started, Managing Finances and Portfolio
Presentation. Developing leadership skills within the sector is
currently a significant area of focus and investment in CEO’s
portfolio and remit. Leadership skills provide arts practitioners
with the tools they need to sustain and grow their practice to
make a significant contribution to the wider community.
www.culturalenterpriseoffice.co.uk
PAL (Performing Arts Labs) creates cross-disciplinary
development laboratories which produce radical thinking,
collaborative practice and tangible results. PAL is a UKbased not-for-profit company devising unique international
residential programmes over seventeen years. The company
attracts talented practitioners across the creative industries;
in the arts and architecture, in film, theatre, opera and music
theatre, interactive media and new technologies, and in
science, education and research. PAL identifies exceptional
talents and challenges artists, scientists, educators, funding
bodies and policy makers to extend the limits of their
individual practice and to challenge the status quo. As of
January 2007, PAL has acquired a growing talent pool of over
3,700 creative individuals, a proven methodology and a unique
body of experience of 115 residential Labs held across the UK
and abroad. Artist as Leader™ will enable PAL to broaden and
deepen its practice and impact through identifying the core
leadership skills of international artists working together with
the decision makers from outside the arts who are engaged in
this experimental programme.
www.pallabs.org
Scottish Leadership Foundation (SLF) was launched in 2001
with a clear remit to focus on raising the quality of leadership
in Scotland’s public services in line with the new Scottish
Parliament’s modernising and Public Service Reform agenda.
SLF has the specific remit to develop the leadership capacity
and capability of all of Scotland’s public services and whilst
developing work on this wider remit, it has been giving
particular support in the last year to Social Work and Mental
Health services as they implement the new outcomes of the
21st Century Social Work review and the new Mental Health
Act (Scotland). The SLF works closely with other leadership
centres across the UK and internationally.
www.slfscotland.com
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The research, which is across art forms, is
being tested on a wide set of constituencies.
With a-n’s readership in mind, this publication
focuses on the visual arts. This publication also
comes during the research, not at its conclusion
and its main motive is to lay out a typology of
issues, substantiated by experience, with a view
to enabling and encouraging debate. We have
invited four contributions – Linda Frye Burnham,
Reiko Goto, Francis McKee and Tim Nunn – to
demonstrate a
range of perspectives. The debate continues and is
open to all online at www.a-n.co.uk
Artist as Leader is funded by an AHRC
(Creativity) Networking award2. It is developed
as a partnership between On The Edge Research,
Gray’s School of Art, The Robert Gordon
University; Cultural Enterprise Office, Scotland;
and Performing Arts Labs, London; and is also
supported by the Scottish Leadership Foundation.
Credits
Anne Douglas is Reader in Art and Public
Pedagogy and Director of On The Edge Research.
She is based at Gray’s School of Art, The Robert
Gordon University. As an artist researcher she is
interested in the role of the artist in social change
both as a theoretical/historical inquiry as well as a
creative endeavour.
www.ontheedgeresearch.org
Chris Fremantle is a cultural historian. He is a
research associate with On The Edge Research,
and also works with Platform. He is a freelance
producer in the visual arts. Previously he was
Director of the Scottish Sculpture Workshop. His
interests are focused on the practice of curating,
and the practices of artists engaging with and
revealing social and ecological change.
www.chris.fremantle.org
Research papers
framing the discussion
Artists lead through their practice. One quality of experiencing
art is that artists enable us to see the world differently. Our
focus is on the ways in which this provides leadership. This is
what we mean by leading through practice.
However, the artist’s role has also become part of the
political agenda of the creative and cultural industries. In this
context it is policy that drives and shapes opportunities for
artists to work within social/cultural processes.
Currently, artists are increasingly choosing, or being called
upon, to work more directly within social, cultural, economic
and political processes. This is a trajectory that has a complex
history in which art is increasingly active in the formulation of
cultural processes.
Both these positions, artist-centred and policy-centred,
frame deeply felt contradictions.
The film What age can you start being an artist?3 gives an
insight into Room 13, a project that has been running for
a number of years in Caol Primary School, Fort William,
Scotland.4 The film, broadcast on Channel 4, was made by some
of the children involved in Room 13 working with Emma Davie,
a professional film maker. The film is both about, and the result
of, the specific creative dynamic of Room 13. Davie said:
It is a gross simplification to create a polarity between
the idea that artists should be free to act for themselves, and
that artists have an important contribution to make to social,
cultural and economic development.
Setting aside the political and policy reasons for addressing
this subject now, in describing previous work we were challenged
by the artist Newton Harrison to clarify and articulate artistic
intervention, not as a process of asking for or giving permission,
but as a process of the artist consciously leading.8
“Room 13 is an art room within Caol Primary School,
which encourages children to think creatively. Children are
able to ask for permission to leave their other classes to use
Room 13, if their class work is up to date – which it always
seemed to be. The children are in charge of Room 13.”
This is therefore an important moment to analyse in what
sense artists lead. Contradictions will be a recurring theme
within this publication. They assist in challenging and perhaps
reframing in a more nuanced way the potential of art practice
to inform the debate.
Davie understands Room 13 to be a different sort of learning
environment from a normal school environment. Her perception
was that “the children were so much more engaged with the
world around them and felt free to create work which genuinely
reflected how they saw things – not how they ‘should’ see them.
The art was cutting edge, bold and very unsentimental”. In
characterising what she learned from working with the children
Davie commented,
The leadership discussion
We are aware that within management, leadership is
considered to be a key to organisational success. Models of
leadership tend to draw on the business world and are assumed
to have universal application. We are aware that this kind of
organisational leadership is an issue in arts organisations,
when currently the arts represent five per cent of the national
economy. In challenging the dominance of transformational
leadership theories, Dennis Tourish9, Professor of Leadership
and Management, Aberdeen Business School, suggests:
“People learn when the work is important. When you
value something, people rise to it.”
She described what this meant more specifically:
“At the end of the day we’d look at what the children had
shot. We’d ask, “Is it interesting, or is it boring?”, thumbs
up, or thumbs down. They’d go out the next day and shoot
more film. Often they had to get rid of the conventions of
television to be able to see again. It was really quick, quick
learning through doing.”
Davie also commented on the importance of the playfulness of
working with children that was particularly evident in Room 13.
“A child would come up with a great idea whilst running
out of the room and eating a sweetie. … What was
wonderful was to be with people who were genuinely
playful.”
This in turn influenced the making of Davie’s film about the
project. The film became an exchange of skills between herself
as film maker and the young people.
Davie focuses on very specific aspects of making a film in
collaboration with children. She focuses on the quality of the
learning and creativity that resulted from the practice (of, in
this case, film making) being the most important thing. She
suggests that the practice, the need to produce a film of quality
in this case, is the thing that is leading.
What is happening when the result of the artists’ practice is
that children are working differently?
Allan Kaprow articulated the change in how and why art
is made as ‘a blurring of art and life’.5 More recently this has
been expressed by Kester and Bourriaud as a paradigm shift
in aesthetics.6 Sheikh views artists as part of a political project,
setting out to construct, and to a degree subvert, different notions
of ‘public’.7 These different discourses are artist-centred.
Leading through practice
“Traditionally, artists have followed an individualistic
pathway, with a primary emphasis on personal
creativity and autonomy. It is plausible that some of
their approaches to leadership could contribute more to
innovation, organisational learning and creativity than
some of the conventional business wisdom allows.”10
There is significant literature demonstrating that creativity, like
leadership, is being considered as an economic driver.11
Within the Cultural Industries the major recent
development has been the Clore Leadership Programme
initiated by the Clore Duffield Foundation and subsequently
supported by the Chancellor in response to the Cox Review12.
The Clore Leadership Programme is precisely aimed at the
development of leader-managers for major cultural institutions.
This is a mirroring of the focus on leadership in the business
and industrial context. Chris Smith, who now heads up the
Clore Leadership Programme, has acknowledged that there is
a difference between this kind of organisational leadership and
the way artists can make a significant contribution.13
We are concerned with the reality of practice. In unpacking
the qualities and attributes of artists leading through their
practice, we are testing the idea that artists are uniquely placed
to mobilise thinking and creative development in public life.
The first complexity that arises when we start to talk about
leading is around purposes. Is it the artist’s purpose to make
representations of the world; to expose or reveal change; or
to create change? If it is to create change, is that a process of
solving problems, or empowering those involved in the work?
“What happened to the people who said ‘we will represent
something in the world’? When did the artist start to say
‘we will change the world’?” Francis McKee14
1 www.ahrc.ac.uk/
awards/search_results.
asp?grant=NWC
2 The Lab element of
Artist as Leader is
trademarked – Artist as
Leader™.
3W
hat age can you start
being an artist?, made by
Amy Cameron, Rosie
Flannigan and Daniella
Souness of Room 13
in collaboration with
Emma Davie, Channel
4, 2004.
4 Room 13 has resulted
from a long-term
process of artists,
primarily Rob Fairley,
working with children
at Caol Primary School,
Fort William, Scotland.
Children involved in
Room 13 have won
the Barbie Prize, and
secured funding from
amongst other sources,
such as NESTA. There
is now a network of
Room 13s in the UK
and internationally. See
www.room13scotland.
com for more
information.
5 Kaprow, Allan and Kelly,
Jeff (Eds), Essays on the
Blurring of Art and Life,
University of California
Press, 1993, 2nd Ed,
2003.
6 ( Bourriaud, Nicolas,
Relational Aesthetics, Les
Presse Du Reel,France,
2003; Kester, Grant,
Conversation Pieces:
Community and
Communication in
Modern Art, University
of California Press,
2004.
7 Sheikh, Simon, various
texts on Transversal:
Multi-lingual
Webjournal, European
Institute of Progressive
Cultural Policies, www.
eipcp.net/transversal ,
2004-2006.
8 The conversation took
place at Evolving the
Future, the Darwin
Summer Symposium,
Shrewsbury, 2005.
9 Tourish is a critical
friend to the Artist as
Leader research.
10 Tourish, Dennis, Case
for Support funding
application to the ESRC
Sept 2006.
11 For instance, DTI
Economics Paper No. 15:
Creativity, Design and
Business Performance,
HMSO, 2005.
12 Cox Review of Creativity
in Business: Building
on the UK’s Strengths,
HMSO, 2005.
13 At an Artist as Leader
meeting, London 6
January 2006 Chris
Smith he commented
that you can never
underestimate the
contribution that
artists can make to the
leadership discussion.
14 Francis McKee
interviewed by
Chris Fremantle, 14
December 2006,
Glasgow.
Join the debate on www.a-n.co.uk
the artist
and power
15 The Lancaster
Leadership Centre is
one of the UK’s top
centres for research and
teaching in the field
of leadership studies.
It is located within the
Lancaster University
Management School,
which has scored a
5* in there last three
consecutive RAEs.
A prestigious new
journal, Leadership,
has been launched by
two of the Centre’s
main professors.
Professor Tourish
is on the journal’s
editorial board, is
co-editing a special
edition of the journal
on Communication
and Leadership, and
has published with
one of its two editors,
Professor David
Collinson. He has also
presented a research
seminar at the Centre.
16 Bob Last interviewed
by Chris Fremantle and
Tim Nunn, 31 October
2006, Glasgow.
17 Ibid, 2006.
McKee’s first observation is that artists offer a new
conception to the world manifested through an object or a
performance, ie they make representations of the world.
Tim Nunn expresses the potential for the artist to lead and
have influence without necessarily setting out to do so:
“It may be an artist has been personally motivated to work
in the natural environment and that the consequent art
has stirred an appreciation of the complexity of nature and
motivated protection of the environment. Or a composer
has instinctively incorporated elements of folk music into
a contemporary composition that has provoked a challenge
to the value of tradition. Or a poet has made someone
laugh when describing a sexual act and made that person
realise something about her or his inhibitions.”
Whilst acknowledging the resonance of Tim Nunn’s observations,
McKee, and we also, understand that some artists are increasingly
interested in working to reveal and expose change, and, going
beyond even that, to create change in the world.
So let us offer an articulation that embraces both conscious
and unconscious forms of artists leading through practice. Some
artists are creating conditions which we as participants, inhabit
for a while. Through this process we achieve a heightened
awareness of the circumstances of our particular lives. As a
result we may go further and engage in change.
If we accept this complexity, we believe that there are a number
of nuances around which artists orientate themselves differently.
These are explored in four broad thematic areas: The Artist and
Power, Humility and Leading, Autonomy, and Criticality.
Artists who accept the relevance of leading through practice
seem to have an ambivalent relationship with power. The
leadership discourse in business is becoming more self-critical
but still favours heroic or celebrity models:
“Leaders have been referred to as idols (The Economist,
2002), heroes (Bennis, 1997; Collins, 2000; Raelin,
2003; Shelton, 1996); saviours (Khurana 2002); warriors
and magicians (Tallman, 2003) and omnipotent and
omniscient demi-gods (Gabriel, 1997; Noer, 1994)”
(Morris, Brotheridge and Urbanski, 2005).
These models stand in stark contrast to the qualities that Linda
Frye Burnham has discovered over thirty-five years of writing
and publishing community art practice. A good artist-leader is
“a cultural animator building and participating in community
life”. He or she is an analyst able to “read situations rapidly
and accurately” (Arlene Goldbard) thereby acknowledging
expertise in people about their lives. He or she is a collaborator
who “motivates others to share a vision” (Lee Ann Norman),
a connector, an organiser, a revolutionary, a good negotiator,
an entrepreneur and a lover (John Malpede). Such approaches
are consistent with emerging perspectives on leadership,
particularly associated with the Lancaster Leadership Centre15,
which stress that followership is an indispensable part of the
leadership equation, and which questions many traditional top
down practices.
Frye-Burnham observes:
“When an artist seeks to lead others in making art, it is
often in a spirit of social change: to help heal a community
after a trauma, reach across a divide, bring generations
closer together.”
In abandoning the heroic concept of leader, or the primacy of
‘author as sole creator’, we prioritise a different set of skills and
competencies. We look to the artist to think strategically and go
beyond the ‘brief’. Bob Last, film producer and entrepreneur,
commented on the importance of intellectual ambition in art,
“In my mind there is some sort of misunderstanding of
what it is to be an artist that leads to … the thought that
self-effacing practice, or objects, or a lack of ambition
to influence is in itself a heroic refusal or worthy
thing… [That] is some strange and conflicted construction
of the artist’s role against the popular.”16
Bob Last suggested an interesting example of leading through
practice. He focuses on individuals in the film industry whose
roles do not gain the headlines. He highlighted Thelma
Schoonmaker who regularly works with Martin Scorsese. Last
commented that Schoonmaker is able to intuitively retain a map
of multiple and overlapping rhythms over ninety minutes, and
that this is one of the key characteristics of Scorsese’s films.
Last goes on to focus on one of the contradictions at the
heart of any discussion about the power of art to enable us to
see the world differently.
“An artist’s practice provides leadership in terms of
constantly re-examining the world. The problem that
dogs this sense of leadership is perhaps that it is not the
case that the majority of people want a life where we are
constantly re-examining what that life means.” 17
Artist/Organisations
One of the most important historical examples of artists seeking
to influence policy is the Artists’ Placement Group (APG). APG
was established by John Latham and Barbara Steveni in the late
1960s and continued through into the early 1980s. APG was a
radical social experiment engaging artists in non-art situations,
and it moved the art towards a different power base where artists
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Research papers
were not just embellishing. Their value as artists was palpable
within the day-to-day business of various organisations.
APG marks out a territory in which the artist was given
maximum freedom to engender creativity at any level of
non-artistic organisations, often investing creativity where
it was least expected. Grant Kester’s analysis of APG places
emphasis on the durational aspects of this work. John Latham
explained the value of the artist in organisational contexts as
lying precisely in their capacity to think through the long-term
implications of actions within timescales that were far greater
and more complex that the short-term expedient problemsolving of the market. APG placed artists within British Steel,
the Scottish Office, the Department of Health in London, and
the Department of the Environment in Birmingham. These
placements resulted in a variety of ‘works’, but the true legacy
lies in the opening up of expectation in and around the role
of the artist. Although at times highly contentious, APG’s
programme led to an official memorandum from the British
Civil Services in 1972 encouraging government agencies to
involve artists in their activities.
APG, radical in its time, has in many ways established one
model for how artists might work within organisations. This
model has the potential to invert the conventional relationship
between the artist and organisational power, but its application
in real terms is problematic. Artists are rarely salaried (though
within the APG programme they were). In practice this excludes
them from certain sorts of processes. Rob Laycock, who has
recently taken over as Director of Helix Arts18, noted precisely this
point19. Artists are effectively excluded from certain networking
and training programmes aimed at supporting emerging
leaders. These programmes are aimed at the long-term good of
society, and largely rely on participants being sponsored by their
employers. This exclusion points to the gap between the rhetoric
of creative industries and the realities of practice in the field.
“Being a tool, [radio’s] use can change, the messages it
carries can change. … Edge FM, as an art project, has
a legacy in the continuing discussions and arguments
about the culture of Fraserburgh and the position young
Brochers20 have within culture.”21 (Carter 2004)
Carter’s insistence on intervening creatively as a temporary,
time-limited action contrasts in some aspects with the longterm commitment that Suzanne Lacy has made to developing
work with the community of Oakland California over ten years
(1990-2000).
Lacy views scale and long-term commitment as crucial to
her approach.
“Each project grew out of youth concerns expressed in the
prior [project], and each positioned youth in leadership
roles. Taking place over ten years of increasing hostility
toward youth of colour in urban cities, the projects…
feature efforts by hundreds to capture the imagination
of thousands, in an effort to demystify ‘youth’. Taken
together, these projects on public education, pregnancy
and health care, public policy, police abuse, and youth
participation in civic life represent a sustained and
developed exploration of the practice and theory of
community-based public art.”22
18 www.helixarts.com
19 Robert Laycock
interview by Anne
Douglas and Chris
Fremantle, 24
November 2006,
Newcastle.
20 Brocher – someone
who comes from or
lives in Fraserburgh.
21 Carter, Paul, Edge FM,
On The Edge Research,
2004.
22 Lacy, Suzanne,
Imperfect Art: Working
in Public: A case study
of a ten-year project in
Oakland, California,
book proposal, 2006.
Through the act of departure, Carter places the energy of the
experience within the lives of the participants. The artist is
ephemeral and redundant once the task of mobilising the energy
of the young people is complete. In staying, Lacy consolidates
and grows awareness of the issues through the sheer duration
and scale of the numbers of people who are reached and their
power to effect change. Both seek to transfer the power of
leadership to the young people and away from the artist.
Where artists develop a successful project that could iterate
or grow and extend, they are often faced with becoming the
managers at the expense of their own artistic practice. Laycock
is employed to lead and manage Helix Arts. He is also a
practising artist. He acknowledged that although he brings a
great deal of creativity to his role as Director, his practice as
artist is consciously separated from his practice as manager/
leader. The fact that an artist within an organisation is faced
with such choices indicates that there is a tension between
artistic conventions and leadership conventions. In other cases
this constitutes a dilemma.
Paul Carter was the lead artist in the Edge FM project. This
project was one of five in the first phase of On the Edge, developed
in partnership with the Museum of Scottish Lighthouses
(2001-4). Edge FM involved a group of young people from
Fraserburgh working with Carter over a two-month period to
create a radio station. They developed the branding, applied
for a short-term community license, interviewed inhabitants
of Fraserburgh on their perceptions of Fraserburgh as ‘home’,
recorded material and developed a broadcast. In this and in
other projects, Carter clearly demonstrated leading through
his practice. Carter understood that the role of the artist lay in
mobilising young people to form self-organising groups that
then gave those young people the power to address issues that
affected their circumstances. He understood that it was not the
role of the artist to sustain and lead the groups as might be
found in conventional youth work models. His intervention
was consciously time limited and also consciously linked with
radio as a medium.
Leading through practice
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23 Morris, Andrew J,
Brotheridge, Celeste
M, Urbanski, John C,
Bringing humility to
leadership: Antecedents
and consequences of
leader humility, Human
Relations, Volume 58
(10), 1232-1250, The
Tavistock Institute,
SAGE Publications,
2005.
24 Neville, Mark, 20042005.
25 Freire, Paulo,
Pedagogy of the
Oppressed, Continuum
Publishing, 1970, 2nd
Ed, Penguin 1993.
26 Harrison, Helen
Mayer, and Harrison,
Newton, A Vision for
the Green Heart of
Holland, 1994-95.
27 Newton Harrison,
Public lecture, Gray’s
School of Art, 24
March, 2006.
humility
and leading
autonomy
Morris, Brotheridge and Urbanski, in developing their case for
humility as a key characteristic of leadership, identify the three
aspects that constitute humility as the “ability to understand
one’s strengths and weaknesses”, “willingness to learn from
others”, and “exceeding one’s usual limits [to] forge a connection
to a larger perspective”.23
The traditional conception of the artist, particularly evident in
Modernism, is of the creative and autonomous individual. In
our case studies the artist is operating with autonomy, but is also
operating within groups, teams, and social contexts. In these
cases autonomy is not also isolation. Rather one might argue
that a key aspect of the work of these artists is to encourage those
they work with to develop their own autonomous thinking.
Reiko Goto echoes this from within her own writing.
“I am in a forest with many people. We are moving in a
consistent direction, led by someone but there is no way
for me to see the trail in front of us. I feel the warmness
of someone’s hand in my own hand and the kindness of
someone’s voice who occasionally guides us…. After the
experience even though I am not an expert, my values have
changed. I care deeply. I am amongst others who have also
learned. We are all moving through the world and at some
level are also blind. At the end of the exploration can we
tell who the leader was? Is it important?”
Goto suggests that the experience of the journey is more
significant than the identity of the guide. She does not wish to
articulate herself as leader. She focuses on what the artist does
and not their perceived status and influence.
Mark Neville undertook a public art project in Port Glasgow
which resulted in the production of, amongst other things, a
book.24 The aim of the project was to capture a year in the life
of Port Glasgow, though not as ‘straight’ social documentary.
Neville describes the challenges, as a middle class Englishman,
undertaking a project within one of the most deprived areas of
post-industrial urban Scotland. He spent a year learning about
Port Glasgow before he was able to realise the output. At the
conclusion he distributed the book only to the people of Port
Glasgow. Where Goto might suggest the journey having its own
form, Neville set out with a clear form in mind, and discovered
how to inhabit that form in a different way.
These examples articulate an entirely different persona of
the artist or leader from one based on the charismatic. There
is a sense in which both artists acknowledge a need for selfknowledge as well as a dependence upon other individuals in the
process. The quality of their engagement is learning, rather than
knowing and presenting. Paulo Freire explores the same point
through the notion of false charity.25 Speaking in the context of
a public pedagogy, he notes that understanding/learning must
come from the ‘oppressed’ and not be given by the ‘oppressors’.
New learning arises from us critically recognising the causes
of oppression and thereby gaining the energy and reason to
expel the myths of the old order through transformative action.
The energy must come from the individual’s desire for change,
from overcoming the fear of change, a process that cannot be
led by ‘an oppressor’. It is an act of love and not of generosity.
Helen Mayer and Newton Harrison’s approach to ecological
challenges is rooted in an understanding of the need to create
space for reflection on the personal dimension of bio-regional
problems. They frame their work in terms of changing the
beliefs of people about their relationship with the environment
around them, looking not at control, but rather at co-existence.
In responding to an invitation by the Cultural Council of
South Holland26 to advise them on the proposed development of
600,000 new houses for the centre of Holland, the Harrisons
recognised the cultural significance of Holland’s ‘Green Heart’
– the area of farming encircled by its major cities of Amsterdam,
Rotterdam, Utrecht, Den Haag, Delft. They developed a
proposal that focused on the ‘Green Heart’ as an icon that in
turn articulated a set of principles and limitations. The proposal
was warmly welcomed, and then abandoned with a change of
government. After five years the proposal was revisited on
the initiative of the Ministry of Agriculture, Environment and
Forestry. Newton Harrison takes up the story:
“We found out that what they had done is – and this is a
stunning thing – they had dismantled our icon… but they
had accepted the working principles: that major cities will
be separated by parkland, their way. The ecosystems will
be made continuous, but in their way. Their way was not
to make a biodiversity ring, but to widen the rivers, and in
so doing, make long continuous bands …
We found that we were really successful in a new way.
We started to design our work differently. When we
designed our work, we would invent our icon. The icon
would explain the work. It would be powerful in the sense
that icons are. But, to enable and enact this work, we
made it so that it was able to be recreated, redesigned and
dismantled and put together again.”27
What the Harrisons promote through their work is not the
traditional artists’ autonomy, but the ability for every individual
touched by the work to think about their environment in new,
perhaps autonomous, ways.
Although Rob Fairley would probably not describe pupils
in Caol Primary School as ‘oppressed’, nor the teachers as
‘oppressors’, the way Room 13 seems to work assumes precisely
that the pupils use the space to determine their own purposes.
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Research papers
criticality
conclusion
Writing on the changing nature of European politics and
culture, Marina Garcés raises the issue of criticality, proposing
it as an embodied practice.28 She explores a shift from critique
as a practice of debating questions, to a new relationship based
in the need to take our highly evolved critical understanding of
the world into practice.
The main motive in this publication is to lay out a typology of
issues, substantiated by experience, with a view to enabling and
encouraging debate. The debate will continues online at www.
a-n.co.uk provide fuller web reference in text
“To embody critique means to ask how to subvert one’s life
nowadays in such a way that the world can no longer remain
the same.”29
Taking understanding into action is dependent upon
seeing that we are profoundly interconnected with the world.
The notion of ‘I’ is emancipated. It becomes ‘we’, integrated
into a networked society in which we see ourselves in relation
to ‘the other’, a part of the world rather than a consumer of
it. Our individual experience is a starting point for immersing
or drowning ourselves in ‘actual experience’, actively seeking
relationships and connections.
It is noticeable how many of the artists we have discussed
start with a deep analysis based on their own immersion and
relationships with specific circumstances. This is evident in
the work of the Harrisons, Lacy, Carter and Goto and Collins.
APG formalised this through the concept of an ‘open brief’ – a
three-month period in which the artist and host organisation
established the grounds for further work through open-ended
exploration, without obligation on either side. The work had
to emerge from the relationship. The Harrisons describe this
in relation to their own practice as a process of design – of
designing an icon that is the vehicle for thinking differently.
The icon is a starting point to creating change. It will itself
change.
Leading through practice in this sense is intentionally not
providing the solution or resolution within a piece of work. It is
often characterised by an absence of a ‘resolution’ or ‘artefact’.
Artefacts may appear as part of the process. It is an embodied
critique because to understand requires us to experience by
participating in the process that the artist initiates. It can be
fun, absurd even, or mischievous. People often comment ‘I was
expecting more art’.
McKee highlights circumstances in which the relevance of
making art at all as a way of creating change is questioned. The
artists themselves acknowledge that despite this lack of power
to create change, they sustain a belief that being present is
‘necessary and useful’.
The idea of the artist leading through practice resonates
in complex ways with a wide range of practitioners. Some
recognise themselves, and others resist the idea of leading.
Some are concerned that leading implies hierarchies, and
others specifically want to engage with hierarchies and
influence policy. Perhaps most importantly, some lead without
setting out to do so.
28 Garcés, Marina, To
Embody Critique,
Critique, Transversal:
Multi-lingual
Webjournal, European
Institute of Progressive
Cultural Policies,
2006.
29 Ibid, 2006.
30 David Butler
interviewed by
Anne Douglas and
Chris Fremantle, 24
November 2006,
Newcastle.
We could say that one of the qualities of artists leading
through their practice is intentionality – that the artists know
what they are setting out to do – but this is immediately
contradicted – even in our own experience in On The Edge.
Perhaps the real point emerges through the learning, and not
the intentionality.
We ourselves seek to engage in this debate from a position
of criticality: we are concerned with the framework of creative
industries, precisely because of the lack of acknowledgement of
the conditions of practice, the gap between rhetoric and practice,
and the assumptions that the artist can deliver, uncritically, on
political priorities.
To this end it is important that, although we have focused
on certain forms of practice, these are not read as ‘the best’, the
only ones that are relevant, or ‘to be prioritised’.
In setting out this typology of issues we have referred to
aspects of the ‘leadership debate’. What comes through the
examples that we have given is that artists do lead through their
practice. The examples don’t neatly fit into categories within
the management debate about leadership, though this debate
is changing and becoming more nuanced. David Butler goes
further. Reflecting on the recent history of the arts, he argues
specifically against becoming embroiled in models from
business:
“We are forced to use models from the outside, when
actually our practices are very good.
… [thinking back to the 1980s and 1990s] it was exactly
the time that large commercial organisations were moving
to more flat hierarchies, and beginning to talk about
creativity. But we were being encouraged to shift our
practice to use top down business planning. It’s almost
like these business models were lying around unused and
we were being given them as ‘cast offs’.
I think that’s a real issue, still. When you then try to
unpack something like leadership you don’t try and
say ‘here are a number of models’ (off the shelf). What
you need to be saying is, “What is it that we are actually
doing?”30
We started with an open question: can artists offer something
different to the issue of leadership?
The world around us is changing and artists’ practice is
changing. In fact at any point where you try and describe practice
as one thing, you immediately think of a counter example. It’s
important that there is example and counter example because
it’s important that people have a say in what they think is art.
Artists are interacting with the world and learning. Assumptions
are being tested along the route.
Anne Douglas and Chris Fremantle
Leading through practice
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Calling the Meeting: Artists as Leaders
1 Burnham, Linda
Frye, “Telling and
Listening in Public:
The Sustainability of
Storytelling,” 2001
www.communityarts.
net/readingroom/
archivefiles/2001/02/
telling_and_lis_3.php
2 Posner, Richard,
“Professional Jaywalker:
Richard Posner on
Crossing from the
Studio to Public Art,”
1996,2002
www.communityarts.
net/readingroom/
archivefiles/2002/09/
professional_ja.php
3 Monagan, Susan,
“The Artmaker as
Active Agent: Six
Portraits,” 2006 www.
communityarts.net/
readingroom/archive/
monagan/index.php
4 Burnham, Linda Frye,
“Telling and Listening
in Public: Factors
for Success,” 2001
www.communityarts.
net/readingroom/
archivefiles/2001/02/
telling_and_lis_2.php
5 Ibid.
6 Ibid.
7 Goldbard, Arlene,
“Don’t Do It!
Organizational
Suicide Prevention for
Progressives,” 2004
www.communityarts.
net/readingroom/
archivefiles/2004/09/
donot_do_it_org.php
8 Cocke Dudley, Harry
Newman and Janet
Salmon-Rue, “A
Matrix Articulating the
Principles of Grassroots
Theater,” 1992, in
Burnham, Linda Frye
Burnham, “A Question
of Values,” 2000,
www.communityarts.
net/readingroom/
archivefiles/2000/02/
a_question_of_v.php
9 Burnham, ibid.
“Spirit in community will die unless there’s someone calling
the meeting.”
Cultural organiser Theresa Holden1
“The ability to navigate the currents and eddies of the publicart administrative process requires the eye of a journalist,
the ear of a poet, the hide of an armadillo, the serenity of an
airline pilot and the ability to swim.”
Artist Richard Posner2
When an artist seeks to lead others in making art, it is often in
a spirit of social change: to help heal a community after trauma,
reach across a divide, bring generations together.
Over the past thirty-five years I have been asking artists
working in communities what defines a successful artist-leader.
Here, gleaned from writing posted on The Community Arts
Network, is some of what they had to say.
A good artist-leader is:
A cultural animator
“’Animation’ is derived from the French ‘animation
socio-culturel’ and refers to the work of the animateur, a
community worker who helps people to build and participate
in community life, to articulate their own grievances and
aspirations in a public context, and often, to make art from the
material of their daily lives.”
Cultural critics Don Adams and Arlene Goldbard3
Someone who can “build relationships and common goals.
Someone to bring people together who normally don’t
interact, work under different conditions or institutional
systems, and have different styles and approaches to the work,
but are all attempting to strengthen the community through
participatory and locally directed means.”
Community cultural organiser Erica Kohl4
“The community animateur is an essential part of the mix:
the role requires an unusual combination of skill, energy,
sensitivity, courage, vision, love and limitless good humour.
There must be a passion for collaboration and the ability
to embrace all the human messiness that comes with the
territory There must be a deep respect for the power of story
to reveal ourselves to each other; to illuminate the connective
tissue of human experience.”
Community theatre artist Kate Magruder5
“I don’t care what you call it – animateur, cheerleader – it
functions in the same way. … smart, passionate about the
work, charming, has the strength of ten, lots of flirting, but
with an edge, a confluence of talent and influence … with a big
account in the favour bank.”
Artist/consultant Lisa Mount6
Analytical
“…people who can read situations rapidly and accurately as
a basis for strategic decisions – who have what Isaiah Berlin
called a ‘sense of reality’. It needs people who can articulate
resonant aims, inspiring and galvanising action, people who
can act responsibly as emissaries.
Arlene Goldbard7
Successful leaders “recognise that management structures
and business practices are value-laden; they affect the
mission, goals and creative processes of organisations through
their structure and practices, self-reliance and collective
responsibility.”
The Grassroots Matrix8
“…the dilemma of integrity in artmaking and organising is
around the gap between what I know and do and what they
know and do in a particular field. I assume that they are the
experts about their lives and communities, and I try to find out
what they already know. I need to own my expertise and its
usefulness in that community.”
Artist/scholar Ann Kilkelly9
Inclusive
“The people who are the subjects of the work are part of its
development from inception through presentation.”
The Grassroots Matrix10
The artist knows that participants must “enter fully into the
role of co-directors of the project, making substantial and
uncoerced contributions to shaping all aspects of the work and
setting their own aims for the project.”
Adams and Goldbard11
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Research papers
Collaborative
“Hierarchy often takes a back seat to necessity, and collective
decision making is much more the norm. With few material
resources, … collective knowledge and connections became
an important resource. To make space for the free flow of
expertise and information, these leaders have learned how to
step back and step up, depending on the situation.” BC (EC)
Bill Cleveland, Centre for the Study of Art and Community12
“Leadership is not about doing everything from start to finish,
from idea to plan to product. It’s about motivating others
to share in a vision to create something that is larger than
anything you could do on your own, as individual parts. I
think I’ve failed if I haven’t raised someone up, if I haven’t
‘reproduced myself,’ if I haven’t passed on knowledge,
relationship, skill, if I haven’t grown in my own learning from
that process, that interaction.”
Community artist Lee Ann Norman13
Connected
“Working closely with key people in the community is
necessary. Sometimes it’s been nurtured for years.”
Artist/scholar Jan Cohen-Cruz14
The successful artist-leader “has played an ongoing civic role
in the community by participating on various development
and education commissions, and has a firm base from which
to build and sustain their project.”
Activist/organiser Caron Atlas15
Organised
The artist-leader has “vision, unstoppable perseverance and
willingness to learn. Organisation of the sponsoring body
must be constantly worked at to meet changing situations and
personnel. Structure is the key to this.”
Bill Grow, Swamp Gravy Institute16
A Good Negotiator
“As survivors, the leaders of the programmes in this study
successfully navigated a complex cross-sector environment
of funding, regulation and public policy. … Their survival
also demanded a clear and forceful articulation of mission
that translated to the self-interest of multiple partners. It is
important to note that all of these programmes were created
by artists who were, in essence, self-mandated. Put simply,
that mandate was a passionate belief in the power of art to
make significant positive contributions to community life.
This was, and remains, a hard sell. To gain any credibility in
the skeptical, even adversarial, territory they occupied, they
had to marshal resources, advocate effectively and produce
results, simultaneously. This seat-of-the-pants challenge
was a hothouse for the development of effective community
leadership.
William Cleveland21
Entrepreneurial
“…opportunistic, investing their often meager resources in
programmes and partnerships that have provided significant
return. … Community accountability tempers the vision of
assertive leaders so that the work is honest, on track and
relevant.
William Cleveland22
A Lover
“Once I asked John [Malpede] if there was an answer to the
complex spiritual problems surrounding homelessness, and
he told me the answer is ‘big infusions of love’ through lots
more projects like his [Los Angeles Poverty Department].
Souls are saved. I’ll testify.”
Linda Frye Burnham23
Flexible
“Flexibility in structure is also key, with the anticipation from
the outset that ‘something bad will happen and this will test
the strength and resiliency of the project.’”
William Cleveland18
“These programmes have organisational structures and
leadership that are resilient, adaptive and improvisational. ….
understanding that both form and freedom are necessary for
integrating creative inquiry and community development.”
William Cleveland19
11 Burnham, “Telling and
Listening in Public:
Factors for Success”
12 Cleveland, William,
“Making Exact Change:
How U.S. arts-based
programs have made
a significant and
sustained impact on
their communities,”
2005 <http://www.
communityarts.net/
readingroom/archive/
mec/mec-findings.
php>
13 Norman, Lee Ann,
and Arlene Goldbard,
“Minding the Gap: A
Cross-Generational
Dialogue, Part I,” 2006
www.communityarts.
net/readingroom/
archivefiles/2006/06/
minding_the_gap_
1.php
14 Burnham, “Telling and
Listening in Public:
Factors for Success”
15 Ibid.
16 Ibid.
17 Ibid.
Linda Frye Burnham is a writer who specialises in communitybased arts. She is co-director of Art in the Public Interest, a
non-profit organisation in North Carolina, USA, and of the
Community Arts Network website. She was founder of High
Performance magazine and co-founder of the 18th Street Arts
Complex and Highways Performance Space, all in Los Angeles,
California.
“I think of it as a listener, facilitator, and as a translator role,
and from that it can move into a catalyst. I think that the
cultural organiser needs to be rooted – in the creative work,
culture and community context.”
Caron Atlas17
10 Cocke Dudley, Harry
Newman and Janet
Salmon-Rue, “A
Matrix Articulating
the Principles of
Grassroots Theater,”
1992, in Burnham,
Linda Frye Burnham,
“A Question of
Values,” 2000,
www.communityarts.
net/readingroom/
archivefiles/2000/02/
a_question_of_v.php
All citations appear on the Community Arts Network:
www.communityarts.net
18 Ibid.
19 Cleveland, “Making
Exact Change”
20 Burnham, “Telling and
Listening in Public:
Factors for Success”
21 Cleveland, “Making
Exact Change”
22 Ibid.
23 Burnham, Linda Frye,
“Up the Revolution,”
1987, 1999
www.communityarts.
net/readingroom/
archivefiles/1999/12/
up_the_revoluti.php
A Revolutionary
[Speaking of Augusto Boal] … a practical theatre artist works
out of a Marxist scheme where there is no real distinction
between an artist and a social worker – a social activist/
revolutionary who works as a facilitator, enabling workers/
families to address cultural conflicts through theatre and
thereby redress or solve them.”
Community artist/poet Grady Hillman20
Leading through practice
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the artist as a leader
A leader is best
When people barely know that he(she) exists,
Not so good when people obey and acclaim him(her).
‘Fail to honour people, They fail to honour you’;
But of a good leader, who talks little,
When his (her) work is done, his (her) aim fulfilled,
They will all say, “We did this ourselves.”
Lao Tzu Quoted in J. Jacobs, (1992) Systems of Survival, Vintage
Books, A division of Random House, Inc., New York, P.125)
I can’t really talk about leadership, I can talk about change. I can
talk about what it means to do things ourselves. Tim Collins,
my partner, and I lived in Pittsburgh USA between 1994 and
2005. We focused upon art, ecology and environment projects
as artists and researchers at Carnegie Mellon University.
Nearby there is a stream called Nine Mile Run that has been
suffering from human impacts for over one hundred years. It
runs through a major natural park in the city. Residents have
been complaining about leaking sewers, horrible smells and
posted warning signs that indicated the water was unsafe for
recreational use. City officials made a plan to put that stream in
a pipe and bury it. When I went to see the stream for the first
time, I did not see the fish in the water. But I did see a newly
emerged Tiger Swallowtail butterfly flying along the stream, my
partner saw deer tracks in the wet mud, we saw wild ducks in
a pool. If that stream were buried it would be hard to bring it
back to any sort of original condition. I asked myself how artists
might help change this.
We met many people who had worked on the stream in the
past. Dr Mary Kostalos taught us about water chemistry and its
relationship to the life in the stream. She introduced us to her
mentor, Dr Jan Sykora, who in turn introduced us to Michael
Koryak. These scientists guided us to understand that water was
not only for human beings but also other creatures as well. That
stream had a human family that had cared for it and studied it
for years. Yet that stream was to be buried.
One snowy morning Dr Sykora, who was a biology professor
at the University of Pittsburgh, took us to a natural park. There
was a small clean spring in the park that fed into Nine Mile
Run. He showed us how to flip rocks in the shallow water, and
examine them for life. We found small translucent shrimp like
creatures, wiggling under the rocks. He explained to us they
were gammerus (Hyalella azteca), crustaceans, small creatures
that lived on the bottom of shallow streams and ponds. They
swim on their sides with seven pairs of legs. We flipped
another rock, and found one of these small creatures holding
the other’s curved back. Another group of them seemed to be
snuggling together in the cold water Dr Sykora said that they
mate during winter. We asked what they would eat. He told us
that gammerus ate dead leaves, twigs, and other organic matter.
In the stream he picked something up and put it in my hand.
It seemed to be a dead leaf. I spread out the leaf on my hand. I
found it was not an ordinary leaf, but an example of the finest
natural lace, it had been made by these bottom dwellers. None
of the veins were broken. Dr Sykora replaced the creatures we
had collected very carefully back into the water. He told us these
small creatures were not only an indicator of good water quality,
but that they keep their living environment healthy.
leaves, framed and presented them in a gallery, some people
might see them as an art object. It was not the object that was
important. What struck me was the way the object represented
the story of its makers and their homes. But to access that story
you would need to have had the experience that I had with my
friends and the little creatures; of water, air, light, trees, shrubs,
rocks, mud, fish, salamanders, birds, deer, and raccoons. There
was a spectrum of topography, life forms, sounds and seasonal
changes; these were all elements of that environment. The
aesthetic was embedded in the experience that my partner and
I had on the snowy morning with the scientist. The story of
gammerus would end if the relationship between the springs
and a healthy stream was permanently lost. I wondered if a
new story was possible, how people might intervene in that
environment.
Change is never certain. People are not comfortable when
they do something new. Even when there is a successful
example in front of them, people often say, “Yes, but this region
is different. We don’t do things that way here.” Creating change
is like going through an unknown forest with a blindfold on.
People are afraid of getting lost, or falling and being hurt, or
maybe they fear being left behind.
I am in a forest with many people. We are moving in a
consistent direction, led by someone but there is no way for me
to see the trail in front of us. I feel the warmness of someone’s
hand in my own hand and the kindness of someone’s voice who
occasionally guides us. I hear the sounds of the forest and the
breathing and talking of people I care about. These guides are
like my friends in Pittsburgh: each of them showed me more
and more of that place where the little creatures lived. After the
experience, even though I am not an expert, my values have
changed – I care deeply. I am amongst others who have also
learned; we can share this with other people who come later.
We are all moving through the world, and on some level we are
all blind. At the end of the exploration can we tell who the leader
was? Is it important? Once people reach the end of the forest,
some people go into another new forest, and others might stay
to tell the story of what we have all accomplished together.
Reiko Goto lives in the West Midlands, and works as a PhD
candidate with the On the Edge Programme, at Robert Gordon
University. Her research focuses upon art, ecology and its impacts
upon public places and policies. Reiko has been recognised for
her achievements in applied research in art and ecology from
1994-2005. She co-directed the Nine Mile Run and the 3 Rivers
2nd Nature projects; and is a “distinguished research fellow” at
the STUDIO for Creative Inquiry at Carnegie Mellon University.
Reiko is currently working with Tim Collins, to develop The
Secret Life of Trees: a Biogenic Opera for British Cities.
http://slaggarden.cfa.cmu.edu
http://3r2n.cfa.cmu.edu
Gammerus is a small part of the chain of organisms that
make up stream ecology. It is easy to say we are all connected.
But it is hard to feel how we are connected. I became connected
to that place through my friends and their relationships with
small creatures. It is naive to say that I wanted to save them
and their stream. I could not stop imagining the scenes of the
little creatures cleaning up their living place, creating beautiful
objects, and then being lost downstream in the rushing waters
of Nine Mile Run during storm events. If I collected those lacy
10
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Research papers
XXXX francis mckee
“What happened to the people who said ‘we will represent
something in the world’? When did artists start to say ‘we will
change the world’?”
It’s not as if artists have refused to confront political issues in
the past – James Gillray’s Blood on Thunder fording the Red Sea
or Francisco Goya’s El Tres de Mayo de 1808 en Madrid certainly
tackled important events. The emphasis in art, however,
remained on the re-presentation of the world and its material
objects until the twentieth century. That balance between
representation and information changed decisively in the
1960s, following through on a series of artistic revolutions in
the twentieth century. Often it was war that drove this change.
The First World War had a devastating effect on artists’ faith
in their objects to transform by means of beauty. Ezra Pound
summed up this crisis in Hugh Selwyn Mauberley:
There died a myriad,
And of the best, among them,
For an old bitch gone in the teeth,
For a botched civilization,
Charm, smiling at the good mouth,
quick eyes gone under earth’s lid,
For two gross of broken statues,
For a few thousand battered books.
WW2 and the Spanish Civil War reinforced this shift in
sensibility and by the sixties protest against the Vietnam war
was taking place at a time when artists were also questioning
commodification (and the commodification of their work) in
society.
Since then the relationship between politics and art has
remained one of the key issues in the contemporary art world.
Most recently, a project instigated in Ramallah has highlighted
its continued urgency. ‘Liminal Spaces’, co-curated by Eyal
Danon, Galit Eilat, Reem Fadda and Philipp Misselwitz, is
an initiative born out of the frustrations and hardships of the
current Palestinian situation. The organisers describe their
aims as follows:
In March 2006, the project invited Palestinian, European
and Israeli artists, architects, academics and film makers
to examine the condition of everyday space, borders,
physical segregation, cultural territories within a reality
of occupation and challenge the possibilities of art as a
catalyst for political and social change. The focus of the
project is the radically divided and fragmented urban
region of Jerusalem/Ramallah, which has become a
laboratory for an urbanism of radical ethnic segregation.
Curators, cultural figures and artists developed this project
through a series of meetings and discussions that sought
to generate a more active political engagement of the art
sector. Additionally, it is hoped that through participation
in the project, new possibilities of contact and exchange
will emerge on an individual basis and beyond.
The reality of this project was of course harsher. With a fire
destroying the Palestinian art centre’s facilities, the opening
conference for the project was held in an empty furniture shop
on the edge of the Qalandiya refugee camp. That meeting went
well with a genuine bond being established among all the
participants.
On the final day, however, an excellent talk from Charles
Esche on the importance of ambiguity in art provoked everyone
present into asking stark questions about the role of art and
politics. Surrounded by the immediate and desperately urgent
situation in Palestine, some artists felt there could be no place
for ambiguity. Clear injustice called for clear condemnations.
Others felt ambiguity and even oblique strategies were viable
and perhaps necessary in a situation where there were so many
Leading through practice
media pressures with predictable, stereotypical uses of military
imagery and so many political complexities. Over the whole
debate loomed a much larger question – would making artwork
at this time change anything?
That conference ended on these bleak notes. It seemed
there would be no clear way forward. A second conference,
however, was arranged for October, this time to be held in
Leipzig. There, more debate ensued but the real surprise lay
in the exhibition that accompanied the sessions. It was clear
that in the intervening eight months all of the artists had begun
projects based on the original aims of ‘Liminal Spaces’. Some
were direct – video observation of a checkpoint and the endless
delays and humiliations created there – some were oblique – an
exploration of Israeli sperm donor rules which forbid Jewish
men to donate while allowing Palestinian men to contribute.
Several of the works were still in progress and a few dwelt on
the bureaucracy and mental blocks that suppressed creativity
in the region. Peter Friedl’s attempt to transport a giraffe from
Palestine, for instance, revolved around a series of letters
documenting the labyrinth of requests necessary. Superflex
chose a route that was miraculously both profound and
frivolous – persuading the Palestinian Authority to sanction an
application for entry to the Eurovision Song Contest.
There was still no clear consensus but the movement to
making and a reliance on practice rather than words was a
significant gesture by all of the artists. There was no idealistic
vision that this process would change anything but some shared
belief that it was still necessary and useful. Perhaps a sense
that a mental space could be opened up through the works and
the conferences which permitted thoughts to be expressed or
challenged in ways not possible on the ground in either Israel
or Palestine.
Francis McKee is a writer and curator based in Glasgow.
He is a part-time lecturer and research fellow at The
Glasgow School of Art. Since 2005 he has also been curator
of Glasgow International, a festival of contemporary
visual art, and the interim director of CCA, the Centre for
Contemporary Arts. Francis McKee has worked previously
as an historian of medicine for the Wellcome Trust.
www.francismckee.com
Postscript
In a completely unrelated situation in 2006 the leader of the
revolutionary Zapatista insurgency movement, Subcomandante
Marcos, co-wrote a detective novel with the Mexican author Paco
Ignacio Taibo II. It was the most recent of a series of actions
that seemed to place art before military action – an invitation/
challenge to the Inter Milan football team, the regular appearance
of a chicken dressed as a penguin in the Zapatista heartland of
Chiapas and the emergence of a sensibility influenced as much
by the Situationists as Che Guevara. In a description of Mexico
City for instance Marcos writes:
El Sup had told me that if you want to know the Monster,
you have to walk it. Walk through it, he told me, and you’ll
see that the city is build on the people who can save it.
So that’s what I did, I walked all around that city. And I
went everywhere, and everywhere I went I ran into people
like us Zapatistas, which means people who are screwed,
which means people willing to fight, which means people
who don’t give up.
To choose art to express these thoughts is more than propaganda
or publicity seeking. It is a natural extension of revolutionary
thought once military action has been dismissed as an option.
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11
Artist Don’t Change Bloody Lightbulbs, They Sit
In The Dark And Mope [or Artists Take the Lead]
If someone does something that inspires another person to do
or think something differently could that person be regarded
as a leader? Could it be an act of leadership? Of course it could,
even if only relying on the definition of leadership provided
by a Collins desk dictionary: “to rule, guide or inspire”. How
about if the person who has done the ‘something’ wasn’t
seeking to influence or inspire but it happened anyway? Is it
still leadership? I would say yes. In fact I would go as far as to
say that this is sometimes the best sort of leadership you can
find; influenced less by ego or individual gain than a good deal
of assertive or professional leadership.
So, leadership sometimes occurs when art is made. Not
always, because that would be a bag of identical marbles, and
would inevitably lead to another box on an application form for
public subsidy: ‘In what way is your work exhibiting leadership
and who will be the beneficiary’. But there is a fair amount
of art out there that does inspire, influence and, even guide
its recipients, and we should not be scared of accepting the
leadership provided by the art and during the act of its creation.
It may be an artist has been personally motivated to work in
the natural environment and that the consequent art has stirred
an appreciation of the complexity of nature and motivated
protection of the environment. Or a composer has instinctively
incorporated elements of folk music into a contemporary
composition that has provoked a challenge to the value of
tradition. Or a poet has made someone laugh when describing
a sexual act and made that person realise something about her
or his inhibitions. One way or another this art exhibits a form of
leadership that in other walks of life would be celebrated and it
is happening when the artist is doing what he or she does best
– not necessarily by design.
Some artists include the objective of social change in their
practice. The London-based collective Platform believes in
“the transformatory power of art’ for the pursuit of ‘social and
ecological justice”. The core team of artists work with artist
and campaigning collaborators (and I’ve been one of them in
the past) to “promote alternative futures”. Platform is happy
to accept the campaigning objective as much as the artistic
objective as criteria for the evaluation of its work. By setting
the agenda and initiating patterns of work for their extended
network, Platform, I would suggest, have established themselves
as leaders. The success of their work gives me no doubt about
their skill as leaders for a wide international community. Artists
placing themselves in this position may also adopt other forms
of leadership, through organisational or charismatic skills. This
might be crucial to their work but is a tangent to the leadership
through artistic practice being discussed here.
Over the last three years I have been writing and producing
a drama production that includes the treatment of artists by
the German Third Reich. This is a horrific but useful set of
circumstances to consider when examining the idea of artistic
leadership. The Nazis persecuted many artists, labelling them
as ‘degenerate’. The ethnic or religious origin of the artist was
sometimes sufficient reason for their persecution in the very
earliest stages of what was to become The Holocaust. Other,
‘ethnically clean’, artists were persecuted solely because of
their art; because of the ‘modern’ nature of their work. Hitler
regarded artists as a real and tangible threat but instead of just
making them and their art disappear, and he would have had the
ability to simply erase both, he attempted to devalue them. In an
attempt to show his strength over the art he organised a series
of exhibitions of ‘degenerate’ art that instead of undermining
confirmed its power. He knew that the art was not just symbolic
of change; it was instigating and causing change.
community, economically and culturally. Every year thousands
of people travel many hundreds of miles to a small Scottish
island with an expectation of a great musical experience that
will include the new and challenging. Those visitors, and
many others who don’t even make the journey, now have
a real association between the rich culture of Orkney and
contemporary performance. I don’t know whether Maxwell
Davis set out to cause any other benefit to his community when
he started the festival but it is clear that it was his love of music
that was his primary motivation.
Some artists become good managers or promoters of
art, including through education, by acquiring other skills
and experience. In its best examples this is an extension of,
and intimately informed by, the practice of the artist. These
managers, promoters or educators could also benefit from a
greater understanding of artistic leadership. For example, by
identifying the abilities derived from their practice they may
have a stronger argument to their employer for keeping their
artistic practice alive.
There is work to be done on understanding leadership
through artistic practice. Artists and the recipients of their work
can benefit from that understanding. This is particularly true
for those artists whose work is done in the public environment,
involves social engagement in the creative process or who are
in collaboration with the business or government sectors. The
potential benefit to artists is informed confidence of what their
practice can achieve and what recipients or collaborators can
expect from them. The benefit to other sectors is an enhanced
understanding of the value of the artist, for example an informed
respect for the artist as leader should protect the process and
working needs of the artist. Insight into the quality and nature
of artistic leadership could also help communication between
collaborators, as expectations are refined. Whether they achieve
it by accident or design artists can benefit by understanding the
leadership their practice can provide.
Tim Nunn is the Joint Director of the ‘Artist as Leader’ Lab
programme, Joint Artistic Director of Reeling & Writhing
and the Specialist Advisor for Performance at the Cultural
Enterprise Office. He is a playwright and theatre producer
mainly with the Reeling & Writhing Theatre Company he cofounded. He is currently writing On The Men which will tour
in Autumn 2007. Tim has spent a good part of his working
life as a professional campaigner for human rights including
eight years as Director of the Free Tibet campaign. As an
artist, curator, and photographer, he has completed exhibition
commissions for the Royal Academy of the Arts and National
Portrait Gallery in London, and the Centre for Contemporary
Art in Glasgow, the NHS, the Prison Service, and Friends of
the Earth. His photography has been published internationally
including in Time, Geo, and regularly in The Guardian.
www.reelingwrithing.com
For more information:
Platform www.platformlondon.org
St Magnus Festival www.stmagnusfestival.com
Reeling & Writhing www.reelingwrithing.com
Cultural Enterprise Office www.culturalenterpriseoffice.co.uk
The pursuit of artistic practice or a fresh platform for work
can result in artists substantially impacting on a community.
When Sir Peter Maxwell Davis established the St Magnus
Festival in Orkney he also created enormous benefit to the
12
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