I am being walked and talked around this strange town I used to know. The gossip is a morass of names without faces. I lag, wading in clods of incomprehension. Different people share the same name and I sink over my boots. It is so simple - she lives here, he did, they do, he’s, she’s - understand?
No. I’d hazard a yes in hope, but … no. Not yet, I need more time on the gossip treadmill, incline-talking to fit me for social purpose. No room for me to interject me, my I is unnecessary, I’m easily identifiable as the one who’s new and knows nothing and no-ones names.
Buzz off I'm busy. I'm drinking my soup. I'm in the middle of something. Go away!
. . . I'm eating soup and from wanting to understand 'everything', to wanting to explain 'everything' I see the impossibility of either and want to slough away this social responsibility and explain nothing at all. It is never quite enough to play footie, to only act, or be an anything, there is the expectation to be able to talk about it and have ready the 'What's it feel like to be a (racing driver)?' answer. My ineffectual explanations are misinterpreted at best. I acknowledge that the fault is mine, that the confusion between idea and expression is my confusion and I see that there is nothing I can do about it. And I've tried, so 'Let the magic box eat lobsters'. I'm doing my bad bit and make of it what you can, what you may, what you care to. Make what you will of this blog, this song, that picy hanging there, here it is and that's that, you'll get no further help from me. I know, I know, publicity can never be a bad thing but I'm not doing the post-match interview. Forget it, I've no more to say and I'm out of here! Out, away into the night and scooting back to this screen.
I've ventured away from the virtual world and been out in public. Perhaps you can tell? FB and social networks went by the board and there was no time to tweet or for virtual musing and blog browsing. My emails and SMS became terse and cursory and the inbox and junk files brimmed. It's dangerous out and about in real time. It's unexpectedly fast. I got into trouble very quickly. I got lost looking for the Jerwood Gallery. A kind bookseller went online to point me from his screen in the right direction, and out of his life. On from the Jerwood Drawing Prize show to 100 PLUS in Webber Street aided by a chap with map-on-iphone and another in a pub taking recourse to his laptop. 'I'm getting to know this area,' I thought as we made our way to the London Group Opening although admittedly I was now in the capable company of a French person. There, I greeted a familiar face by name of a dead man. Live-not-dead man turned out to be judging the exhibition. I had a piece in the show and was shortlisted for a prize so, that went well. Fleeing from my gaffe, cursing silently, I rounded off the evening in the cellar of an occult bookshop so dark that denim glowed bright. Surrounded by the litter of departed witches, empty glasses and a series of paintings set on black velvet depicting scenes from the Book of Revelations, I vowed never to leave the safety of my laptop screen ever again.
'Let the magic box eat lobsters' (Sir Terry Pratchett), is one of my all time favourite 'I'm out of here' lines. I'm in public again this Thursday evening at the ING Discerning Eye exhibition opening at the Mall Galleries where I have a piece on show.
I've been pondering a blog post for ten days or so. I haven't posted for ages and 'the pressure' is getting to me. Blog Blank. No Blog. Blog guilt! Can this be true? Can I really be stressing out on this?
Yes.
'This state of affairs' I think, 'is not good.' Reviewing my jottings over the last weeks they reveal lists of 'to do'-s, and moans.
Moans about avatar and atavar. What are they? Which to use? When and Why? Am I the only one who's confused?
'The lure of digital.' There's a lot of inconclusive moaning about that - is digi the revolution that the mass production of paper was? That sort of thing.
What happens when the power cuts off, if it will, if we let it, if we . . . but I don't want to blog moans, I'm not in a moany mood.
I like Scarlet's refusal to raise the white flag, and N, O Bestbelovéd, the white flag .gif is the one I want.
. . . and suddenly, 'it's all worth while' I tweet . . .
There is a frisson around submitting work to an open entry art exhibition. Perhaps 'sweet' describes it, or humbling, or grim. It could be 'blithely optimistic', desperate or just brutally professional. If my recent entrant number to the highly prestigious Jerwood Drawing Prize: three-thousand-four-hundred-and-something is to be taken at face value, upwards of 4,000 artists entered on average two drawings each in hope of winning one of 4 prizes, or inclusion in an exhibition that shows between 40 and 50 works. 8,000 drawings vie for a hang in a 50 piece exhibition giving each a mathematical 1-in-160 chance. (all figures estimated) This is as much a gamble as a punt at Epsom or Sandown Park racecourses. 160-1 are not odds a professional gambler would contemplate, but a keen punter may put an emotional quid or two on a 160-1 shot here and there amongst the run-a-day favourites. The average punter might, and casual flutterers, aka idiot punters lose money all the time this way. But I don't understand gambling. I can't do the lottery and don't much care for playing poker for matchsticks, or Newmarket for buttons or pennies with small children. When it comes to considering getting into the socially essential Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, the odds-against that the entrant faces are simply staggering, so much so that it is widely whispered that the only reasonable chance is to have a nepotistic nobble running in your favour, an RA insider friend to give a nod, wave or wink. Basically, a performance enhancing agent. So when trudging embarrassedly in to collect a rejected masterpiece, the artist can take comfort from the mathematics. It was always 'odds against'. The rejection stems from something else; the arbitrary mood of the judges, the zeitgeist, the dynamics of the exhibition space, it was an indefinable mitigating against your inclusion; exclusion was nothing to do with you, with your work, or a reflection on the merit of your piece. It never was a competition and the odds were too stupid for it to have been a bet. Still, it is bloody galling and frays at fragile self-belief that it is worth carrying on, not least because unlike 2 quid lost on a 160-1, this 'not getting in' has come dear. There is the entry fee of anything up to £20 per entry. That's per entry, not per entrant. There is framing and the sky's the limit where framing costs are concerned. While most artists can make frames, few can make them with a professional touch, few have all the tools required and none the range of options a framer has, but artists just don't have the time to blunder around making frames badly. Framing is not our trade. So there is a framing bill, and then there's transport. 'Lucky those who live in London or near an exhibition's regional collection point' many artists may think with feeling, but even living in London, traipsing around on public transport lugging clumpy artwork is no picnic. Nursing precious, delicate and heavy frames down escalators, on and off crowded buses, footslogging with it through slow shoppers, drifting tourists, brisk workers, and speedy youth is no fun. Driving art without a chauffeur is not an option. Trust me on this. Taxis or couriers? Yes it's the best, but see the meter cost mounting again? But artists get there . . . arriving down backsteps to dingy areas to find indifferent staff and a smattering of fellow submittees, but not fellows, a grim fellowship for we're not only suffering and gambling, but competing in a game where the rules are indefinable and the odds ludicrous. These fellow sufferers hate you as you hate them as we all hate being there gambling and competing. They might get in, you may not. We don't know yet and if we do get in and spot him or her at the Opening, it will be relieved grins of recognition, congratulation and 'hail-well-met's, but that's for later. For now, we pay our money to the neutral smiles of the reception staff, often students under a gimlet-eyed professional and it's hard not to read condescension in their faces, hard not to sense a weary sympathy, or is that a hint of a contempt in their eyes of the sort we all recognise when confronted with the haplessly gullible? We perform the ritual, submit the forms and write a rare cheque, gather up our packing material and speed away spotting others arriving burdened and bleakly determined. You are anonymous once more and relieved to be unencumbered and unmarked, but slope off with a sense that we're all being ripped off. Ripped off is one thing. Rejection is worse altogether. Worse because you've set yourself up for it, and collecting your rejected pieces isn't any better for knowing you are of a company of rejects. The same students smile neutrally, glance at your slip and call up your rejecteds from the reject storage zone. You re-use the same packing material you used before for the experienced keep it bagged-ready-waiting. You nod coolly at fellow rejectees who hate you as you hate them for being rejected, for being seen by anyone as a rejected one even by another reject and out you go into the traffic and crowds, jostling with your unshown pictures now uselessly, and you can't help thinking, unnecessarily framed. There are no plusses. You are badly out of pocket and out of sorts with the world. A petulant 'never again' crosses your mind. I have seen rejected work abandoned, left leant against walls, destroyed with the glass kicked in. A losing betting slip tossed underfoot. I've been tempted to do the same.
But not NOW. I got into the London Group, so none of the above applies.
The London Group Open Exhibition 2009
Menier Gallery - dates tbc (OCTOBER)
Smug smug smug & xxx all round.
Kevin Jackson : Original Limited Edition Prints 2009