Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art. Show all posts

Friday, October 30, 2020

SAW Prize for New Works in Critical Writing

I am delighted to announce and honored that I have been selected as one of the recipients of the SAW Prize for New Works. Along with 30 other artists and makers from Ottawa-Gatineau and the surrounding First Nations, I have been given a great opportunity to create a new work with financial and organizational support provided by Galerie SAW Gallery.


I have been awarded a SAW Prize for New Works in Critical Writing, and the focus of the new text that I am going to produce will be on contemporary artists in the Ottawa-Gatineau area. I am also very excited to see what my cohorts come up with for their new productions.

Saturday, July 6, 2019

Bouquiniste Mobile Project Launch at EBA

Members of the Bouquinistes Collective launched our project, The Bouquiniste Mobile, at Enriched Bread Artists (951 Gladstone) on Saturday July 6 from 2 to 4 pm. Like the Bouquinistes of Paris from which the group takes its name, used booksellers on the banks of the Seine, the Bouquinistes of Ottawa mean to operate outside of official channels and contribute to the circulation of ideas.


Installation view, Bouquiniste Mobile Silent Auction, EBA July 6

The project brings together three text-based artists living in the Ottawa area (including myself, Mana Rouholamini and Guillermo Trejothrough a platform developed by a local artist, Adam Brown, whose work can be characterized as social practice, enabling each to present their work in a dynamic way to an audience that might not necessarily be an art audience.


Installation view, Bouquiniste Mobile book sale, EBA July 6

Inspired by Brown’s Friendship Library, a 2014 installation on the grounds of the Arts Court which provided a temporary shelter and transformed public space into a site of cultural activity, the Bouquinistes Collective have made it their mandate to provide an accessible experience of art. The Bouquiniste Mobile can be maneuvered to capitalize on opportunities for public engagement and disseminate artworks where people gather, at parks, festivals and other events.

To raise funds for the project, there will be a silent auction of artworks by collective members as well as a fabulous used book sale! Tea and snacks will be provided. Come to the EBA to learn about the project, get some great deals and chat with the artists. More information about the Bouquiniste Mobile is available on the project's website.

Thursday, April 26, 2018

Video Rental Store: Under New Management

I submitted a DVD copy of one of my videos, Testament (2005), to be included in the Knot Project Space (SAW Video) iteration of Su-Ying Lee and Suzanne Carte's project, Video Rental Store: Under New Management. The exhibition, from April 26 until June 9, 2018, takes the form of the increasingly and/or already obsolescent video rental store, featuring a growing inventory of over 250 artists' videos.


Video Rental Store: Under New Management at Knot Project Space. 
(Testament is 5th from top left.) Photo: Mathieu Rioux

Initiated in 2013, the project may outlast video stores themselves. The hand-lettered signs are a nice throwback to the type of sign that appeared at Honest Ed's in Toronto, another defunct business enterprise. Under New Management’s Video Store is a resolutely non-commercial venture that has a unique rental policy incorporating a pay-what-you-wish with what-you-wish program. The videos can be rented without a membership and are procured from artists through an open call for submissions. Watch for it when it appears in a neighborhood near you. 



Michael Davidge, Testament, 2005, digital video

Testament incorporates footage from the classic silent film The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928) directed by Carl Theodor Dreyer. The frame rate expands or contracts depending on whether it is a close-up or establishing shot, in an effort to generate tension and release in the viewer. It has a unique soundtrack, borrowed from the Crosby and Hope Road comedy, Road to Bali (1952). The use of this music was my nod to Antonin Artaud, who appears in the director's cut but who is otherwise absent from my edit of the film.

Monday, October 9, 2017

Writer-in-Residence at Est-Nord-Est

I was the Writer-in-Residence for the fall residency at Est-Nord-Est (ENE), an artist-run centre in Saint-Jean-Port-Joli, Quebec that hosts an international community of artists and authors in contemporary art. Situated in a small village on the south shore of the St. Lawrence River, the residency offers a great opportunity for artistic experimentation and research in a unique setting with a rich history.

ENE began with the idea of facilitating encounters between contemporary artists and the traditional artisans of the region, and now ENE welcomes contemporary visual-arts artists from all disciplines. It also encourages writing about contemporary art through its writer's residency. There are three residency periods, offered in the spring, summer, and fall, and they usually bring together four artists and one author in contemporary art. 

For my residency, the artists were: Jennifer Belair, a printmaker from Detroit; Sophie Jaillet, a conceptual artist from Montréal; Christoph Mügge, an installation artist from Malmö; and Céline Struger, a sculptor from Vienna. 


L-R: Sophie Jaillet, Jennifer Belair, Christoph Mügge, Céline Struger, Michael Davidge

During my time in Saint-Jean-Port Joli, I conducted studio visits with the artists-in-residence and prepared a text on the residency for a future issue of Est-Nord-Est's publication, Mémento. I was also working on my own research project, entitled “Further to an Aesthetic Education.” The project is an exploration of the relationship between aesthetics, education, and politics that takes Friedrich Schiller’s On the Aesthetic Education of Man as a source of inspiration. My residency ran from October 9 to November 3, 2017, and I gave an artist talk during the open house on the night of October 26, 2017.

Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Past Forward 50th Anniversary Alumni Exhibition

In the fall of 2017, the Department of Visual Arts at Western University is celebrating its 50th anniversary. As part of the occasion, the Artlab Gallery organized Past Forward, an alumni exhibition that included over 300 images and texts submitted by former students from the department's studio and art history programs.


Michael Davidge, Scylla and Charybdis, digital image, 2017.

As a graduate of the MFA program, I was invited to submit an image or a text that reflected my experience or memory of my time at Western. The work Scylla and Charybdis was my response. The exhibition runs from September 5 to September 29th, 2017, with a gala reception on Saturday, September 16th from 7 to 9 pm.

Friday, November 25, 2016

SKETCH Fundraiser for SAW Gallery 2016

I am happy to be participating in this year's SKETCH Fundraiser for SAW Gallery. I have donated one of the works from my Sticky Fingers series, "Hey Hey Now (Sway)," to the silent auction. It's the twelfth edition of SKETCH, Galerie SAW Gallery’s ever popular holiday fundraiser, with more than 150 participating artists. This year’s edition of SKETCH includes a spotlight on 1980s contemporary Inuit art, and signed photographic editions from Magnum Photos featuring artists from around the world.


Michael Davidge, Hey Hey Now (Sway), 2016, digital print.

All proceeds from this special edition of SKETCH will go toward Galerie SAW Gallery’s expansion within Arts Court in 2018. The new 15,000-square-foot SAW will include expanded galleries, a new international research and production space, a new archive and library, an expanded multidisciplinary venue and a renovated courtyard to accommodate festivals and screenings during the summer months. SKETCH is the first fundraiser that will kickstart the capital campaign for this transformative project. Since its inception in 1973, the artist-run centre Galerie SAW Gallery has supported politically and socially engaged art, focused on the performance and media arts. The expansion is an exciting new chapter in the gallery's long history as a catalyst for the arts in Ottawa. 

Thursday, September 8, 2016

Sticky Fingers

I was delighted to exhibit a new series of digital prints in an exhibition at the BLINK Gallery in Ottawa. Entitled Sticky Fingers, the prints are based on tracks from the legendary Rolling Stones record. Each print in the series is an unlikely collage juxtaposing images, colours and texts that I have sourced from internet searches using the title of each song on the Sticky Fingers album, from “Brown Sugar” to “Moonlight Mile.” The resulting compositions are fragmentary, displaying snatches of each song’s lyrics only to dislocate them from their original context and create artworks that are more abstract and ambiguous.


Michael Davidge, Cool Cool Hand (Sister Morphine), 2016, digital print.

The Rolling Stones copied the Blues to create their own music and I copied and pasted (digitally) from the Stones to create my own artworks, with knowing reference to the colloquial meaning of the phrase “Sticky Fingers.” The resulting series of prints participates in a long tradition of using popular music and pop culture to construct one’s identity. Each collage maker steals preexisting content and rearranges it to create something new that speaks with his or her own voice.

Saturday, January 23, 2016

"Letters for Juliet" in There's Room at Gallery 101

I was invited by the curator Petra Halkes to participate in the group exhibition There's Room at Gallery 101 in Ottawa, from 23 January to 27 February 2016. Prompted by the Syrian refugee crisis, the exhibition provides a place where people are invited to empathize, listen and talk to artists and viewers with vastly different life stories that are nonetheless connected by a memory of displacement and resettlement. The other artists in the exhibition include Asal El-Rayes, Zainab Hussain, Maria Gomez, Rachel Kalpana James, Farouk Kaspaules, Jaime Koebel, Zivana Kostic, Stephanie Marton, Jessie Raymond, Laura Taler, Mohamad Thiam, and Tavi Weisz.


Letters for Juliet (detail), Installation view, Gallery 101, 2016. Photo: Jennifer Covert

The work that I contributed to the exhibition, Letters for Juliet, is a text-based installation that quotes Elvis Costello’s song “Who Do You Think You Are?” from his 1993 album The Juliet Letters with the Brodsky Quartet. The quote “I kiss the air about the place that should be your face” is repurposed as graffiti for the context of the exhibition. A chain of associations, from global events to works of art like Romeo and Juliet, can be linked through the experiences of longing, loss and love that are meant to be underscored by the placement of the quote in the gallery.

I gave a speech on the occasion of the opening reception for the exhibition. The text for the speech ran approximately as follows:

Hello. I’m a little embarrassed to be standing before you right now, called up to give a performance at an opening for an exhibition of artworks made in response to the Syrian refugee crisis. It’s not that it wasn’t my idea, and it seemed like a good idea at the time. But it’s not really a performance so much as a story that I want to tell, and the story isn’t really about the Syrian refugee crisis. It has more to do with me and my own experience, which is far from that of a refugee. And I don’t even play a large role in the story.

Nevertheless, I’m going to tell you that I was walking in Montreal recently, going from point A to point B, when I realized that if I walked one block over, not really going out of my way but just slightly changing the path I was taking, I would walk right by the location of the Café Sarajevo, which I hadn’t been to for years.

In the early ‘90s, I was studying English Literature in Montreal, and the Café Sarajevo had just opened up around that time. A friend of mine got a job there as a waitress, and so my circle of friends and I would hang out there. It was a great place, with low comfortable couches and lots of cushions to relax in. The drink that I habitually ordered at the Café Sarajevo was a Pernod with orange juice, but that is another story.

Of course, right at this time the Bosnian War was taking place. The proprietor of the café, Osman, was from Bosnia, and so it became a kind of community and cultural centre for Bosnian refugees. Osman owned the whole building and he made an apartment on the second floor available to those who needed it. At the time, the café offered a welcoming atmosphere not only for me and for the Bosnian refugees, but also, incredibly, for the singer songwriter Rufus Wainwright, who could be heard caterwauling and playing the piano in there on a weekly basis.

It was around this time that I saw the film Ulysses’ Gaze at the Montreal World Film Festival. In it, the American actor Harvey Keitel plays a Greek filmmaker who travels to Sarajevo during the Bosnian War in order to look for a lost film that was made by the first Greek filmmakers at the beginning of the twentieth century. His journey is a long one, and so is the movie. Its running time of three hours feels even longer because of its slow pace and dreamy atmosphere. It encouraged me to behave as if I were on a long journey, and so during the course of the film, I wondered around the theatre, I went to the bathroom and the concession stand, and I took several naps. I would often wake up at some point in the movie where Harvey Keitel was waking up at another stop along his way.

One striking image that remained with me from that film is from a scene that shows a cargo ship slowly leaving a harbor. The deck of the ship is entirely filled with the jumbled, disassembled parts of a giant statue of Vladimir Lenin, his bald head facing and his index finger pointing onwards. It’s hard not to read this image as pointing to the break-up of the Soviet Union as being one of the causes of the Bosnian War.

I also remember seeing Harvey Keitel naked and crying in this film. Now, in the ’90s this was not a rare sight. You almost couldn’t go to see a film without having Harvey Keitel show up naked and crying. But it was always memorable, less so for his physique, which was formidable, but more so for the sounds that he made, which cannot be imitated. From the scene in Bad Lieutenant where he gently weeps, stoned and naked, to doo wop music, to other scenes with more fully throated keening. I cannot capture the quality myself. It is like the sound of a wounded animal. Harvey Keitel crying is actually now an internet meme, and there are many clips you can find online. You can even download an mp3 of Keitel crying and mix it into your Electronic Dance Music if you wish. Now, I tell you, Keitel’s tears are a wholly suitable response to the injustices of the era, if not those of today.

I felt like crying like Harvey Keitel when I arrived at the address of the Café Sarajevo. It was long gone. There were no visible signs that it had ever been there. The awning was gone and when I looked inside the door at the entrance, the space had been completely renovated and was now a shallow storefront where you might buy a cell phone. It was empty too. There were no cell phones. I began to doubt that I was even in the right place, but I scanned the street and my memories and I was sure of it. To my body it felt right. And it made me feel more deeply the sense that I had lost touch with most of the people that I knew from that time. Although a few had stayed in Montreal, most, like me, had moved on to other cities and are now scattered around the world.

I returned to Ottawa, and I was inspired to track down a DVD copy of Ulysses’ Gaze and watch it again. Although it was set in the present at the time, the film is a loose retelling of the Odyssey and Keitel’s character is supposed to be the mythic adventurer Ulysses or Odysseus. Though it was a complete coincidence, it was exactly 20 years since I had seen the film, the same length of time that it took Odysseus to return home to Ithaca after the Trojan Wars. It was also about the same amount of time since I had last been to the Café Sarajevo. Unlike Odysseus, who returned to find his wife Penelope still waiting for him after all that time, I had returned to the Café Sarajevo after twenty years to find it packed up and gone.

The odyssey that Harvey Keitel’s character undertakes has an even unhappier ending. Spoiler Alert: Everybody dies! He has returned to his homelands to find the lost film, and he does eventually find it in Sarajevo, but unfortunately, when he runs it through a projector, the image is lost. Just as I faced the façade of a building that was now unrecognizable to me, Keitel’s character, with tears streaming down his cheeks, watches a blank screen.

Seeing Ulysse’s Gaze again, another image is even more resonant for me now. When Keitel travels through the Balkans on his way to Sarajevo, he sees numerous refugees of the Bosnian war crossing the countryside. You could fade in to today’s news coverage of the refugees of the Syrian war traversing the same territory and the similarities would be strikingly uncanny. I suppose that one of the themes rehearsed by this story is that you can’t go back to the past, even though history seems to keep repeating itself. There is a slim ray of hope in the film however that suggests if the story were to be told again in a different way then it might have a different ending.

In a scene late in the film, the characters find that on a foggy day in Sarajevo, residents can come out in the streets without fear of being shot by a sniper. These days take on a festival-like atmosphere, with music and dancing. Local actors even put on a performance of William Shakespeare’s play Romeo and Juliet. Keitel watches as they run through the famous Balcony Scene, and his voiceover repeats the line “Parting is such sweet sorrow.”

There are so many memorable lines in the Balcony Scene, where the star-crossed youths first pledge their love to each other: “But soft what light through yonder window breaks? It is the east and Juliet is the sun.”; “Oh Romeo, Romeo, wherefore art though Romeo?...That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.”; “To be or not to be.” That is not the right quotation, but enough with the quotes already. They’re memorable. Perhaps the scene is so memorable because we want to remember the lovers this way, before they meet their tragic fate. And they keep talking in order to postpone the moment too. Finally they agree to meet the next morning at 9 o’clock. Juliet says she will not fail to do so “’tis twenty years till then” implying not only that it will feel like twenty years until that time but also that she would not fail to meet him even if the date set were twenty years later.

They meet and are secretly married by the Friar who hopes that by doing so he will end a long standing feud between Romeo and Juliet’s families. Of course, spoiler alert, it doesn’t end as they wish. Everybody dies! In a complicated turn of events Juliet takes a potion that makes it appear as if she is dead. The friar sends a letter to Romeo to tell him that Juliet is not really dead, but the letter never makes it to him. Of course, you know the rest of the story.

It is true that the fact that letters can go astray is responsible for the tragic end to Romeo and Juliet but it is also the reason why their story can be taken up and interpreted in so many different contexts across time, appearing in places that the author never imagined, like in Sarajevo during the Bosnian War. It is also the reason why I can take a quotation from The Juliet Letters by Elvis Costello and the Brodsky Quartet and place it in the context of an exhibition about the Syrian refugee crisis.


Letters for Juliet (detail), Installation view, Gallery 101, 2016. Photo: Jennifer Covert

I’ve painted the line “I kiss the air about the place / that should be your face” on the gallery’s walls. [The break indicates that the line is split into two sections, which are painted on separate walls at a distance from each other.] The quote is taken from the song “Who Do You Think You Are?” which is meant to be a reading of a postcard written by a lover who suffers cruelly from the absence of his loved one.

“Who Do You Think You Are?” is one song from an entire suite that takes its inspiration from the real “Juliet Letters” of Verona. Each song can be interpreted as being one of the countless letters that the lovelorn have actually addressed to the fictional Juliet, which often end up stuck to the walls of a courtyard in Verona where the Balcony Scene purportedly took place. What is extraordinary is that people write these letters knowing full well that Juliet cannot really answer them. Still they do it, with faith that their entreaties and their pledges will reach their rightful destinations.

In conclusion, I would just like to say that although the space between us is what makes it possible for letters to get lost on the way, it is also what makes it possible for us not only to make but also to keep promises. Thank you.

Saturday, November 2, 2013

The Artist Book Now!



My artist book Empirer is featured in the exhibition "The Artist Book Now" at La Fab - Chelsea Arts, Culture and Heritage Centre from the November 2nd to November 30th, 2013. Curated by Margit Hideg, the exhibition asks if the the Artist’s Book can evolve into the 21st century. It includes a kaleidoscope of works from all disciplines and mediums as well a community-based interactive installation.

Empirer is an unauthorized translation of Hardt and Negri’s Empire into Unicode text in a unique edition that binds in hardcover with gold text and red ribbon the printed text of a book made available in electronic form. Published at the turn of the new millennium, Empire is a work of political philosophy about the spread of globalization that was so popular at the time of its release it was allegedly hard to keep on the shelves at bookstores. I found a pdf version on-line that unfortunately was locked for printing. In my feeble attempts to “hack” and print the pdf, I generated a Unicode version of the text that gained in aesthetic appeal what it lost in meaning. It serves not only as a signifier for technology and its built-in obsolescence but also as a code book for cracking the mysterious global forces at work today.

In English, Empirer is the title of the book; In French, it is a verb, “to worsen.” Empire gets empirered.


Saturday, October 19, 2013

Happiness is...


I was both intimidated and honored by the fact that I performed as Happiness is... on the same bill with some of my favourite musicians in the Ensemble SuperMusique and Kingdom Shore for the 12th edition of Tone Deaf, Kingston, Ontario's Festival of Adventurous Sound Performance.

My Happiness Is... project takes inspiration from the Jeffersonian principle of "Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness," underscored by Hannah Arendt as happiness derived from participation in the public sphere. Happiness is... satisfies my desire for such participation through public performances in front of an audience as well as through dialogue with the source material I have selected for distortion and improvisation. Noise elements indicate my neurotic discontent with the status quo, yet register as a salvo of oppositional discourse in a performative dialectic inspired by the tradition of jazz.

For Tone Deaf 12, I highlighted the political dimension of my performance by taking as its source material Prime Minister Stephen Harper's performance of the Beatle's "With a Little Help from My Friends." Through music, political antagonism is shifted to the field of agonism or play.

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Pilgrimages Redux


Vincent Perez and I, working collaboratively under the name Catalog, presented “Pilgrimages Redux,” an illustrated tour of our respective pilgrimages to Mount Rushmore and Santiago de Compostela. Through spoken word and printed matter, this performance reflects a dialogue about our travels and the themes which drove our pilgrimages in the first place: curiousity, community, communication and context.

Following “Pilgrimages Redux,” Laura Kelly orchestrated another edition of the “Mouthy” series, an open-mic session inviting speakers and audience members alike to share short personal stories. The theme for this edition was "journeys." In the era of global travel, we all have a tale to tell.

The free event was presented in conjunction with the exhibition “Déjà déjà visité: Mike Bayne, Jocelyn Purdie, Maayke Schurer,” curated by Sunny Kerr at the Agnes Etherington Art Centre in Kingston, Ontario as part of Culture Days. Light refreshments were provided.

A podcast of the event is available online.



Sunday, November 4, 2012

Like a Flame



One of the Tone Deaf organizers, Neven Lochhead, put together another interstellar line-up of local Kingston noisemakers just in time to be released in cassette form on the last night of the festival.  Entitled No One Turned Away / No Guest List it also lives on the internet here should you not have been able to pick up a tape. The fabulous artwork on the cover is by Elizabeth Johnson.

I was happy to be able to contribute a track entitled "Like a Flame" under the name Happiness is... for the compilation.  Neven describes it so:  "This is the oddity project of Michael Davidge, artistic director of Modern Fuel for many years. Seeing Happiness is... live is always an unpredictable experience - last time he played the balloon for about 10 minutes." Check out and download the track here.

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Elrond Lives!


I will be presenting my work, and a related presentation, entitled "Elrond Lives," at the opening reception for the "Princess Towers Notions" Exhibition at the Artel on August 16, 2012.  Information about the exhibit is as follows:

Exhibition Opening Reception
August 16, 8pm
Featuring a performance work by Michael Davidge
The Artel
205 Sydenham St.

Kingston, Ontario

The Princess Towers Notions Group presents an exhibition that engages with the question, "What is to be done with Princess Towers?" It features new works by artists who have created improvements to, fantastical re-imaginings of, or other responses to the 16-storey brick and concrete anomaly, "Kingston's tallest." The exhibition will be on view from August 11th until September 1st. Gallery hours: Thursday to Sunday 12pm-4pm

Artists:

Jeff Barbeau
Michael Davidge
Decomposing Pianos
Christine Dewancker
Megan Hughes
Sunny Kerr
Cedric Le Floch
Neven Lochhead
Josh Lyon
Marc Piccinato
Milosh Rodic
Matt Rogalsky
Heather Smith
and others


The Princess Towers Notions Group is a small group of Kingston artists investigating the contemporary meanings of the building and its compelling legacy. Current members include Jeff Barbeau, Ben Darrah, Michael Davidge, Christine Dewancker, Sunny Kerr, Matt Rogalsky, and Su Sheedy. 

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Pretty Vacancy at Silver Platter


This summer "Pretty Vacancy" is installed at Robert Hengeveld's Silver Platter Contemporary Art Projects.  When in Toronto, stop by 34 Silver Ave. and look up at the roof.  "Pretty Vacancy" will be up there all season (save rainy days).  And summer will be over before we know it!

Each exhibition of the sign establishes a new context for it, and a new spin. Check out the previous installations, when it was exhibited at the Swamp Ward Window, at the Art Gallery of Peterborough, and the Verb Gallery.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Pretty Vacancy in the Swamp Ward Window


As part of the Art in Public Places Kingston project (APP Kingston) curated by the xcurated collective, "Pretty Vacancy" is on display in the Swamp Ward Window (448 Bagot Street) from May 12th until June 8th, 2012. (Information about the Swamp Ward Window project can be found on its website.)


APP Kingston consists of six thematically related visual art installations in public spaces across the city of Kingston. Each installation is situated in a different space throughout the city creating a unique context for each work of art. The project consists of three locally-based artists (Catherine Toews, Shayne Dark, and me) and four artists from outside of Kingston (Steven Laurie, Robert Hengeveld, and Millie Chen and Warren Quigley.)  The intention of this project is to stimulate discussion about the role of the visual arts and creativity in civic development, while enriching and expanding Kingstonians understanding of public art in all its forms, and through these efforts, to contribute to the development of a successful and viable public art policy in Kingston. More information is available on xcurated's website.


The curators of xcurated (Matthew Hills, Jocelyn Purdie, and Riva Symko) provided the following interpretive text about "Pretty Vacancy":



Kingston-based artist Michael Davidge’s Pretty Vacancy, directly references two things: the 1977 song, “Pretty Vacant” by seminal punk rock band, the Sex Pistols, and the ubiquitous neon (NO)VACANCY signs of roadside motels. While the former inflicts raucous snarls about political unease, recessionary poverty, and youthful unrest, the latter symbolizes a safe place for physical relief from the stress of the highway, and a temporary vacation from the realities of home and working life. Both, however, contain an underlying current of anxiety. The kind of cultural anxiety that has become apparent with the past few decades worth of rapid growth in spectacular capitalism – some might say at the expense of spiritual or intellectual reflection. And the kind of personal anxiety that is present when facing the uncanny strangeness of a blank motel room – like a mixture of the Bates Motel from Hitchcock’s Psycho (1960) and the sterile luxury of a Hilton. Residing somewhere between these two currents, lies Davidge’s desire to captivate and confuse us with his puzzling – and pulsing – textual game.
Davidge’s use of neon is certainly not without precedent. In fact, it has proven to be an attractive and compelling medium for a substantially large number of contemporary artists (including Bruce Nauman and Ron Terada among many others). Perhaps it is that neon is a surprisingly complicated and dialectical substance, which makes it so artistically seductive. Indeed, it can appear both retro and futuristic, it can be tongue-in-cheek but it can serve as a serious mode of communication, it is impossible to ignore and yet it is also an invisible part of our everyday urban-scape. When placed in the context of this otherwise quiet, residential neighborhood in Kingston’s Swamp Ward, is neon an obnoxious imposition or an amusing curiosity?

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Pretty Vacancy at the AGP


Okay, so, "Pretty Vacancy" is at the Art Gallery of Peterborough until April 29 as part of the AGP's inaugural Triennial Exhibition which opened March 9 with a reception on the 11th. My Uncle Mark and Aunt Jacqui came to see it. There is a downloadable exhibition catalogue. The link can be found here.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

The square root of Vexations to the power of three


Members of the SouB? ensemble (Left to Right: James Goddard, Kristiana Clemens, and Michael Davidge) perform Michael Davidge's arrangement of Erik Satie's "Vexations" for alto saxophones (left and right) and turntables at the Union Gallery in Kingston, Ontario on 18 May 2011.  Link to article in the Queen's Journal.

The performance was broadcast on CFRC community radio during the radio programme "Kingston Staged" on Thursday May 26th 2011 at 1pm, or 1300 hours, you know?  Link to CFRC programming archive.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Pretty Vacancy at Verb Gallery February 2011


The exhibition "Pretty Vacancy" ran from the 12th to the 28th of February, 2011, at the Verb Gallery in Kingston, Ontario.  A reception was held from 5:00pm to 7:00pm on Friday, February 25th, during which Michael Davidge made the following remarks:

“Hello Everybody,

Thanks for coming out tonight.  I promised to make some remarks about my work around 6 o’clock and now the time has come, so here they are:

First of all, I’d like to apologize to anyone here who is expecting me to cut myself.  At one point I was promising people that as part of this talk there would be some blood let, and it was going to be mine.  Unless someone here attacks me, it isn’t going to happen.  And let me be clear, I don’t want you to attack me.

Rather, I would like you to hear me out.  Now, it is conventional for artists to give talks at art galleries and openings in order to give people a better idea about what their work is about.  And I am here to do that for you, hopefully.  However, I was thinking that the talk could also be a part of the work, or a work in its own right.  That the piece (what there is here, simply, a neon sign) could create an occasion for the work of the talk to take place.  That the physical work itself could be a speech act that effected the talk.  Like the concept of performativity in J.L. Austin’s How to Do Things with Words, whereby language is a particular practice that can effect a concrete change on the state of affairs in the world.  Like a priest who would be invested with the power to say “I now pronounce you man and wife,” only more like, “I now pronounce you work of art and artist.”

Maybe it would make a little more sense if I provided you with some background to the piece, “Pretty Vacancy.” It is really, simply, one thing: a variation on the title of a punk rock song by the Sex Pistols, “Pretty Vacant.”  Well, two things, because it is also a vacancy sign.  It is a marriage of the Sex Pistols’ song with a vacancy sign.  And this marriage has engendered this talk that I promised to do. (Or is it the other way around?)  At any rate, I promised to do this talk, effecting a kind of contract in which hopefully my word would be my bond.  

Did I promise that I was going to cut myself?  Why would I do that?  It has something to do with history, and here, now, with the history of punk rock.  In 1991, the lead singer of the Manic Street Preachers, Richey Edwards, when accused of being a poseur and not authentically punk enough, this lead singer, in front of the interviewer who had challenged him, took a razor bland and carved “4 Real” into his forearm.  Edwards had to be rushed to the hospital.  He wrote himself into punk rock history with that razor blade.  And then he disappeared, but I won’t get into that.  I’ll get back to me and my motivations, which by analogy, would be to prove my seriousness, to make a claim for my legitimacy, and write myself into history.  But what history? The history of Punk, of Performance Art, of Visual Art, of Writing?  I’m certainly not a punk.

In its heyday, I was too young for it, as the years passed, I was too out of it.  Punk has always been something on the periphery of my life.  I heard about it.  I knew about it.  I knew some people who were into it.  But I was not it.  My earliest memory of punk is when I was seven years old.  If I remember correctly, I was in the backseat of my parents’ car, with my sister.  My dad was driving and my mom was in the passenger seat.  We were going over the newly constructed Fort Garry Bridge.  It was a bright sunny day.  My stomach was a little sour because my dad regularly smoked in the car, so it smelled like an ashtray.  Plus, I was reading a newspaper, and reading in a moving vehicle always makes me queasy.  I was reading the music charts, and I remember reading that in the top ten there was a band named the Sex Pistols.  I thought this was hilarious, that that name of the band was a joke, and that it must be some kind of a put-on.
I also remember, around this time, watching Dick Clark’s Rockin’ New Year’s Eve with my sister (who is two years older than me and that much more sophisticated) and seeing David Bowie performing “A Space Oddity.”  Again, we thought it was hilarious and weird.  I remember my sister saying, “He must be on drugs!”  Every performer that we thought was a little weird or offbeat, we would always assume was on drugs.  We didn’t really know all that much about drugs at that time except that weirdos like David Bowie must use them.  And of course, we were right.

There was another time a few years later that I was riding in the back seat of a car, my aunt and uncle’s, in downtown Toronto, and I remember my younger cousin Christopher wildly gesticulating and laughing and pointing at a punk with a Mohawk haircut, and my Aunt Judy crying out, “Christopher, you lock your door right now!”  Of course, Christopher grew up to be a hard-core punk musician.

I suppose what is remarkable about the Sex Pistols and David Bowie [whom we might more properly refer to as the glam-father of punk] and the punk with the Mohawk in Toronto is that they made themselves deliberately different to stand apart from the crowd.  At that time, and maybe ever since, I’ve paid more attention to and identified more with less flamboyant characters, regular guys or anti-heros, like Howard the Duck, for example, a comic book character accidentally transported from his duck planet to find himself on Earth. (The tagline from the comic was “Trapped in a World He Never Made.”)  Howard just wanted to deal with it, make his way, make a living (he drove a taxi-cab), stay out of trouble, but because he was different (he was a walking, talking, cigar-smoking, taxi-driving duck after all) he was always getting pulled into trouble.

So, I never really felt like Punk was of my time, or I was of the time of punk.  I always felt more like I was out of time and place, like Howard the Duck.  And yet, the spirit of Punk does speak to me: As the lyrics for the song “Pretty Vacant” go: “You’ll always find us, out to lunch.”  I love going out to lunch. Of course, out to lunch means more than that: it means being on drugs, not working, being spaced out, out of step, out of time and place, daydreaming.  By extension, I think that art is out to lunch.  

You’ll note that the light from the “Pretty Vacancy” sign is really the only light that is illuminating the space in here.  It’s meant to focus your attention on the sign, but also on the space that it is in, and that all the surfaces that the light touches comprise the Pretty Vacancy.  The Pretty Vacancy is a place where you can come to be out to lunch.  So, by picking up on a Sex Pistols’ phrase and redeploying it, I’m hoping in some way to carry on its tradition, much like Richey Edwards with the text he wrote on his arm.  But whereas he was trying to cut right through and connect right back to the authentic source and make a direct link to be fully present, really real, my quotation places more emphasis on the spacing between the two instances, establishing their difference.  All text contains and creates a space between words and worlds, which the reader can inhabit, particularly in the margins. The margins are ideally suited for addenda or graffiti, interpretive or interpolative scrawls.  And the space illuminated by the Pretty Vacancy sign has led me to append one more word to my talk [I crossed the room and said it as I wrote it on the wall opposite with the pen from the guest book]:

Ballocks!”
 

Friday, February 4, 2011

Michael Davidge awarded Nan Yeomans Grant 2011


Michael Davidge, as the winner of the 2011 Nan Yeomans Grant, was asked to give a presentation at the Kingston Arts Council's Pecha Kucha event at The Artel in Kingston, Ontario, 4 February 2011.  Link to the Pecha Kucha presentation uploaded by the Kingston Arts Council. 

Or, watch it here:

Friday, December 17, 2010

Hello.


This entry marks the moment when I first created this blog, and all entries past and future emanate from this point.  The image is of what I consider to be my self-portrait, "Golem" from 2006.  It is a slide transparency that can be and has been projected at various scales.  The title, and text on my forehead, is taken from the story of the Golem from Prague, a kind of Frankenstein monster created by a rabbi out of mud and brought to life.  To deactivate the Golem, the rabbi rubbed out the first letter of the word "emet," meaning truth or reality, from the creature's forehead, leaving the Hebrew word "met," meaning dead.  The midrash explains that "emet" is made up of the first, middle, and last letters of the Hebrew alphabet (Aleph, Mem, and Tav: אמת).  Thus, truth is all-encompassing.