Each summer
the creative energy that seems to hum through the Stroud Valleys
is given form in the shape of the site festival. As the festival
grows so it broadens its scope, increasingly bringing artists here
to Stroud to participate, endorsing these valleys as a place of real
artistic vitality. In 2008 there is more than ever to enjoy and take
part in.
For many of us, the site festival is anticipated as our once-a-year
chance to go to the Open Studios, and this summer over a hundred
artists are participating, by far the largest number yet. The concept
of open studios is a familiar and popular one. The open studio provides
a glimpse into working lives that are often hidden from view, behind
closed studio doors, in workshops and sheds, at kitchen tables. As
it approaches the artist calls a temporary halt to normal life, clears
and spruces up their workspace, decides what they wish their public
to see, labels, prices and displays the work. Then doors are flung
back to all curious or casual visitors, and we get to see where they
work, what they make, and to talk to them about it. We might even feel
enticed to buy or commission something, with all the pleasure of dealing
directly with the artists themself. In return, the artist can show
and sell their work, make new contacts, get valued feedback, before
returning to their solitary toil. But if we look a bit more closely
at what site08 opens up for us, we get a far more comprehensive, rounded
and sustained insight into the real working practice of making art,
an activity that goes on around us throughout the year and has real
value.
We see how artists on placement at Gloucester Royal Hospital bring
to light the daily behind-the-scenes work of staff there, and the value
of bringing art into such environments for staff, for patients and
their visitors.
Artists working from and with the landscape invite us to participate
and consider its role in our lives. This not only reflects Stroud’s
geographic and historic location, but also links a traditional genre
to wider current debates about the role and future of green spaces.
Artists working in local schools show our children that art can be
serious fun, that everyone can get involved, and The Carnival procession
will be a celebration of their exuberant creativity.
The site08 darbyshire award supports the work of contemporary
artists and will bring exhibitors from across the country to show their
work here. Darbyshire’s is involved with the contemporary art
market at the highest level, with production based here in the Stroud
valleys. The award-winning artist will be able to draw on the company’s
expertise and services, culminating in their own exhibition.
We can see the role artists have in showing us what might otherwise
remain hidden, or unexpressed. Art is about communication, another
viewpoint, looking again, seeing for the first time. What is that worth?
Crucial to any thriving artistic community is their participation in
the broader context of life beyond the studio, as is amply demonstrated
by site08. But behind this, there is also the role artists play in
supporting each other’s practice, discussing and challenging,
taking their work forwards. This too is a vital part of the festival’s
activities, the talks and discussions being the clearest example, but
site08 also offers chances for artists to collaborate, develop specific
projects and stretch themselves.
The site festival happens because of the vision and energy of an extraordinary
artist-led organisation, based at Stroud Valleys Artspace (SVA).
Year round it offers support to artists, promotes challenging projects,
forges links nationally and internationally, hosts a programme of diverse
events, invites discussion and debate. This summer’s site08 programme
may lay claim to being the most exciting and ambitious they have yet
organised, and one that a much larger, national arts organisation could
be proud of.
I believe site08 offers a model of how artists can support
creative activity, how they contribute to the life of our communities,
and sustain the vibrant contemporary arts for which this country is
justly known. This is what marks out site08 as far more than simply
a celebration of local talent. And Stroud is a far from ordinary local
town.
Jean Boyd Artist and Lecturer at the University
of Gloucestershire |
|