- bla bla bla (21)
- 28/08/2009: baby smith - the dada song
- 22/08/2009: busy, busy, busy...
- 29/07/2009: Trash Vortex at Hackney Wicked
- 04/07/2009: eye candy at transition gallery
- 19/06/2009: the blank canvas project
- 06/06/2009: let the chips fall where they may...
- 24/05/2009: upcoming: vauxhall art car boot fair
- 20/05/2009: amuse bouche at the two jonnys
- 04/05/2009: oysters ain't - V22Presents: the sculpture show
- 02/05/2009: breakfast of champions
art blogs
- a painting a day
- absent without leave
- anonymous female artist
- art & photography blog
- art in liverpool blog
- art moco
- artblog
- burn your eyes clean
- carol's bloggie
- cathy lomax
- contourism
- curiosity collective
- diary of an art pimp
- edward winkleman
- fadblog - the new one
- fadblog - the old one
- fallon & rosof
- fresh paint
- golgonooza
- happy famous artists
- i photograph stuff
- if you can say it why paint it
- kerblog
- kristin posehn
- live art bites
- marja-leena- athje
- mick mathers' art blog
- modern art obsession
- mtaa-rr
- new art
- new images
- newsgrist
- nyc art
- paintings from the street
- PakPark
- perhaps solitude
- russell herron's blog
- sarah doyle's blog
- simpleposie
- square zero
- stephen art-east
- studio bbq
- stunned
- the art life
- thinking about art
- tintype
artists
- alexander stevenson
- ali wong
- allan McCollum
- amanda dumas-hernandez
- annie kevans
- baby smith
- bill viola
- bobbi studstill
- brad downey
- brent owens
- bunny mazhari
- carlos cortes
- charlesworth lewandowski & mann
- chris meigh-andrews
- claire morgan
- corey eiseman
- cornelia parker
- craig atkinson
- daryl waller
- david johnson
- david shillinglaw
- eric deis
- ettie spencer
- eva andree laramee
- franklin einspruch
- fuisable front
- gorden cheung
- gordon faulds
- ivy ma
- jack harris
- james acord
- jen southern
- jennifer dalton
- joanne lee
- jonathan lockwood
- jorunn maeland
- joy garnett
- jun-me yoon
- juno doran
- kam lai-wan
- kathryn cooper
- kes richardson
- kevin osmond
- kwan sheung chi
- lance wakeling
- lars vilhelmsen
- laura frame
- Mazen Kerbaj
design & graphics
eat, drink and be merry
galleries - further afield
galleries - london
music & sound
online arts listings
other artie fartie stuff
- beyond brilliance beyond stupidity
- derelict london
- douwe osinga - net wizard
- europe for president 2008
- eyebeam
- fallen fruit
- generator x
- hayvend
- heavy trash
- how scandinavian of me
- no more problems
- peckham pet-tastic
- postmodern thought (all you need to know)
- scan
- share your country
- the annual group photograph
- theory.org
peeps & biz
random stuff i like
zine & printed page
- all this is mine
- an magazine
- anxiety culture
- artwords
- arty
- bookart bookshop
- border crossings
- brag
- cafe royal
- creature mag
- donlon books
- eccentric city
- footprint workers co-operative
- found magazine
- grrl zine network
- is not magazine
- leisure centre
- mailout
- milk two sugars
- mustard
- runway magazine
- smoke - a london peculiar
- sticky institute
- the citizen
- the critical friend
- the pavement
- the quiet feather
- the type museum
- things magazine
- zone zero
ivan pope - ‘bound’ at grey area
Ivan Pope is having a solo show, ‘Bound’, at the Grey Area Gallery in Brighton - opening is tomorrow evening and there will be an artist talk on Sat 3 April at 7.30pm. Worth going if you are in the area and a nice excuse to visit Brighton if you aren’t.
He also has an excellent post on his blog regarding the rather prickly issue of artists not being paid a living wage. I have strong feelings about this and have had it on my mind for quite some time now. In the UK it seems that it’s assumed, more often than not, that artists are quite happy to work for free. Not so! As an example, look on the ACE jobs board - you can count on one hand the jobs that actually offer a wage, never mind a living wage. It’s pathetic and it takes the piss, and shame on ACE for promoting this. Artists are viable cultural producers. As a profession, we contribute a lot to our communities and we should not be expected to wait tables and work at Tesco in order to survive and then ‘do the art for love alone’. Any other profession would laugh at the prospect of being expected to work for free or worse, to have to actually PAY someone in order to be able to do your job.
I was talking with an old friend about this the other day over coffee. He shows work quite a lot in Europe and was remarking on how differently the Europeans treat artists and what a pleasure it was to work over there. It’s a respected profession and one of the things he commented on was the fact that the artists themselves assumed this about themselves and their work. We should take a leaf out of that book.
Perhaps we are our own worst enemies - perhaps we need to have a bit more self-respect and develop a bit more backbone. After all, if we don’t believe in our own worth in terms of what we offer and what we produce, why would anyone else? Something to consider anyway.