Friday 22 May 2009

Hungry Pigeon festival

The Northern Quarter in Manchester is becoming known for its cool bars, quirky fashion and serious music shops. It treads a fine line of respectability with its fair share of adult shops and old school pubs with guys who are there waiting at the door come opening time. It reminds me of Kings Cross in Sydney. It's a place where backpackers and tourists mix with prostitutes and drug pushers. It's a red light district where the Mcdonalds sits next to a lap dancing bar. Smut sits next to mainstream without anyone blinking a disbelieving eye. You may assume that this would make the place unsafe, but you would be wrong. The area mooch gallery occupies isn't anywhere as "Red" as that, but it has that feel.

The northern quarter is cool, its quirky but in some places bizarre and a little intimidating. It shows that people are prepared to turn away from the homogenisation of the high street. Perhaps more now than ever. I lived in the northern quarter so knew of its resurgence. The streets we moved into 8 years ago were derelict and have now been filled so that its the nightlife centre of the whole city. Sunday morning used to be quieter than a remote cottage in the highlands. Quieter in fact because there was no wildlife.

More luck than judgement has been responsible for the area leading the Mancunian cultural scene. The creativity and ideas aren't a result of hours of planning and council funding. In fact its precisely the opposite. An untended garden will flourish with wildlife without any planting, pruning, watering or fertilising. Maybe the best strategy is to just let things be, watch it grow.
Most people didn't give a monkeys about the area until some young businesses decided to take advantage of cheap rents and start injecting some colour and vibrancy into long forgotten buildings. So its a chance occurrence. A result of low barriers and free thinking, of plucky business owners and broad minded customers. Yes there has been key investment from property companies like Crosby and Urban Splash, but this hasn't given the area its character and it hasn't contributed to its soul.

A couple of key players are really going to put the Northern Quarter on the map . The arts council are building their head office on the adjacent road to Mooch taking 18,000 sq ft of the Hive building. Band on the wall are renovating the fabulous building that was the cornerstone of the punk scene in the late 70s and was where the buzzcocks, the fall and joy division first played. It is due to open September this year. These developments are part of a £30 million masterplan to turn the area into London's Camden locks. Manchester's Camden locks needed something to promote and celebrate the good stuff.

The Hungry Pigeon festival is the start of an annual celebration of art, music and cultural shenanigans. From 22nd - 25th May there were over 200 bands playing, dozens of events, the biggest staged in Piccadilly gardens on Saturday. I went along and the sun was shining, thousands of people were basking in a festival atmosphere. The organisers rolled the dice on banking on a good day and came out with a double six. It was perfect, and hats of to them for a well organised event. I had wondered whether there would be trashy music that makes me feel old and baffled at what "the kids" listen to nowadays. I was pleasantly surprised and thought that the unsigned bands I heard were actually something I could recognise and actually like. Like the Northern Quarter in general, the festival will only get bigger and better and that's great news for galleries like mooch.

Friday 1 May 2009

Art Critics. Worth their salt?


I really don't think I could be an artist. I could possibly gain some skills in applying paint to a canvas but that isn't what makes me want to stay on the other side of the creative spectrum.
What other job can you do where you work for years only for someone to judge your life and career in 3 seconds. The lives of many a creative are in perpetual turmoil resulting from ecstatic praise or crushing criticism. Sometimes fragile egos take a battering from the casual curt comment.
I have massive respect for these artists for who the vast majority, do it because they love it rather than for financial gain. To articulate their imagination as art is a process that fascinates me.
Thalia Allington-Wood has written a review of the opening of Mooch Art and Revolve Gallery in the triangle. Click Here. Generally positive but one of Revolve galleries artists received some criticism which is highlighted as all journos are adept at doing.
The question is whether art criticism can be constructive given the subjective nature. Can someone telling you they don't like Marmite be of any benefit to people who haven't tried it but love a tasty, nutritious, salty spread on their toast (My cheques in the post).
My feeling is that everyone's opinion is valid and the only way the gallery will get better is with feedback. I have mentioned in a previous blog that browsers who are positive about everything leave me a little lost. Smoke blowing or fence sitters are terrible for galleries especially if an artist isn't selling. Perhaps the worst criticism would be apathy, if people came to the gallery cocked their head to one side and sighed at how mundane it all was then I haven't done my job properly.
So art critics are needed just as all other customer feedback is needed. They are worth their salt but just take their comments with a pinch of it.

Just read a great article in the guardian by Jonathan Jones see below.
CLICK HERE