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the Roberts Institute of Art - Joe Hill

Joe Hill

06/23/20 • 42 min

the Roberts Institute of Art

DRAF Broadcasts: Podcast with Joe Hill

What does it mean to have a "living collection", or use stories from an art collection to form societies that are forward-looking? These are the types of questions Joe Hill is asking since taking the helm of Towner Eastbourne (9:55).

Towner Eastbourne has a rich history and eclectic collection. It has been shaped throughout the 20th century by artists and curators and as such has always been contemporary, tracking the contemporary as it has moved along for 100 years (from 6:04).

Hill and McConnell also discuss the importance of collaboration and turning the museum into a more communal, friendly and social space, reflecting on what role the collection and new acquisitions play within this (from 14:30).

BIO

Originally trained as an artist, Joe Hill has over ten years experience working as a director, curator and project coordinator for visual arts organisations, public commissioning and working directly with artists. Prior to his appointment at Towner Eastbourne he was Director of Focal Point Gallery in Southend-on-Sea between 2013- 2018.

townereastbourne.org.uk

If you're interested to hear more about curating, audiences and collections, be sure to listen to Episode 3 of the DRAF Broadcasts: Podcast, where Ned McConnell talks with Laura Smith, Curator at Whitechapel Gallery.

Have questions, comments or want to see more of what DRAF does? Reach us via davidrobertsartfoundation.com, @draf_art and subscribe to our newsletter!

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DRAF Broadcasts: Podcast with Joe Hill

What does it mean to have a "living collection", or use stories from an art collection to form societies that are forward-looking? These are the types of questions Joe Hill is asking since taking the helm of Towner Eastbourne (9:55).

Towner Eastbourne has a rich history and eclectic collection. It has been shaped throughout the 20th century by artists and curators and as such has always been contemporary, tracking the contemporary as it has moved along for 100 years (from 6:04).

Hill and McConnell also discuss the importance of collaboration and turning the museum into a more communal, friendly and social space, reflecting on what role the collection and new acquisitions play within this (from 14:30).

BIO

Originally trained as an artist, Joe Hill has over ten years experience working as a director, curator and project coordinator for visual arts organisations, public commissioning and working directly with artists. Prior to his appointment at Towner Eastbourne he was Director of Focal Point Gallery in Southend-on-Sea between 2013- 2018.

townereastbourne.org.uk

If you're interested to hear more about curating, audiences and collections, be sure to listen to Episode 3 of the DRAF Broadcasts: Podcast, where Ned McConnell talks with Laura Smith, Curator at Whitechapel Gallery.

Have questions, comments or want to see more of what DRAF does? Reach us via davidrobertsartfoundation.com, @draf_art and subscribe to our newsletter!

Previous Episode

undefined - Lina Lapelytė

Lina Lapelytė

DRAF Broadcasts: Podcast with Lina Lapelytė

Lina Lapelytė and Ned McConnell were supposed to meet for an Artist Talk at DRAF on 18 March 2020, which was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Following this, the podcast is a space to initially reflect on the immense changes to making, presenting, or thinking about art during lockdown. It has changed time management and pace, as well as underscoring the importance of touring and re-staging large performance works. The pair also discuss the performance that was planned for Glasgow International - similarly postponed due to the ongoing health crisis.

Lapelytė, together with collaborators Vaiva Grainytė (libretto) and Rugilė Barzdžiukaitė (director), composed an opera called Sun & Sea (Marina). This was their second collaboration together, after Have a Good Day!, created between 2011 and 2013 which still tours today. Sun & Sea (Marina) was presented at the Lithuanian pavilion during the 2019 Venice Biennale, in a project curated by Lucia Pietroiusti, and won the Golden Lion for best pavilion, one of the festival's top two awards.

Taking this big project as a departure point, McConnell and Lapelytė trace her practice back through earlier operatic and music-based works such as Have A Good Day! and Candy Shop. Often working with non-classically trained performers, composed music and visual art elements, Lapelytė asserts that staging “improvised music can be like abstract painting”, whilst making an opera equates to other kinds of painting (21:01).

BIO

Lina Lapelytė (b.1984, Lithuania) is an artist living and working in London and Vilnius. She holds a BA in classical violin (2006), BA in Sound Arts (2009) and MA in Sculpture from the Royal College of Art, London (2013). Her performance-based practice is rooted in music and flirts with pop culture, gender stereotypes, aging and nostalgia. Throughout her artistic career, Lapelytė has explored various forms of performativity, crossing genre boundaries while entwining folk rituals with popular music and opera formats, frequently using stylized expression, grotesque and conceptual musicality.

linalapelyte.com

Have questions, comments or want to see more of what DRAF does? Reach us via davidrobertsartfoundation.com, @draf_art and subscribe to our newsletter!

Next Episode

undefined - Laura Smith

Laura Smith

DRAF Broadcasts: Podcast with Laura Smith

Having worked as a Curator at Tate St Ives for many years before moving to Whitechapel Gallery, Laura Smith has a good understanding of the benefits of building relationships with local audiences. Her curatorial approach is one that foregrounds good social relations between everyone involved in making, hanging and experiencing an exhibition. Collaboration and shared experience are important to her, as it is through creating this sense of community and trust that you can really challenge audiences (from 8:33).

As Smith states; "If we can care for each other, it makes the making of that exhibition a positive experience for everybody with vital and beneficial conversations, rather than a stressful encounter" (28:32).

David Roberts Art Foundation works with the David Roberts Collection, currently through collaboration and partnerships with institutions around the UK. In part, it was due to Whitechapel Gallery having a ten year history of hosting external collections, ranging from public, private, to corporate, and Smith’s experience of working with the Tate Collection that led to her being invited on this podcast. She discusses various approaches to working with collections, including how it can open up research, the importance of bringing works that don’t usually get shown into the public focus, commissioning short stories in response to a collection's narrative or working with guest selectors (from 20:48).

BIO

Laura Smith was appointed Curator of Whitechapel Gallery in February 2018, where, among others, she has worked on the first UK survey show for Elmgreen & Dragset and with Helen Cammock, who won the 2017-19 Max Mara Art Prize for Women and was a co-winner of the 2019 Turner Prize. Prior to the Whitechapel Gallery, Laura was Curator at Tate St Ives, where she was responsible for a series of international historic and contemporary projects by artists including Rebecca Warren, Jessica Warboys, Linder, Marlow Moss, R.H. Quaytman, Bridget Riley, Lucy Stein, Nashashibi/Skaer, as well as group exhibitions such as Virginia Woolf: An Exhibition Inspired by Her Writings (2018), Turner Prize 2016 (2016) and Images Moving Out onto Space (2015).

Laura writes extensively on modern and contemporary art. Most recently she has contributed a chapter to Oxford University Press' Virginia Woolf Reader on Woolf's influence on the visual arts, an essay on Lisa Brice to accompany her solo exhibition at Stephen Friedman Gallery, and a forthcoming monograph on Eileen Agar - soon to be published by Eiderdown Books.

Want to hear more? Be sure to give Episode 2 of the DRAF Broadcasts: Podcast as listen, where Joe Hill, Director of Towner Eastbourne, has been invited to talk about approaches to working with a collection, and turning the museum into a more social space.

Have questions, comments or want to see more of what DRAF does? Reach us via davidrobertsartfoundation.com, @draf_art and subscribe to our newsletter!

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