Recently I was at a CreativeSydney debate. It was apart of Vivid and held at the Museum of Contemporary Art. The debate question was: Is Sydney pricing creativity out of the picture?
One of the concerns was the difficulty of obtaining studio and/or gallery space. Partly due to expense, location (many of the ‘places’ are concentrate in the city and displace artists from their communities), and even if you did have such a space no audience (Sydney: GO! VIEW! ART!)
Some of the solutions bandied about were: property owners loan your property/retail space to artists on temporary basis (artists promise they won’t become squatters and never leave); have local artists showcasing in their local communities, and pitching to their local community. Success doesn’t mean 2000 people coming to view your exhibition or piece. Aim to reach people on your street, your neighbours! The panelists in the debate even suggested that more churches need to be transformed into art space.
I thought this was a) a snide comment of the panels opinion that churches are a dying, they are wasted space, only being used on a Sunday and could serve local communities better than just preaching a sermon on Sundays! and b) a great encouragement to the endeavors our church and others like York St Anglican Church are doing with art!
York St recently had a festival in their church. Here is a snapshot comment from Jenny Ihn on using church space as an art space.
Unlike contemporary white gallery spaces, we did not have a space that primarily existed ‘for’ the Art. We had, if you like, a ‘historic space loaded with memories of the past’.
Read more of Jenny’s reflections here
Related articles
- Our Churches Are The Proof Of The Gospel (via Brister & Dever) (mgpcpastor.wordpress.com)
- Artists reveal their private spaces at M Gallery invitational show (charlestoncitypaper.com)

June 22, 2011

