Archives for category: collaboration

In August I collaborated with Platform Arts, Urban Scale Interventions and Connswater shopping centre to co-facilitate a large-scale community drawing workshop on the roof of the centre’s multi-storey car park with the theme ‘every grain of sand’ referencing how each individual person is unique and has a valuable contribution to make. The drawing was part of ‘Rooftop Summer Recess,’ part of the Eastside Arts Festival 2021 in Belfast.

There was a great response from participants of all ages who used the cardboard stencils of shells and abstract shapes I had made as a starting point or added their own imaginative contributions. The experience makes me want to do more community art, feels that it was successful in encouraging people from diverse backgrounds to join in.

Co-facilitator Meadhbh McIlgorm (left) from Platform and participants adding to the drawing.
Local artist
Many chalks were used over the weekend
Drawing in progress
Nearing completion

Platform enlisted the talents of photographer Simon Mills to document the exhibition. Here are a selection of his excellent images. In my experience good documentation is always important, this sense was heightened for ‘Rule Driven’ because Covid restrictions meant the public were not permitted to enter the gallery space, only catch fleeting glimpses from Connswater shopping mall windows.

drawing in process
drawings, drum kit, sculpture and projected video
Me at work
A still from iterations of a shape video
Drawing near completion
drawing detail

John Macormac is a recipient of a Support for the Individual Artist Programme award from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland

Last Saturday Dr Robin Price and I performed a specially composed, structured improvisational performance as part of Rule Driven in Platform Arts in Connswater shopping centre. The drum kit was prepared with piezo microphones and augmented with a Roland SPD-SX sample pad.

As they were played, these sent signals to Robin who manipulated them using a bank of modular synthesisers, effects units and a space echo. Thousands of lines of C++ code translated signals from the drums in to lines that formed repeating triangles beamed from a heavy duty laser. These repeated regular forms echoed those present in the drawings. The triangles were also projected on to the sculpture. Midi signals from the sample pad allowed the projection to be reset.

The gallery is located in a busy shopping centre mall. Priceless reactions from passers by ranged from interest to utter bewilderment.

Robin Price is an artist-inventor, trans-disciplinary physicist, musician and cat enthusiast. He holds an MPhys in Theoretical Physics from the University of Wales, Swansea and a PhD in Composition and Creative Practice from Queen’s University, Belfast. Recent solo exhibitions include Escape Sequenceat CCA, Derry~Londonderry, Lambent Ambient, R-Space, Lisburn and Air of the Anthropocene at University of Atypical, Belfast. His work is held in the Arts Council of Northern Ireland’s public collection and has been covered in Source MagazineNew Scientist and the Guardian.

“I use electronics, algorithms, code, glitches and hacked objects to push at the boundaries of what is technologically and ecologically possible, permissible and ethical. My approach is playful, experimental and publicly engaged.

My work comes from personal experience. I’m an outsider artist who trained not in art but physics and music who works primarily with new materials to try and make concentrated moments of wonder or joy an audience can carry away with them; making a memory that stands out against the background urban hellscape. This approach came out growing up around the tail end of the UK rave scene, living for the weekend and beginning my creative practice putting on visuals for local promoters. I often work with children and first became interested in the environment at a young age, this points towards the playfulness, connection with the inner child and environmental themes in my work. Theoreticians that have influenced my practice are Rachel Carson, Lev Manovich, Timothy Morton, Simon Reynolds and Lakoff and Johnson.”

John Macormac is a recipient of a Support for the Individual Artist Programme award from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland

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I recently participated in The Melody of Dust exhibition, creating a site specific wall drawing and performing a new 20 minute sound art piece on the opening night.

The exhibition was in Pollen Studios Belfast and billed as an “Exhibition of two emerging Belfast talents whose work explores organic forms, traces and movement” and was curated by Colm Clarke & Tonya McMullan (CCTM)

CCTM

Colm Clarke and Tonya McMullan (CCTM) work collaboratively as artists, curators and urban farmers. Their projects are site specific and responsive, including one day curatorial projects, artist run initiatives and interventions in the city.

http://cctmprojects.tumblr.com

Jasmin Marker is a Belfast-based, German born interdisciplinary artist who works primarily with members of the microbial kingdoms. Engaging with a variety of biocultures she seeks analogies to societal cultures, exploring relevant scientific and anthropological concepts and their philosophical paradigms. While her research originates from a dedication to environmentalism and sustainability it extends deeper into questioning the evolution of human psychology. Jasmin graduated from University of Ulster with a Bachelor in Fine Art in 2016, where she has completed a graduate residency in 2017. Since she has exhibited in various galleries in Northern Ireland including PS2 Gallery (March 2017), Catalyst Arts (October 2017) and currently shows as part of the group show Kills 99,9% of Bacteria at CCA Derry:Londonderry.

John Macormac (b.1981) is an artist living and working in Northern Ireland and a current co-director at Catalyst Arts. He has recently graduated from the University of Ulster with an MFA in Fine Art. John helped establish Cathedral Studios, a Belfast based artist run studio organisation in 2003. His art practice is multi-disciplinary, embracing performance, installation and drawing.

 John Macormac is a recipient of a Support for the Individual Artist Programme award from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland

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