Skip to main content

Channels - Edinburgh Art Festival Commission 2022

Things have come a long way for the Edinburgh and Glasgow Union Canal since it first opened for business in 1822. This should be apparent when Edinburgh Art Festival presents Channels, a series of new public works by four artists, curated by this year’s EAF Associate Artist, Emmie McLuskey, as part of the festival’s 2022 commissions programme. 

 

From Lochrin Basin to Wester Hailes, works by Maeve Redmond, Hannan Jones, Amanda Thomson and Janice Parker navigate their way through the waterway’s rich flow of history by way of sign writing, sound, botany, writing, and dance.

 

The canal kind of sits outside of the main bit of the city, and it's got a really interesting history in relation to industry,” says McLuskey, EAF’s second Associate Artist following on from Tako Taal in 2021. “This is obviously a huge generalisation, but Edinburgh doesn't necessarily see itself as an industrial city.”

 

McLuskey was attracted to Channels by way of another project she was working on that raised questions about environments, social justice issues, gentrification and change. 

 

“There were a lot of conversations about home, how to listen to environment, and how to work with contexts that we're a part of, rather than being against them, or trying to put something into a context that hasn't listened to what's actually going on.”

 

The Union Canal was originally built to carry coal and other minerals before being made the redundant within twenty years by the rise of the railways. Its 200thanniversary The Wave of Translation programme shows off its regeneration as a leisure-based attraction that runs alongside a similarly rebuilt Edinburgh.

 

“I saw a lot of overlaps with the cycles of industry that were playing out in terms of this particular canal,” McLuskey says. “At Lochrin Basin, there are a lot of developments happening around Haymarket, with student accommodation and hotels being built, and it is definitely in a state of flux. 

 

“As you progress along the canal, you move through different communities, and you see lots of change happening. What is now a space for leisure was once an economic device to improve trade between Glasgow and Edinburgh and further afield, and that brought up loads of conversations around industry, capitalism and migration. That’s interesting to deal with in the context of a festival, specifically in Edinburgh, because of many important conversations to be had around festival culture here.” 

 

Rather than the artists addressing these issues explicitly, for McLuskey, “it was more interesting they deal with these conversations as different ways of listening, and as different ways of really engaging with context. For me, that is political, because it's responding to what's already happening, and what's already there, rather than trying to add more and more growth. What is the history that already existed, how do we listen to that, and how as artists do we engage with that?”

 

The four Channelsartists have answered in different ways. Maeve Redmond’s The Mathematical River (2022) sees herworking with sign writer Tatch Hatch-Robertson to create two sign paintings using traditional techniques. Hannan Jones’ Surface bounce and cycles (2022) is a series of sound works using recordings made both underwater and above ground.

 

ForMainly in Sinuousities. (2022) Amanda Thomson worked with botanist Greg Kenicer to produce a printed publication that offers a guide to the flowers and plants growing around the canal with historical commentary. Five plaques will be placed at different points of interest along the canal. Not Brittle, Not Rigid, Not Fixed (2022) sees dancer/choreographerJanice Parker create a new set of solo performances each day in response to the sights and smells of the canal, as well as any chance meetings she has with passers by in an exploration of our relationship with public space.  

 

As well as the commissions, McLuskey will host Background Noise, a rolling programme of radio broadcasts that will look at some of the concerns raised by Channels through conversations and interviews.    

 

EAF also hosts Watch this Space, an initiative led by Dutch artist Jeanne van Heeswijk’s Community Wellbeing Collective (C.W.C.) working with a group of Wester Hailes residents. Montreal based First Nations artist Nadia Myre, meanwhile, leads a multi-format programme titled Tell Me of Your Boats and Your Waters - Where Do They Come From. Where Do They Go.

 

“My main focus with the programme,” McLuskey says, “is that we engage and learn together about the context of the canal, and that that the programme is for people that go to the canal. Not that I want to ignore a festival audience, but I think the four artists we’ve commissioned can engage in a really meaningful way that will have longevity beyond the festival period. A lot of the processes happening as part of the festival are the start of the work rather than the end of it. 

 

“My hope for Channelsis that it continues a conversation for people, and allows them a different sort of lens to look at something in Edinburgh’s history that is maybe not talked about so much, when it actually was a very industrial city. I hope it opens up conversations about what we're a part of now, and how we want to engage with these things as we move towards the future.”

 

 

Channelsruns as part of Edinburgh Art Festival, July 28th–August 28th.

www.edinburghartfestival.comBackground Noisecan be heard at www.background-noise.com.

 

Scottish Art News, July 2022

 

ends

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Ron Butlin - The Sound of My Voice

When Ron Butlin saw a man who’d just asked him the time throw himself under a train on the Paris Metro, it was a turning point in how his 1987 novel, The Sound Of My Voice, would turn out. Twenty years on, Butlin’s tale of suburban family man Morris Magellan’s existential crisis and his subsequent slide into alcoholism is regarded as a lost classic. Prime material, then, for the very intimate stage adaptation which opens in the Citizens Theatre’s tiny Stalls Studio tonight. “I had this friend in London who was an alcoholic,” Butlin recalls. “He would go off to work in the civil service in the morning looking absolutely immaculate. Then at night we’d meet, and he’s get mega-blootered, then go home and continue drinking and end up in a really bad state. I remember staying over one night, and he’d emerge from his room looking immaculate again. There was this huge contrast between what was going on outside and what was going on inside.” We’re sitting in a café on Edinburgh’s south sid

Losing Touch With My Mind - Psychedelia in Britain 1986-1990

DISC 1 1. THE STONE ROSES   -  Don’t Stop 2. SPACEMEN 3   -  Losing Touch With My Mind (Demo) 3. THE MODERN ART   -  Mind Train 4. 14 ICED BEARS   -  Mother Sleep 5. RED CHAIR FADEAWAY  -  Myra 6. BIFF BANG POW!   -  Five Minutes In The Life Of Greenwood Goulding 7. THE STAIRS  -  I Remember A Day 8. THE PRISONERS  -  In From The Cold 9. THE TELESCOPES   -  Everso 10. THE SEERS   -  Psych Out 11. MAGIC MUSHROOM BAND  -  You Can Be My L-S-D 12. THE HONEY SMUGGLERS  - Smokey Ice-Cream 13. THE MOONFLOWERS  -  We Dig Your Earth 14. THE SUGAR BATTLE   -  Colliding Minds 15. GOL GAPPAS   -  Albert Parker 16. PAUL ROLAND  -  In The Opium Den 17. THE THANES  -  Days Go Slowly By 18. THEE HYPNOTICS   -  Justice In Freedom (12" Version) 1. THE STONE ROSES    Don’t Stop ( Silvertone   ORE   1989) The trip didn’t quite start here for what sounds like Waterfall played backwards on The Stone Roses’ era-defining eponymous debut album, but it sounds

Big Gold Dreams – A Story of Scottish Independent Music 1977-1989

Disc 1 1. THE REZILLOS (My Baby Does) Good Sculptures (12/77)  2. THE EXILE Hooked On You (8/77) 3. DRIVE Jerkin’ (8/77) 4. VALVES Robot Love (9/77) 5. P.V.C. 2 Put You In The Picture (10/77) 6. JOHNNY & THE SELF ABUSERS Dead Vandals (11/77) 7. BEE BEE CEE You Gotta Know Girl (11/77) 8. SUBS Gimme Your Heart (2/78) 9. SKIDS Reasons (No Bad NB 1, 4/78) 10. FINGERPRINTZ Dancing With Myself (1/79)  11. THE ZIPS Take Me Down (4/79) 12. ANOTHER PRETTY FACE All The Boys Love Carrie (5/79)  13. VISITORS Electric Heat (5/79) 14. JOLT See Saw (6/79) 15. SIMPLE MINDS Chelsea Girl (6/79) 16. SHAKE Culture Shock (7/79) 17. HEADBOYS The Shape Of Things To Come (7/79) 18. FIRE EXIT Time Wall (8/79) 19. FREEZE Paranoia (9/79) 20. FAKES Sylvia Clarke (9/79) 21. TPI She’s Too Clever For Me (10/79) 22. FUN 4 Singing In The Showers (11/79) 23. FLOWERS Confessions (12/79) 24. TV21 Playing With Fire (4/80) 25. ALEX FERGUSSON Stay With Me Tonight (1980) 1. THE REZILL