The Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, one of Europe’s leading conservatoires, presents Live work by performance artist Tom Estes.
Founded in 1845 The Royal Conservatoire has played a critical role in the development of the performance arts in Scotland over many years. The RCS is integral to the nation’s vibrant performance culture and uniquely placed to partner with a wealth of inspiring professionals and artistic companies.
The Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, has invited artist Tom Estes to explore the role of the audience in contemporary performance as part of ‘Into The New’, a four day event exploring Contemporary Live Art Performance. As an artist Estes has always leaned toward making Live Art performance work that is participatory or imersive in some way. In his work for The Royal Conservatoire Estes will explore these issues and there will also be a range of responses from artists, academics, researchers and practitioners on the role of the audience in contemporary performance.

In his performance CAKE HOLE artist Tom Estes cuts holes in donuts while members of the audience take pictures on a communal camera that is passed around. The simple act of cutting holes in donuts or 'punching holes in donuts' is based on a slang term in activist circles meaning doing something that has little or no real impact. The title of the work is also from a slang term. Generally expressed as ‘shut your cakehole’in the United Kingdom it means ‘shut up and keep your opinions to yourself’.
During the event audience members are asked to interact with the central performance by taking pictures on what Estes calls a "communal camera". The pictures are then posted on social networking sites for another, wider on-line audience. This is what Estes refer to as 'Harnessing The Hive' - as the view of the central performance is mediated and digitally recorded through a machine. In this way, the photographs, become more than mere documentation and can be seen as central to the work. The audience, rather than being some kind of privileged witness becomes part of the performance while taking pictures. This role reversal invites the audience to re-examine easy assumptions, received opinion and current social and critical trends as well as pose tough questions about the ways in which we see and understand our world and culture.
At the core of this work is an attention to the flickering fading definition of our lives as dictated by film, television, the computer monitor and the rapid reply of instant messaging. Estes strives, not to break down these introverted, often self-imposed boundaries, but to look how data flow form the virtual realm impacts on the significance, symbolism and depth of real-world human senses. But in doing so, he has begun to generate unexpected questions about how art might be able to inscribe itself on the surface of reality- not to represent itself on the surface of reality- not to represent reality, not to duplicate it, but to replace it.
Estes performance 'Cake Hole' is part of ‘Into The New’, a four day event exploring Contemporary Live Art Performance. The Performance 'Cake Hole' by Tom Estes will take place on the 16th of January between 4:00- 6:00. ‘Into The New’ will takes place in Glasgow on the 14th, 15th and 16th of January at the Arches, a 65,000 square foot venue so no doubt there will be ample space for a critical and discursive debate to challenge perceptions of audiences.

http://www.tomestesartist.com/
http://www.thearches.co.uk/
http://www.rsamd.ac.uk/academy/royalconservatoire/
http://www.2013.intothenew.org.uk/audience-innocent-bystanders/
Link:
http://www.rsamd.ac.uk/academy/royalconservatoire/
Address:
The Arches
253 Argyle St
Glasgow, Scotland G2 8DL
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Art Portal is part of Arts Electronic,a new artist-led inititive, that supports grass-roots contemporary art that remains unswayed by fashion, trends or the whims of government funding. The project involves ongoing research into the placing of contemporary art, it’s audiences and it’s relationship to the everyday and we place great emphasis on context. Our mission is to support new works of contemporary art and foster an audience from a wide range of backgrounds. Arts Electronic acts as a testing-ground for innovation with a strong emphasis on supporting new risk-taking ideas and cross-disciplinary collaboration.
I. MISSION
Arts Electronic aims to be a hub for new and up and coming international contemporary visual art; A forum where all can engage with contemporary ideas through a unique, risk taking, cross art-form and culturally diverse high quality programme of art.
In today’s climate the factors that determine which artists receive credit for their work and which works are carried forward, does merit inspection. Individuals with valuable insights might easily be overlooked or passed by in a world increasingly underwritten by market-driven forces. However, when individuals are marginalized, it can force them to embark on higher-risk courses of action, enabling beneficial innovation that would otherwise not have happened. The aim is to retrieve art that may have a different type of value from those dictated by market forces while stimulating questions about the history-making process of art.
At the same time we hope to develop a network-based creative community as a model of innovation in curating and practice. The objectives of the project is to introduce new audiences to the work of significant artists and to engage the work of artists as interacting generative agents, remediating one another as a vital part of contemporary social space.
Given the simultaneous emergence of conceptual art in several art centers around the world and the emergence of the new forms of interconnectivity via digital platforms we hope to encourage international collaboration and exchange with both artists and audiences.
This curatorial project presents a flexibility of approach to the curating of artistic works that make use of the contradictory relationship of the respective participants and characteristics.
II. VISION
Within the next 4 years to become a creative crossroads to build new partnerships and to be acknowledged by our audiences as being central to artistic, cultural and educational life. Playing a leading role on innovation and risk taking, to span the virtual and real worlds, achieving openness, access and excellence making a positive contribution to the regeneration to the arts.
III. VALUES
Arts Electronic values:
1. People
A. The work of artists and curators and audience.
2. The Work
A. Critical dialogue between artist, audiences, curators.
B. Innovation in the visual arts and wider cultural industries.
C. Original thinking and a contemporary outlook.
D. Internationalism and multiculturalism.
E. The Way We Do Business
F. Creative collaboration with individuals, institutions and funding partners.
G. Education as a tool for change and for increasing understanding of cultural, social, aesthetic and political issues.
H. Taking calculated risks in the pursuit of artistic excellence.
I. Fiscal responsibility.
IV. Business
The Mission, Vision and Values of the organisation have been translated into 7 aims which underpin the Business Plan. These are:
1. To be a leading international centre for contemporary visual arts engaging audiences, artists and curators in ideas, knowledge and dialogue.
2. Support innovation, creativity and the development of talent.
3. Make a leading contribution to local, national and international cultural and knowledge agendas.
4. To develop inclusive participation, learning and skills in visual arts and digital media.
5. To be a social, creative and business network hub.
6. To attract talented people and invest in them.
7. Achieve our objectives within a framework of a balanced budget and a well-run organisation.
IV. PROGRAMME STRATEGY
The core of the programme strategy is as follows:
•To conceive of projects as a loose series, with a methodological freedom in the curatorial-editorial approach, and which will remain inherent in all issues of the project, and will manifests itself in all the respective forms of presentation.
•Programming in an integrated way across the visual arts with engagement in the programme seen as central.
• Developing innovative partnerships to increase the quality of the programme and increase risk taking by sharing the risk more widely.
• Expanding the digital footprint of artselectronic to engage a wider audience.
•Increasing the impact of the work of artselectronic on the Knowledge Economy.
• Becoming more commercially focused and effective as state funding for work in the arts becomes squeezed.
• Adopting open working practices at the core of the new strategy and making this central to delivering an integrated, innovative and risk taking programme. (Open in this context means creating a way of working where there is a continuous and open dialogue between audience and artists about ideas and this dialogue helps to shape and redefine what artselectronic does.)
V. RESEARCH
Arts Electronic explores two specific lines of enquiry:
•International socio-political change
•Participation in artist practice
Arts Electronic is a cross art-form that engages with:
•Visual Arts – group and solo exhibitions of emerging, mid-career and established artists; thematic shows across all forms of contemporary visual art. Produce the majority of its exhibitions to tour, initiating original projects and commissioning a range of artists.
•Digital Media – this is a cross-cutting theme rather than a distinct programme. Areas include online artistic projects, interactive artist-led projects, user-generated content, participative projects and applications that enable creative innovation.
Creative Industries – A programme of formal and informal events and initiatives to support the creative sector and talent through information dissemination and networking.
Projects will range between small and middle scale with the aim of producing high profile projects utilising and interacting with each city and region. Work will be produced in a number of ways:
•Commissioned
•Toured
•Developed from artselectronic research programme
VI. Visual Arts
Our core programme 2012-13 continues the exploration of international socio-political change through the groundbreaking exhibition and tour, Crazy Like a Fox. Arts Electronic aims to develop further investigations, whilst socially engaged art and participatory projects are a strong focus.
We are currently developing ideas for inclusion in a Festival of Live Art Performance that provides the opportunity for an in-depth enquiry into issues around the economy with strong new commissions and partnerships.
In 2012-13 we also begin our Curator initiative, where international artists work strategically on our long term programme development with us.
VII. Engagement
Engagement is not a separate team or area but works across all of artselectronic participation in a current line of enquiry. Engaging new communities in projects with artists is a focus for our work. Engagement activities are not restricted to but might include tours, debates, digital content, workshops, interpretation, Q&As and seminars.
artselectronic is also developing a number of targeted projects including:
• Projector: young people (Youth Hostel inititive)
• Exposures: new talent in moving image
• Wire: creative industries
http://artselectronic.wordpress.com/
For further information go to our website http://artselectronic.weebly.com/
or join us on our new Facebook page at: https://www.facebook.com/ArtsElectronic
contact Abel Magwitch: magwitch@live.com
marc garrett