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a live art walk through 9 sites
in the city centre - 7 days for 6 hours each day
plaster of paris 'houses', bricks, roof tiles, wood, photograph portraits,
cardboard tray, blanket, torches, non-reflective perspex screen, 787 telephone
calls, notepaper, sellotape, an empty council flat, a roofless church,
a banner asking "What do you notice?", library newspaper reading
room, a nightshelter, public telephones, a cave, a shopping street, a
map, gravestones, hard hats
conversing with audience,
building a house without mortar, making telephone calls asking "What
is the difference between a house and a home?", offering small photograph
houses.
additional performers: Matthew Harding, Gary Winters, Harriet Vessey,
Jo Walsh, Bridget Mazzey, Louise Teale, Tony Ella, Kevin Newton, Keith,
John, Spooky

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What the Zwillinge Project achieved in their final episode
was to take their art out of the gallery, engage it with social issues
and to reclaim the city itself as a place for excitment, mystery and meaningful
encounter.
Nine sites in the city centre were linked in a circular route. At the
first site, the Arnolfini Gallery, an encapsulated colour map was issued
to participants which had the route marked and a series of instructions.
The happenings at each site were kept a secret and this produced an effect
more like the pursuit of a paper chase or the revelations of a detective
story than the serious contemplation of a work of art. For the two walkers
I was with, who are infrequent gallery visitors, this had a remarkable
effect, they began highly sceptical but after visiting site number two
were anxious to find out what happened next. And as the art was happening
outside of the socially exclusive space of the gallery they were much
more comfortable about interpreting what it meant for them. As was I.
Site No.2 was a block of system built council flats which we we entered
by dialling through the door intercom and taking a lift up to a deck walkway.
At the flat a project assistant ushered us into what was clearly a dis-used
flat - unfurnished and piled up with old mail. The front room was separated
from the rest of the flat by a piece of perspex through which we could
see and hear a researcher telephoning. Each call consisted of a question,
'what is the difference between a house and a home?' In the three bare
rooms upstairs the responses to the previous calls were sellotaped to
the walls. The sense of mass testimony was both incredible and unexpected
- there were thoughtful and brief statements, insults, banalities and
answerphone messages. The project had moved us from the public space of
a gallery through equally public streets into the private world of a council
flat and then put the public back in there through a telephonic connected-ness.
The sites that followed included: a small house being constructed within
the sheltering walls of a bombed out roofless church, a floating performer
who appeared to be begging but was actually 'offering' small houses made
from photograph self portraits, a banner only visible from the top of
the Cabot Tower which demanded "WHAT DO YOU NOTICE?" and the
city Library's newspaper reading room where participants were directed
to search out a number of stories from the day's newspapers.
At Site No. 5 - an underpass where homeless people often gather, participants
were told that something would happen every fifteen minutes. This forced
a kind of looking which might usually be avoided in such a place. On the
quarter hour one of the public telephones rang allowing participants to
answer for themselves the question first posed at Site No.2. The final
site was a nightshelter where participants had the chance to talk with
homeless people, the artists and each other.
Inbetween the nine main islands the project maintained an attentive gaze
upon Bristol's urban fabric by placing small white plaster houses in nooks
and crannies normally overlooked by rushing pedestrians. The search for
the white houses effectively re-charged the concrete city with meaning
and the artists prefigured this renewed attention in their instructions
- "Try to look and notice as if for the first time"
I was profoundly impressed by Episode 10 - Archipelago, Bristol.
Eric Laurier
Research Fellow
Dept of Geography, University of Wales
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