Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Assembly Lines Installation










This past Sunday I returned to Halifax from Charlottetown where I had been installing the bee part of Assembly Lines. This exhibition brought four artist's together to show work that, in it's making, had taking highly personally charged subject matter and put it through a repetitive, assembly line type process that somehow depersonalized it.

I was amazed at how friendly and welcoming the Confederation Centre gallery staff and volunteers were. An extra special thanks has to go out to Betty-Jo McCarville and Erin Arsenault who each welcomed me into their homes for two of the four days I was on the Island.
I can't wait to go back to PEI and visit again!




Sunday, October 16, 2011

Electric Log






















































About a year ago I met some new friends who had an interesting bee disappearance related story to tell. They had been keeping bees for a few years when last summer their queen bee and her hive suddenly swarmed one afternoon. These bees then took up residence in a neighbor's rotted tree and were quite comfortably appointed when the neighbor asked that my friends remove the bees. In a move that I consider quite novel they hired an arborist and had him, wearing gear to protect him from the bees, remove the section of tree where the bees were living. They then moved this section back to their property where the bees thrived for quite some time until, one day, quite unexpectedly, they were gone. It's possible the bees simply swarmed again, this time much further afield, it's also possible that they fled their hive and died. Whatever the explanation, they, like many billions of bees all over the world simply disappeared.Add Video



All that was left of the bees after this event was their log hive, some abandoned beeswax, and a couple of short videos of them taken by my friends. I was very excited about what in my mind added up to an installation artwork. I soon had my greedy hands on the log hive and video and set about putting these things together to be presented at the Nocturne: Art at Night Festival. Hive was placed within a city garden bed on the corner of Spring Garden Road and South Park Street in Halifax from six pm to midnight on the night of October 15th.

Here's the artist's statement for Hive:

“Hive” is both a monument to the missing bees and what Jean Baudrillard might consider “a perversion of reality”. A viewer may initially be attracted to the hive by the buzzing sound it gives off even at a distance (from speakers placed covertly on the inside). A faint light emitting from the hive’s small entrance issues an invitation to cautiously peer inside. Stooping a little bit to see, the viewer may feel slightly anxious that the buzzing, combined with the way the hive blends naturally into the park setting may indicate the presence of actual bees. What the viewer gets instead is an unfaithful copy. A small screen plays a video of the hive’s former occupants while the scent of the hive’s abandoned comb lingers in the air. What remains is a an artist’s attempt to put humpty dumpty back together again; we can see and smell the bees and touch their hive but what we are experiencing is a copy which only serves to highlight their absence.







Friday, September 30, 2011

New Documentation, Bee Taxidermy
































































The fabulous and talented Christina Arsenault documented my most recent bees, above are some of the highlights. Sixty eight of these bees as well as an index of information gathered about each of them will be a part of an exhibition at the Confederation Centre of the Arts Art Gallery in Charlottetown, PEI From October 22, 2011- March 04, 2012. The exhibition is called Assembly Lines. It explores the idea of putting work charged with personal meaning through impersonal or repeditive processes. The other artists in the show are Sarah Saunders, Stephen B. MacInnis, and Aaron Weldon.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Corpus Melliferous









The fabulous Christina Arsenault has documented Corpus Melliferous and here are the images of that series of work. The first three drawings shown measure 55''x96'', the round drawing measures 36'' in diameter, the following drawing measures 50'' x 36'' and the remaining three each measure 36'' x 50''. They are predominantly graphite with some ink.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

"May I Have Your Bees Please?" Information Booth and Walking Tours










During the week of August 8th-13th I set up an information booth inside of Eyelevel Gallery as part of their members' weekly show "Biological Society". Between 2:00pm and 4:00pm I held office hours and, three times a day, I lead groups on walking tours of the neighborhood. Member of the group would decide which areas posed a particular hazard to bees and teeny tiny signs were placed in these areas.I would note the locations in a small notebook as well as the reason for the hazard. Upon our return to the gallery a pin would be placed in a map indication these locations. Every person who participated received a free button in their choice of gold or white. It was lovely to see what happens when you ask a stranger to do something so whimsical. The mood of each of the tours ranged from amused to giddy. It was a great week, thank you to everyone who came out for a tour and a conversation.




Friday, July 29, 2011

Upcoming Performance






Coming up August 9th, 10th, 11th,and 12th I'll be doing a performance at Eyelevel Gallery. I've never attempted anything like this before but my bee project has made me brave since a big part of it was and is about reaching out to people and making work based on that interaction.

This performance will take the form of an information booth inside of Eyelevel gallery and short walking tours of the neighborhood surrounding it. I've made tiny (2cm x 2cm) warning signs printed on yellow paper very much like the one shown above. These are mounted on toothpicks and will be given to members of the walking tours. We will decide as a group which areas we encounter on our walk that pose a hazard to bees and place bee sized warning signs in these areas. In the event that we find a dead bee, we will collect it for my taxidermy workshop but will leave a tiny memorial (2cm x 2cm) like the one shown above in its place. The locations of the signs will then be carefully recorded on a map that will be mounted to the wall behind the information booth indicating the bee warning and memorializing initiatives taken on by the neighborhood. The tours happen between 2:00 pm and 4:00pm on each of those days and leave on the half hour (2:30, 3:00, 3:30). When not on a tour I will be in the booth handing out bee kits and answering questions.


The circular image above is of the buttons that everyone who comes along for the walk will receive for participating. "Head, Heart, Thorax and Abdomen" is the official motto of "May I have your bees Please?"

Everyone is invited so please tell your friends!

Corpus Melliferous Opening






So it's been a while friends!

Last time I posted I was still struggling with my large scale drawings, well, nothing makes things come together more effectively than a deadline.

The fabulous Christina Arsenault is documenting this series for me so there will be images to follow soon. You can check out her work at http://www.christinaarsenault.ca/ . For now here are some images from the reception.

I was also lucky enough to have a local band, Special Costello, play a thirty minute set of experimental music which was amazing! It's so great to be able to work with talented people making other kinds of art and music. In this case the music seemed to flow perfectly with the drawings somehow. It's the kind of thing I would love to try again.



Monday, May 9, 2011

Grant, Drawings, Mail Outs!

I'm happy to announce my good fortune at having been selected to receive a Creation Grant under Nova Scotia's Department of Communities, Culture and Heritage. This has been a great boon to my art practice since it allows me to work in my studio uninterrupted Monday-Friday.

I am also continuing work on large scale drawings. I was lucky to receive some feedback from Katie Belcher and Susan Wood, who were each generous enough to come out for a studio visit to see my drawings. If you're a shy person like I am it can be daunting to ask others for feedback, especially in this case where I had so much admiration and respect for each of them and their drawing practices. Their feedback was kind, thoughtful and extremely helpful! They both suggested I try making my drawings larger and so I have been. I'm really excited about the results. I hope to have some images to show you soon.

Check out Katie's work here: http://www.katiebelcherart.com/Home.html

Check out Susan's work: http://www.susanwood.ca/

Bee season has begun in most of Canada so I've been sending mail outs of ten bee kits at a time to any interested artist run centres or community organizations. Links to locations that currently have kits are listed below. If any of these locations happen to be near you then you can pick up a kit there. If not, I'd be thrilled to mail you one so please email me your request to ruth@ruthmarsh.net

Links:
http://www.truck.ca/
http://www.thenewgallery.org/
http://www.annapolisriver.ca/
http://www.arcac.ca/artsplace/aboutus.php
http://alternatorcentre.com/
http://www.ecologyaction.ca/

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Techno Bees!











Introducing Techno Bees! Here are some drawings of the latest Taxidermy Bees made with computer parts.

Since I'm making so many tiny drawings anyway I thought I could make an animation with them. It will be a nice way to link each of the people who send me a bee with drawings that are small pieces of a unified whole. Eventually it would be nice for everyone to be able to see the animation online but it's still in the planning stages at the moment. It's definitely going to be a steep learning curve.