The Scotsman

Moments of reflection

The Normal at Talbot Rice gives us big issues to chew over, while Emma Talbot’s Ghost Calls at DCA invites us into a future where we are kinder to ourselves, one another and the planet, writes Susan Mansfield

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The word “normal” has assumed a whole new currency in the past year: when will we return to “normal”? Will things ever be “normal” again? What will “the new normal” look like? A new group show at Talbot Rice, curated during lockdown by the gallery’s Tess Giblin and James Clegg and featuring more than a dozen artists from around the world, uses the word in all these ways. While it staggers a little under the weight of all the issues it raises, it is a brave attempt to bring together all the things which have been called into question in this pandemic year.

The first work we see, loudly occupying the large space of the White Gallery, is This song is for… by South African artist Gabrielle Goliath. Working with rape survivors, she asked each of her collaborat­ors to choose a song which was then recorded by leading female and queer musicians.

In lengthy cover versions (15-20 minutes) of well-known songs (REM’S Everybody Hurts, Save the Hero by Beyoncé), she introduces a glitch, making the singer repeat a line over and over like a live performanc­e of a broken record. The longer this goes on – and it goes on for a very long time – the more uncomforta­ble it becomes. It’s a powerful metaphor for what trauma does, trapping victims in a feedback loop of experience. Here, it also doubles as a metaphor for the experience of lockdown.

If this sprawling, ambitious show has a central argument, it is to do with re-evaluating our relationsh­ip with the natural world. If Covid-19 arose because a virus jumped species, and if that came about because human beings abused nature, then – it argues – this must be the priority to address as lockdown lifts.

Solution for Normality by Jarsdell Solutions Ltd (the collaborat­ive practice of Scotland-based artists Rae-yen Song and Michael Barr) is less of a “solution” than a fragmented look at the problem, the layout of the

eight-screen installati­on physically echoing the mutant King Rat phenomenon. New drawings and a sculpture by Anca Benera and Arnold Estefan explore deep sea vents, home to important micro-organisms but at risk of exploitati­ve mining, and quasi botanical drawings by Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg and Sascha Pohflepp depict sinister combinatio­ns of plant and machine.

Dutch artist Femke Herregrave­n analyses the history of plague and its links to economic systems, while Edinburgh-based artist Tonya Mcmullan brings a welcome lighter note, cataloguin­g the different kinds of honey harvested by local beekeepers during the lockdown summer of 2020, each with a set of tasting notes. Her microscopi­c images of pollen are scattered (like pollen) throughout the show.

To this big issue, other big issues are added: Black Lives Matter (Kahlil Joseph’s highly acclaimed BLKNWS, which creates a collage of a new kind of broadcasti­ng prioritisi­ng black faces and black stories, and Larry Achiampong’s clever Detention

Series); climate change; violence against women; immigratio­n (James Webb’s There’s no place called home, which introduces non-native birdsong into natural locations). There’s an early work by the Boyle Family looking at population density, and a sculpture by Scotland-based artist Sarah Rose challengin­g the environmen­tal issues around artmaking.

There are times when The Normal feels like an a valiant attempt to bring together too many big issues under too small an umbrella, with the attendant danger that none of them is treated with quite the attention its deserves. That said, it is an important snapshot of where we are at this moment in time, and an important reminder of all the things we said we would try to do differentl­y in the postcovid world.

Emma Talbot’s solo show for DCA, Ghost Calls, was made during the first lockdown and was due to open in December, but had to be postponed for four months. While it has been in planning since 2018, the work has shifted in the last year to address the post-pandemic moment more directly. In essence, it is occupied with similar questions to The Normal: what is important as we emerge from the wreckage of the last year? What should we try to do differentl­y? The approach taken by Talbot, who won the Max Mara Art Prize for

Women in 2020, is very different. While The Normal started with the issues, a starting point for her was a Celtic revival painting by John Duncan in the Mcmanus Art Gallery, Riders of the Sidhe. From Duncan’s procession of mythical beings, she moved on to look at the Celtic tradition of keening – profession­al mourners who attended a death to help escort the soul into the next world.

On two large-scale silk banners, she has painted a narrative of a “crash” which collapses the structures of the familiar world (she admits this didn’t require too much imagining in 2020) and a journey through the postcrash landscape, lead by the keening women, towards a new way of being.

Each element of the show –the words, paintings, banners, handmade fabric and papier-mâché sculptures and animated film – enriches the central propositio­n. In the paintings, there are images of creatures from Pictish carving, echoes of Scottish landscapes, of William Blake, mythology and ghosts. The film hints at a personal grief which becomes emblematic of something much bigger.

The sculptures, in particular, are beautifull­y made, and capture Talbot’s female protagonis­t (who looks a little bit like herself ) striving to climb a mountain, being buffeted by winds, mourning, dreaming, picking up a leaf and seeing hints of new life. Their handmade nature means they are imbued with a kind of loving attention.

There are times when the work’s mystical overtones tip over into psychedeli­c new-age talk (“harmonisin­g with ancient symphonies, astral and earthly”). But the core of it is much wiser, more human and more empathetic. It is better to grieve what is lost, it suggests, and let it go, “accepting our state as terribly fragile and magically robust.”

Where The Normal gives us big issues to chew over, Ghost Calls invites us into a future where we are kinder to ourselves, one another and the planet. Part intentiona­l, part serendipit­y, it is somehow exactly what we need to hear as we re-emerge into a world which is a little more normal than the one we’ve known for the past year.

The Normal runs until 29 August; Emma Talbot, until 8 August

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 ??  ?? Detention by Larry Achiampong, main and This song is for… by South African artist Gabrielle Goliath, left, both part of The Normal at Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh; installati­on views of Ghost Calls by Emma Talbot at DCA, far left and top left
Detention by Larry Achiampong, main and This song is for… by South African artist Gabrielle Goliath, left, both part of The Normal at Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh; installati­on views of Ghost Calls by Emma Talbot at DCA, far left and top left

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