The Scotsman

First look

The pared-back digital version of this year’s Glasgow Internatio­nal only hints at the artistic responses to coronaviru­s which are sure to come in the months and years ahead, writes Susan Mansfield

- Yesterday carries a poignant sense of solitude, of large empty spaces

Susan Mansfield reviews this year’s online version of Glasgow Internatio­nal

At this point in the calendar, I should be happily footsore, having walked the length and breadth of Glasgow, Glasgow Internatio­nal programme in hand, exploring the highs and lows of Scotland’s contempora­ry art biennale. Now, in what feels like a parallel universe, the festival has been postponed until 2021, and a small selection of work by some of the artists involved has been made available online.

While the majority of these works do have some resonance with the present circumstan­ces, this is not a contempora­ry art response to Covid-19. It’s too early to expect that. Some of the artists have made new work for the digital programme, battling the restrictio­ns of time and lockdown, while others are presenting existing works which have some thematic connection, either with isolation or with the festival’s original theme of attention.

The main exception is Glasgowbas­ed Alberta Whittle ,whois committed to making work which addresses the events of the moment. Previously, she has made films which respond to events such as the Windrush scandal in 2018 and to the impact of last year’s Hurricane Dorian on the Bahamas.

Her preferred style of film-making, collaging new, found and historical footage, lends itself to being responsive, so she has created a new edit of her Gi commission, business as usual – hostile environmen­t, which addresses the current moment.

Originally a co-commission by Gi and Glasgow Sculpture Studios, with support from the Year of Coasts and Waterways, the film was to be part of a larger work exploring Glasgow’s canals and their relationsh­ip to trade, colonial history and to the city’s multicultu­ral community today.

In this iteration, canals take a back seat, while more pressing issues are foreground­ed.

Whittle begins by quoting the British Medical Journal, on 17 April, telling us that of the 3,883 patients with confirmed Covid-19 at time of writing, the percentage of black and Asian people affected was nearly double the population average. She has points to make, too, about the NHS dependency on nurses from overseas, very few of whom reach the income threshold of £35,000 now required for permanent settlement, and about the findings of the Windrush Lessons Learned Review, published on 19 March, and all but buried by the virus.

With so many important things to say, the film at times does more telling than showing. But it also creates a nuanced environmen­t for this informatio­n to be delivered, particular­ly in its use of music and dance. It closes with a single haunting voice which is at once an incantatio­n, a lament and a scream of rage.

London-based Georgina Starr, who was to have premiered a new film work at Tramway for Gi (the intriguely named Quarantain­e), instead presents an audio work from 1991. In Yesterday, the artist recorded herself whistling the Beatles’ song at night in the empty corridors of the Slade School of Art. At the time, she played it back during the day, via hidden speakers and a tape deck concealed in her locker. Even as a simple audio track played online, it carries a poignant sense of solitude, of large empty spaces. She is literally whistling in the dark.

Japanese artist Yuko Mohri, whose work is mainly in sculpture and installati­on, has created a film, Everything Flows: Distance, collaging scenes from Yasujiro Ozu’s acclaimed 1953 film Tokyo Story in which no people appear. Eliminatin­g narrative, conversati­on and the film’s claustroph­obic observatio­n of family dynamics, we are left with mood: empty streets, unpeopled houses, a train passing through a silent suburb. And it’s this silence – the silence of lockdown – which resonates most of all.

Urara Tsuchiya, orignally from Japan but now based in Glasgow, presents a film which was shown as part of an installati­on at Frieze last year. Give us a Meow shows the artist in a remote cottage, and in the landscape of rural Devon, dancing and performing in a range of zany costumes. While it might sound ridiculous – and her attempt to cross a cattle grid in stilettos is nothing short of hilarious – the performing actually feels like the opposite of exhibition­ism. It has the vulnerabil­ity of something very private, as if we are watching someone lose their inhibition­s in a trance, a dream,

a fantasy. It’s an isolation where joyful abandon tips all too easily into despair.

There is a much more selfconsci­ous sense of performanc­e in

Jenkin van Zyl’s film, In Vitro (All the Love Mix), in which the performers seem to taking part in a sub-tolkien fantasy epic set against the frozen wastes of Iceland. I suppose this, too, is about isolation, but it feels more like a hasty reassembly of surplus footage from van Zyl’s 40-minute Gi commission than a coherent narrative in itself.

Glasgow’s Liv Fontaine, whose work is primarily in performanc­e, also takes a fantasy theme for her eightminut­e audio work, Some People Say, charting a woman’s transforma­tion into a reptile. Loud and angry, chanting over throbbing drums and wailing guitars, she weaves a spoken word piece about feminism and sexual politics, voyeurism and fetishism; and illness, perhaps, though the reptilian transforma­tion

seems to be more empowering than debilitati­ng.

Sarah Forrest’s film The Unreliable Narrator speaks more to the theme of attention. We watch – for 11 minutes – the hands of a close-up magician making coins disappear and expertly manipulati­ng a deck of cards. Thus mesmerised, we consider the idea in the title: is the unreliable narrator the magician, who plies his or her trade by sleight of hand, or the film-maker, who might be editing the footage to tell a different story? Or, since we generally enjoy watching trickery, are we complicit in our own deception?

While the digital programme will never replace the adventure of Gi in the flesh, at least we can look forward to a full iteration of the festival in a year’s time. Some of these works might be part of it. One hopes, too, there will be new works which respond to the changed world of 2020, and to the world of 2021 – whatever that will look like.

Until 10 May

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www.glasgow internatio­nal.org ✪✪✪✪ Glasgow Internatio­nal Digital Programme
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 ??  ?? Clockwise from main: a still from Urara Tsuchiya’s Give us a meow; Yesterday by Georgina Starr; Everything Flows: Distance by Yuko Mohri; The Unreliable Narrator by Sarah Forrest; Some People Say by Liv Fontaine, In Vitro (All the Love Mix) by Jenkin van Zyl
Clockwise from main: a still from Urara Tsuchiya’s Give us a meow; Yesterday by Georgina Starr; Everything Flows: Distance by Yuko Mohri; The Unreliable Narrator by Sarah Forrest; Some People Say by Liv Fontaine, In Vitro (All the Love Mix) by Jenkin van Zyl
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