Drawn to Dundee | Panel Discussion
To celebrate the opening of the Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize 2021 exhibition at Cooper Gallery, join us for an online panel discussion celebrating drawing and its resonances in Dundee.
The panel features curators and artists who work in the expanded field of drawing including Lucy Byatt, Simon Groom, Tania Kovats, Jade Montserrat, Olivia Plender, Natsumi Sakamoto, Anita Taylor and Calum Wallis.
Drawn to Dundee
This event is part of Drawn to Dundee, a series of talks and workshops accompanying the Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize 2021 at Cooper Gallery, co-curated by artists Tania Kovats, Professor of Drawing & Making and Alex Roberts, Lecturer in Drawing, Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design at the University of Dundee.
Participant information
Online event. Participants will receive a viewing link upon sign-up.
All enquiries please contact: [email protected]
Speakers' Biographies
Lucy Byatt is Director of Hospitalfield, Arbroath. Since 2021 she has devised a public programme based on supporting artists through residency opportunities and the development of new commissions made for the programme at Hospitalfield and for public platforms elsewhere across the world. This emphasis is placed at a time when institutions tend to forget that artists, at whatever stage they are in their careers, need time and space to make new work and the opportunity to fail in order to succeed.
Byatt directs a public programme that reflects a strong commitment to working with contemporary artists as well as the care of, and engagement with Hospitalfield’s fascinating heritage and collections. Her priority is to establish an effective interdisciplinary programme, rooted in the visual arts, that is continuously broadening its engagement with people living and working in the region of Angus whilst continuing to sustain an international focus.
Simon Groom is the Director, Modern and Contemporary Art, National Galleries of Scotland.
Groom graduated with a degree in English Literature from Edinburgh University, before spending time living and working in Japan and Italy, and then completed an MA and PhD at the Courtauld Institute of Art, in modern and postwar international art. Simon worked as the curator at Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge, and Head of Exhibitions at Tate Liverpool, with a special interest in art from the Asia Pacific region, before joining the National Galleries of Scotland.
He was one of the selectors of the Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize 2021.
Tania Kovats’ practice and research as an artist is an exploration of our experience of landscape, increasingly with an environmental focus. Her work includes temporary and permanent sculptural works often in the public realm, drawing, and writing, that currently consider her preoccupation with water, rivers, seas and oceans. She works at the confluence of environmental, psychological, political, and the personal. Kovats is an advocate for drawing in its expanded field, as a highly significant tool of thinking and expression, that provides an infinite and varied means of communication that continues to be expanded and enriched by practitioners. She regularly seeks out engagement and impact with audiences beyond the gallery. Her works are in both public and private collections in the UK and abroad, including Arts Council, Jupiter Artland, The British Council, Government Art Collection, the National Maritime Museum Greenwich, and the V&A.
Jade Montserrat was the recipient of the Stuart Hall Foundation Scholarship supporting her PhD (via MPhil) at IBAR, UCLan, (Race and Representation in Northern Britain in the context of the Black Atlantic: A Creative Practice Project) and the development of her work from her Black diasporic perspective in the North of England. She was also awarded one of two Jerwood Student Drawing Prizes in 2017 for No Need for Clothing, a documentary photograph of a drawing installation at Cooper Gallery DJCAD by Jacquetta Clark. Jade’s Rainbow Tribe project – a combination of historical and contemporary manifestations of Black Culture from the perspective of the Black Diaspora is central to the ways she is producing a body of work, including No Need For Clothing and its iterations, as well as her performance work Revue. Jade was commissioned to present Revue as a 24 hour live performance at SPILL Festival of Performance, October 2018, a solo exhibition at The Bluecoat, Liverpool, (Nov – 10 Mar 2019) which toured to Humber Street Gallery ( July-sept 2019) and was commissioned by Art on the Underground to create the 2018 Winter Night Tube cover. Iniva and Manchester Art Gallery have commissioned Jade as the first artist for the Future Collect project (2020). As of 2021, Jade participated in a group exhibition titled An Infinity of Traces at Lisson Gallery, and opened a solo exhibition titled In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens at Bosse & Baum Gallery, both in London.
Olivia Plender (born 1977) is an artist based in London and Stockholm. Plender's work often starts with research into social movements and their histories, because what we think we know about the past inevitably shapes what we believe is possible in the future. She is interested in the relationships between gender, power and authority – who claims the right to speak in public and how the ‘rational’ is defined. Through collaborations with both adults and children – in workshops, performances, installations, and videos – Plender attempts to listen to those voices that usually go unheard and reflect on some of the problems with how history has been written. She also make drawings and comics, including an ongoing series titled The History of Animal Kingdom. Recent exhibitions include The School of Creators: The Art of Learning from the 1960s to the present, Centre Pompidou-Metz, 2022; 34th Bienal de São Paulo, 2021; Life Support, Glasgow Women’s Library, 2021; Not Without My Ghosts, Hayward Gallery Touring exhibition, 2021-2022.
Natsumi Sakamoto (born in Tokyo, Japan) is an artist based in Glasgow who creates multi-media installations that include film, drawing and animation. Her practice employs oral tradition to examine memories of hidden history through a feminist lens. She explores the politics of women's work and gender roles embedded in the intangible heritage of superstitions, songs and everyday ritual passed down through intergenerational memory.
Her work aims to make visible the multiplicity of storytelling by voicing individual experiences through cross-cultural dialogue. Her recent solo and group exhibitions include: Knitting the Intangible Voices, 16Nicholson Street, Glasgow (2021); Memories in Movement, Place MAK, Seoul (2019); Quiet Dialogue: Invisible Existences and Us, Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, Tokyo (2019). She works internationally and with one of her most recent works she collaborated on a transnational filmmaking project between Scotland and Japan, "Speculative Fiction: Practicing Collectively" which was screened at e-flux Artist Cinemas. She often works collaboratively with artists from different disciplines and she is also a member of the feminism-focused artist collective called Back and Forth Collective.
Anita Taylor is Dean of Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design at the University of Dundee. She is the founding Director of the foremost annual drawing exhibition in the UK, the Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize [since 1994], and Drawing Projects UK, a public-facing initiative dedicated to drawing [since 2009]. After graduating from MA Painting at the Royal College of Art [1987], she became Artist-in-Residence at Durham Cathedral [1987-88], then Cheltenham Fellow in Painting [1988-89].
She has extensive teaching, research, peer and expert review, and her academic leadership experience includes: Executive Dean of Bath School of Art and Design at Bath Spa University; Director & Chief Executive Officer, National Art School in Sydney, Australia; Dean of Wimbledon College of Art, University of the Arts London [UAL]; Director, The Research Centre for Drawing at UAL; and Vice Principal of Wimbledon School of Art.
Calum Wallis (born 1993) grew up in Ross Shire, UK, moving in 2013 to study Fine Art at Duncan of Jordanstone in Dundee, where he now lives. His practice asks questions of how humans relate to the natural world, posing them in the form of drawings made in, of and with the landscape. Borrowing, isolating, rescaling and repurposing natural formations, his drawings ponder the roles of memory and expectation in our experience of nature, and the deeper memory held within the earth. His drawing practice increasingly seeks to grow fresh arms, now encompassing kinetic sculpture, performance, printmaking and walking, with a sleep-based drawing practice being his final frontier.
Image credits
Bet Low, Stormy Passage, 1983. Courtesy Simon Groom.
Undated drawing of peonies by Francis Place (1647-1728). Courtesy Lucy Byatt and the collection of Hospitalfield.
Calum Wallis, 86 Bricks, 2021. Graphite on paper and canvas. 20m x 4m. Photo by Ben Douglas.
Olivia Plender, The History of Animal Kingdom – Prologue, 2016. Ink on paper (detail), 21 x 29.7cm
Jade Montserrat, No Need for Clothing, 2017. Drawing installation at Cooper Gallery. Photo by Jacquetta Clark.
Natusmi Sakamoto, Knitting the Intangible Voices, 2020. Exhibition view at 16 Nicholson Street. Photo by Bart Urbanski.
Funders and partners
The Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize project is led by its founding Director, Professor Anita Taylor, Dean of Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design at the University of Dundee, and is supported by the Trinity Buoy Wharf Trust.
Drawing as Collaboration, discovering a new language
Join artists Robert Luzar, Andrea Stokes and Nicole Wendel for an online panel presentation as they share insights about their practices and collaborative drawing. Each artist works in a collaborative manner and as part of their practice questions how drawing transcends and creates new dialogues, communication, and language.
This event will include a Q&A with the artists chaired by artist and DJCAD Lecturer Alex Roberts. Audiences will be invited to start a drawing during the event in response to a score provided by the artists.
Drawn to Dundee
This workshop is part of Drawn to Dundee, a series of talks and workshops accompanying the Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize 2021 at Cooper Gallery, co-curated by artists Tania Kovats, Professor of Drawing & Making and Alex Roberts, Lecturer in Drawing, Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design at the University of Dundee.
Participant information
Online event. Participants will receive an link upon sign-up.
This event will include a hands-on drawing activity, prompt. Please bring along any drawing tools and paper, surfaces you wish to work with.
All enquiries please contact: [email protected]
Artists' biographies
Robert Luzar is an artist, writer, and educator. He was born in Slovenia, and lived in Canada before moving to England. He holds a PhD from Central Saint Martins. His works engage with notions of ‘event’ and ‘trace’ through forms of change, thought, point, and body in ‘precarious’ forms of existence; using drawing experimentally with live-art performance, video, Internet, and space. He exhibits globally in live-art events, museums and galleries, such as Palazzo Loredan Venice (IT), Torrance Art Museum (USA), Talbot Rice Gallery (UK), DRAWinternational (FR), Katzman Contemporary (CA), Künstlerhaus Dortmund (DE), and CUMT Institute (China). His writings on art, culture and philosophy are published in books and journals such as Nancy and Visual Culture (Edinburgh University Press 2016), Theatre and Performance Design (Routledge 2017), and Drawing: Research, Theory, Practice (Intellect 2019).
Artist's Website
Andrea Stokes is an artist and Associate Professor in Fine Art at Kingston University, London, UK. Stokes’ adopts collaborative and process based techniques to interrogate locations and objects that have personal and political significance. Individual and collaborative acts of drawing play a significant role in this research.
In 2013 Stokes installed a drawing of a net curtain onto the windows of Thelma Hulbert Gallery (Honiton) in collaboration with 25 local women. Recent work ‘Lacuna’ (2021) used remote collaboration to critique the construction of an airport on the small island of Upernavik in Greenland. A missing mountain top, removed to make a runway, became a conceptual space for collective thinking and making from the multi-disciplinary and international perspectives of four women.
Artist's Vimeo
Nicole Wendel understands her drawing both as an act of setting traces and as a translation of intense perceptions of her body in relation. Forms of "Deep Listening" thereby constitute her process of composition and become visible as a performative notation. As a cross-media artist she creates and combines drawings with performances, videos and installations.
Her works have been shown in numerous national and international exhibitions, collaborations and collections. Such as the exchange project Inclusive break! A time besides many others at the Liu Haisu Museum in Shanghai, 2021, in North by Northeast, 2020, at the German Artists' Association in Berlin. Actually she works on the collaborative performance (N)ON SITE BODIES with the choreographer Jan Burkhardt for Kai10 in Düsseldorf.
Vimeo
Image credits
Andrea Stokes, Lacuna, 2021
Robert Luzar, Two Seen, One Unseeing. Telematic performance, various media, unrecorded/live video, 2016. Photo by Johannes Zits.
Jan Burkhardt and Nicole Wendel, Rehearsal on (N)ON SITE BODIES, chalk, Schlagschnur, black board, black paper, 06.12.2021, Berlin
Funders and partners
The Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize project is led by its founding Director, Professor Anita Taylor, Dean of Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design at the University of Dundee, and is supported by the Trinity Buoy Wharf Trust.
Drawing as 'translating': exploring the personal relationship with archive
A workshop led by artist Natsumi Sakamoto exploring drawing as 'translating' and as a way of creating a personal relationship with history.
Participants will refer to archival material of women workers in the jute industry in Dundee, focusing on their anonymity in history and acquiring the touch of lost memories through drawing.
Participants will observe archival material in various ways and make experimental drawings as they translate historical material in their own personal 'language'.
Drawn to Dundee
This workshop is part of Drawn to Dundee, a series of talks and workshops accompanying the Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize 2021 at Cooper Gallery, co-curated by artists Tania Kovats, Professor of Drawing & Making and Alex Roberts, Lecturer in Drawing, Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design at the University of Dundee.
Participant information
This limited capacity in-person drawing workshop will take place within the Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize 2021 exhibition on level 2 of Cooper Gallery.
Participants are requested to take a Rapid Lateral Flow Test prior to arriving to the workshop.
Participants are invited to bring their preferred drawing materials, eg. Sketchbook, drawing tools, mobile phone, camera and/or sound recorder.
The gallery is on two floors. Ground floor has ramped access. First floor is accessible by an internal lift and six steps with a handrail. Wheelchair access is via a stairclimber. Please email in advance if you require lift, stairclimber or with any other access enquiries.
First floor is also accessible via 24 steps. Two flights of 12 steps with handrails are separated by a landing.
Artist's Biography
Natsumi Sakamoto (born in Tokyo, Japan) is an artist based in Glasgow who creates multi-media installations that include film, drawing and animation. Her practice employs oral tradition to examine memories of hidden history through a feminist lens. She explores the politics of women's work and gender roles embedded in the intangible heritage of superstitions, songs and everyday ritual passed down through intergenerational memory.
Her work aims to make visible the multiplicity of storytelling by voicing individual experiences through cross-cultural dialogue.
Her recent solo and group exhibitions include: Knitting the Intangible Voices, 16Nicholson Street, Glasgow (2021); Memories in Movement, Place MAK, Seoul (2019); Quiet Dialogue: Invisible Existences and Us, Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, Tokyo (2019). She works internationally and with one of her most recent works she collaborated on a transnational filmmaking project between Scotland and Japan, "Speculative Fiction: Practicing Collectively" which was screened at e-flux Artist Cinemas. She often works collaboratively with artists from different disciplines and she is also a member of the feminism-focused artist collective called Back and Forth Collective.
Image credit
Natsumi Sakamoto, A Rowan Wards off Witches, 2019. Exhibition view at Place MAK, Seoul.
Funders and partners
The Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize project is led by its founding Director, Professor Anita Taylor, Dean of Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art & Design at the University of Dundee, and is supported by the Trinity Buoy Wharf Trust.