Design: Maeve Redmond
Ahead of Laura Guy and Steven Grainger’s event ‘Inventing Vocabularies’, Guy shares a selection of writing that has shaped the research project ‘Imagining a City’ for our Room for Reading.
Guy selects 'Leaving the Auld Toon' in Nothing Personal: Pilot Issue (2021) by Neil Clements; ‘All Shadows are Alive’ (2023) by Esther Draycott; 'Teneu’ (2024) by Rosie's Disobedient Press; ‘Ingress’ (2023) by Kate Morgan and ‘Apparitions (Nines)’ (2024) by Nat Raha.
'Leaving the Auld Toon' in Nothing Personal: Pilot Issue (2021) by Neil Clements.
'Leaving the Auld Toon' in Nothing Personal: Pilot Issue (2021) by Neil Clements
“I moved to Glasgow ten years ago, in 2015. I was working on my PhD, which looked at how queer feminist publics had been imagined by artists and activists through ephemeral print cultures, focusing on the manifesto form. Through this research, I was interested to come across the exhibition ‘Read My Lips: New York AIDS Polemics’, curated by Nicola White at Tramway in 1992. Histories of queer art and culture are often framed through notions of scarcity. Though it’s important not to understate the backdrop of homophobic legislation and government inaction against which ‘Read My Lips’ took place, it also happened at a time of relative abundance. The exhibition was well supported by public funding in the period immediately following Glasgow’s designation as European City of Culture.
Thinking about the implications of this exhibition for narratives of art and culture in the early 1990s, I have also been thinking about the cultural scene that I have participated in since 2015. This period has seen the emergence of a new institutional - or infrastructural, as the late Marina Vishmidt identified - critique. Neil Clements’ essay ‘Leaving the Auld Toon’, published in the pilot issue of Nothing Personal (2021), was instructive for me in this respect. Addressing Glasgow International and the story of the city it reinforces, Neil’s essay also provides a useful overview of transformations within the city’s funding landscape over the last two decades. Here paucity is not something that belongs to the past but the present. Yet he also identifies a ‘patchwork infrastructure’ of local practice. He writes, ‘if the city is to function in service of its local practitioners, we must pay closer attention to its internal rhythms’.”
‘All Shadows are Alive’ (2023) by Esther Draycott.
‘All Shadows are Alive’ (2023) by Esther Draycott
“‘All Shadows are Alive’ is the outcome of Esther Draycott’s research project about the Glasgow drying green. The formal inventiveness of her approach to histories of the city is structured through multiple voices and was developed within her PhD. In her writing, Esther weaves different kinds of artefacts together in a process that could be likened both to excavation and to reconstruction. It reminds me of what Naomi Pearce calls a ‘forensic feminist methodology’, where evidentiary approaches are employed in ways that complicate the writing of history of women’s lives and work. It also brings to mind Glasgow-based writer and artist Shola von Reinhold’s ‘Lote’ (2020), which does amazing work in relation to the obfuscation and erasure of black figures in history. The poet Edwin Morgan is a figure who casts a shadow across Esther’s pamphlet. She writes about how he uses ‘the dirt that remains on billowing white sheets on the Green to speak to another obfuscated story, that of homosexual life in post-war Glasgow’.”
'Teneu’ (2024) by Rosie's Disobedient Press.
'Teneu’ (2024) by Rosie's Disobedient Press
“Adrien Howard and Lisette May Monroe founded Rosie’s Disobedient Press in 2020, to foreground writers working from perspectives that have historically been marginalised by both mainstream and artist publishing. Like Esther’s writing, Rosie’s recent collection ‘Teneu’ is a situated exploration of the city, one that invokes the deep histories and forgotten futures of the St Enoch Centre. Calling upon the eponymous saint, Teneu foregrounds non-linear, queer temporalities in ways that are reminiscent of Charlie Prodger’s video Bridget (2016). Teneu is also a meditation on formal and informal infrastructures and in this way contributes to a broader landscape of practice investigating post-industrial and post-colonial lineages and legacies within the fabric of the city of Glasgow. Mason Leaver-Yap’s contribution to Teneu concludes with a question that seems to encircle much of this work. ‘Classing something as a ruin is less about the thing being labelled, and more a question of who has the power to manifest and name the ruination in the first place... A ruin for whom, ruined by whom?’.”
‘Ingress’ (2023) by Kate Morgan
‘Ingress’ (2023) by Kate Morgan
“Both Kate and their writing came to me through sad circumstances and in those circumstances opened up material and tender descriptions of fractured intimacies. They wrote ‘Ingress’ from their tenement flat in Glasgow. It contains observations about living, working, relationships and architectures. Like other texts on this list, Ingress helps me to think about infrastructure in ways that are both critical and expansive. The scaffolding for Ingress is unsure, susceptible to leaks. Glasgow seeps into the text as an atmospherical state.”
‘Apparitions (Nines)’ (2024) by Nat Raha.
‘Apparitions (Nines)’ (2024) by Nat Raha
“For some time now, my research and writing has predominantly attended to archives of post-1960s feminist, queer and trans cultural activity. There has been a tension in this work: the tug of the past on the urgent demands of the present. Along with others, I have been interested in this tension, in thinking through and alongside practices that make returns in ways that might allow the present to appear other than its dominant and dominating forms. But recently I’ve found myself less convinced by this desire to return to the archive. In part a consequence of regarding the genocide in Gaza, it’s also, not unconnectedly, because I’m compelled to write in relation to the counter-institutional and counter-infrastructural practices that are present in this city, some of which I’ve recorded here. Nat Raha’s scholarship is remarkable partly for the way it enfolds histories within practice and doing so expands the horizons of past(s) and present(s). Her poetry, most recently published in her book ‘Apparitions (Nines)’, does this too but with the greater immediacy and urgency, accumulation and interruption her form allows.”
Details
In conjunction with our projects, exhibitions and events, Room for Reading offers artists we work with an opportunity to contribute to The Common Guild library and share the books and resources that have influenced their artistic practice.
Every artist’s selection is added to The Common Guild’s expansive reference library of artist books, catalogues, and cultural and critical theory.
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Our library space is open every Thursday from 12-5pm between 27th February and 27th March.