Part Two of My Love Letter to an Unnamed Residency

Part two: This was my project proposal for the residency. I was cold, I think, or at least wearing many layers; my borrowed chair by my borrowed desk (I was forever the impostor) was uncomfortable, or perhaps it was too comfortable, I cannot recall. I refuse to look back, I think this is a general rule I must set for myself in order not to drown in nostalgia, and this will not be an exception. 

I wonder about this, now: where do unfinished art projects go? What about the ones that were conceived but then aborted, either by force or from an unfortunate fall down the stairs, just a short trip to get marmalade from the pantry? Do they go to heaven? Do the evil ones go to hell?

 

I will tell you this, for this is what I have now begun:

It is a project where I bead and bead and bead my own passport photo so that I cannot recognize my own face. Parts of it may be visible, but there is a strain and one cannot breathe.

Beautiful though they are, words like strangulation and asphyxiation bring life to unpleasant dreams; you wake gasping and crying for air. We all have dreams, don’t we, where our fingers curl and stretch around our throats?
 

 

What does drowning feel like when it’s a relief

What does drowning feel like when water is more welcoming than dry earth

What does drowning feel like when the better alternative to life on land that doesn’t want you that doesn’t need you

What does drowning feel like with child clutched to your chest trying to get out and up


 

Cough and sputter all you want, but coming up for air is almost never a good idea.
 

I will never, probably, know what being an asylum seeker or refugee feels like, and I think that makes me grateful. My original idea was to seek asylum as a refugee in various European countries and document this. Though still on the table, something tells me I don’t know enough, I don’t know nearly enough.

So then I wanted to bead and to continue beading my own face, the face of an asylum seeker, a refugee. If I can cover these pictures drawings images with thousands of beads and spend time doing so, then surely I will be better equipped to understand the sheer number of people roaming across the Mediterranean in nothingness boats for a slight hope of something (life) better than nothing (death, or worse, a worthless life).


 

If I try to find every refugee and asylum seeker in the Unnamed City and speak with them, will I understand it better?

If I bead them all, will I understand it better?

(and why does it look so much like beat and I wonder and I wonder)


 

So this is what I want to do, and if I haven’t said so already then I might never get to the point. Listen-

If I don’t bead a thousand faces life-size on a slippery daffodil-colored boat this year in Vilnius, then I might never do it.

If I don’t embroider one hundred faces that on either side of the Great Divide (seeing and being seen, arriving and welcoming, rejecting and accepting), the citizens and soon-to-be- or never-will-be-citizens this year in Vilnius, then I might never do it.

And if I come to the Unnamed City and don’t embroider or bead at all then know I have not failed.


 

The title of my project is They Come At Night and is a work in progress and a mind plan and a master plan and also a blueprint drawn with flimsy water colors that slip off the page before you say cheesecake.

They Come At Night is a project that aims to identify and understand the integration and/or assimilation of refugees and asylum seekers in Europe, particularly the Unnamed City, through personal narratives gathered through interviews and meetings conducted by said artist (myself).

They Come At Night is, in its dreams and ambitions, a multidimensional installation that can grow and run throughout my time at the Unnamed Residency. In its form, it becomes an online archive with the information harvested, sound and writing and image. In patience, I will bead it, or at least the people I see and meet, or perhaps only my own face, again and again, serious no contrast white background officialdom that never smiles.

They Come At Night tries to approach you with grace on its side and a knife in the pocket. Occupying both real and virtual spaces I envision it like a mold that grows uncontrollably, bereft of a predictable result (or else: you only notice it when your cheese, bread and ham are all devoured and long gone). Unlike a mold, however, I will not work alone and in the dark.

They Come At Night will also invite sneaky and suspicious-looking collaborations, must involve travelling, and requires a relatively open studio policy (from my side).

They Come At Night is already begun, if only in its simplest and most straightforward form: the beadings, one of which I have sent you.


 

I try, and I try, and yet again I try.


 

They Come At Night is something I have begun but also something that isn’t nearly begun, because it is a large and living thing (and births can be difficult and traumatic, we all know) and it will set itself upon the world in such a manner that I’m worried (certain) of losing control entirely.


 

My dearest darling:

This is my project and here you have it. Like a scaffolding merely, I am holding it together with dreams of being with you this coming Spring, patiently beading away on the Norwegian farm where I currently reside, teaching at the local middle school. Some days I pierce my own face one million times with a tiny needle and then extend the pain a tenthfold with the thread that drags itself through it: across the plains there are also beads upon beads upon beads. When my eyes later on, my countenance is heavy with tears and I wonder where it all came from.


Thank you. Thank you.

Application to an Unnamed Residency

Preface: I wrote this application in a frenzy some time late in 2015 at the teacher's room where I was a substitute. The Unnamed Residency is just that for privacy reasons, because I do not know if the Residency wants to be named and included in my art and writing, and because it might contain sensitive information about the Residency. I strip at the turn of the tide, but will hesitate to bare you naked too.

 

I saw you and I knew that you were perfect.

But first, let me tell you a story. Listen-

I spent the Spring of 2014 in New York at a residency program along with a bunch of juniors and seniors from other art schools in the US and Canada. Having no idea the scope or structure of the program, I figured I’d likely be doing what I was already doing: drawing attenuated lines marched up like soldiers on faded Chinese paper. For hours I could sit. It’s rarely a problem for me to be alone.

But I wasn’t alone, and the more time I spent in New York the less time I’d engage with my patience-demanding, back-aching, time-engulfing lines upon lines upon lines upon lines upon lines of ink (my brush had no more than 15 hairs, of that I’m sure). Surely there are still signs of my wear and tear on the communal kitchen and living room in the residency? Photos of the floor before and after we cleaned it, like from black to white? Or, to be honest, from a dark gray to a lighter shade…

We would sit in the kitchen and talk into the late hours of the night, and my studio became sorely neglected. Talking became listening, and I listened all I could, my ears big and red and sore. Economics and New York housing policy and gentrification, art and money and class and art, hashtags and activism and political meetings and panel discussions until something had to come out of me, I would overflow and drown.

Upon returning to my studio I discovered it was a complete mess. Drawings of naked ladies on the wall, big and dirty sheets of fake grass meant for a mini-golf court, marshmallows made out of baby clay and piles upon piles of paper printouts of screenshots taken from Rihanna’s video What Now (I was working with bondage for part of the year).

Dark gray became light gray and walls white. Tables piled into my studio space and I sent out invitations; the first of May two-thousand-and-fourteen the first Unpanel commenced, a somewhat haphazardly constructed (and poorly moderated) roundtable discussion about art and money and collaboration. Many came from Occupy, from alternative educational institutions, from my residency, from art resource centers, from everywhere. It worked well and it totally flopped and I learned a million things from it, but it wasn’t why I came to New York. It became the reason I loved it, and did something no one else had done there before.

The question I’ve been asked is why I’m applying to you, and I told you that my reason is because you are perfect. I told you this story about my time in New York because it was as rich as butter and cream, but not what I planned for it to be. When I first found you about a year ago (right after the deadline had passed) I thought that this was a place where arrival and departure can be two different things. Where something can be many things, and newness is something too.

I’ve told you this story, and in telling you I’ve got hopes that you could be one such story I tell later on. About giving back and stretching the definition of who we are and what we make and what we make art for

It is because of this: I came to New York to do one thing and I left doing something completely different. You are one such place. You are not a factory, I think. Neither are you a cow, where the same stuff comes up day after day after month after year, and milk comes and then poop: it’s predictable.

You are perfect, you are whole and unpredictable and strange and open and I don’t know what you want but creativity and art and thinking and working, and I want to be in you.

Some updates and joyous news!

It's been a while, I know. There are several reasons for this that are absolutely uninteresting for me to go into as they mostly involve me spending my days mowing lawns and planting flowers on a graveyard in Oslo. Fine, I went into it anyway, because I honestly really enjoy it, though it naturally gives me much less time to work and to write. 

BUT I have still found SOME time, and I always have time to read yeses or noses from people I've begged for money from. That sentence turned out a bit weird... Mostly it's noses, but I can finally say that I've gotten a yes, or actually, SEVERAL yeses! Alright, two yeses. I won't say too much about the second one because nothing's been finalized and I'd hate to come crawling back and say it didn't work out, but I can at least disclose the first one and what this wonderful, sumptuous and highly desirable yes will mean for me. 

As I have subtly disclosed in this interview I am going to Japan in the middle of the summer! I was going to do this anyways, but now I have also been given a gorgeous and generous grant to do so, from the Scandinavia-Japan Sasakawa Foundation. I know, I know, not supposed to brag, being both Norwegian and a flink pike (look it up, it's a rather common syndrome in Norwegian females, young and old), but I will. The trip to Japan will be month-long, and I'm going to spend my time there participating in an indigo- and shibori workshop led by Bryan Whitehead (this is his blog, which is so well-written and poetic) outside of Tokyo and traveling around the country visiting different places that are important to Japanese textile traditions and crafts. More on this later. I have also received homework, and I MAY or may not disclose the progress, but having been without homework for a year now I find that I'm totally out of the habit... As I prepare for the trip by doing research and DOING HOMEWORK (just have to actually write that) I will try to keep blogging about it, and I will naturally blog about the trip in da real time, as it iz happening. 

Preview of homework. Not sure if this will work out, but we shall see!