Opportunity of a LifetimeIAN STEPHEN has been involved in both of the Triangle Trust International Artists Workshops held so far in the Highlands & Islands, once as an artist as once as resident boatman. The Lewis-based writer, artist and sailor sets the scene for this month’s Three Islands Workshop on the island of Hoy |
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| The Three Islands Workshop is a development that grew out of Còmhla, the first Triangle Trust Workshop to be held in Scotland (see weblink at end for more information on the Triangle Trust). It took place in association with Taigh Chearsabhagh on North Uist in 2003, and was followed by the first of the Three Islands Workshops on Tanera Mor in the Summer Isles last year (see our From the Archive feature or page link below for the Northings weblog which documented the event). The second Three Islands Workshop takes place this month on Hoy, and the sequence will culminate with a return to Uist next year. NORTHINGS: Ian, how did you get involved in the Triangle Trust Workshops? IAN STEPHEN: I got involved in the run up to the Còmhla workshop in Uist, which was a partnership with Taigh Chearsabhagh. I hadn’t heard of the Triangle Trust before, and wasn’t aware of their work, but I was asked to be on the steering group, both as one of the artists involved, and also in helping to select the other artists. Several of the other people involved had been on Triangle Trust workshops elsewhere, including Nicky Gear in Zimbabwe, I think it was, and Shauna McMullan in Pakistan. If you talk to anyone who has been on one of these, I think they would agree they have been profoundly moved by the experience N: What form does the event take? IS: The basic idea is that you have ten or so artists from a host country and about the same number from as wide afield as possible, and they are just put together for a couple of weeks with a small materials budget and accommodation provided, and that is basically it. There is no pressure to make an exhibition or anything like that. The emphasis lies in the process itself – it is the experience of working together that is the point. |
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N: And the Three Islands Workshops grew out of that intial Còmhla event? |
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N: Did you find that led to explorations of new directions in the work of the artists involved? |
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N: You were involved in selecting artists for the first one at least – what kind of criteria come into play in that process? |
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N: You were not actually involved in the Tanera Mor project as an artist – what did you do? © Kenny Mathieson, 2008 LinksAssociated PagesPost your commentsPost your comments and responses to this article.
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