Sunday 19 April 2020

Nicholas Barnes (b. 2003) & Toby Golding (b. 2004) (intervention), Untitled/Site Specific Artwork. Crosby Ravensworth, Cumbria. 2016-2019.

Nicholas Barnes (b. 2003) & Toby Golding (b. 2004) (intervention)
Untitled/Site Specific Artwork. Crosby Ravensworth, Cumbria.
2016-2019.
Pencil on Household Emulsion/Plaster.

In this piece the artist records a period of his own physical growth between January 2016 and February 2019, specifically his changing stature during the early period of his adolescence. The drawing was made by standing with his back to the wall, marking the position of the top of his head at approximate right angles to the wall and repeating this act at informal monthly intervals. The repetition of this act, its performative basis and the single but changing metric it records accompanied in each case by a month/year index forms the basis of a complex and self-referential work of a tightly constrained autobiographical nature which addresses the artist’s unwillingness to accept the physical limitations of his own (short) stature during this time and his anticipation of change. Some of the marks knowingly show an ‘aspirational stretching’ of natural posture.

In common with much time based and performance work, of which this drawing could be said to be the physical trace, the work has an extended durational basis of substantial length (3 years) that places it in sharp contrast to the relative brevity and drama of that masterpiece of 20th century performance art Chris Burden’s (b. 1946 d.2015) ‘Shoot’ 1971 which also required the participation of ‘another’ actor.  

It is not known whether either Barnes or Golding drew influence from works in the performance genre that also develop over an extended period and require an element of endurance to realise such as the frequently performed ‘The Artist is Present’ by Marina Abramovic (b.1946). However, the intervention of Golding in the work can be better likened to the brief and unanticipated engagement of Ulay (b.1943 d.2020) with Abramovic during the presentation of her piece at the Museum of Modern Art, New York in 2010 than with the ‘role’ of ‘marksman/assistant’ in Burden’s ‘Shoot’. Burden’s claim to sole authorship throughout ‘Shoot’ was maintained by the artist. The marksman, Bruce Dunlap, whose subsequent career as an accountant comes as something of a surprise, is not identified, recognised or even named by the artist as a collaborator but as an element of the work under the direct authorial control of the artist. Whereas, Ulay and Abramovic’s time together (3 minutes) in the NYC iteration of ‘The Artist is Present’ both formed and signalled a rapprochement  and even reconciliation between two artists of equal/unequal standing with a shared/appropriated history of collaboration, performance, partnership and dispute.

In ‘Untitled’ 2016 2019 Golding’s intervention has a dissonant effect. He uses his intervention, adopting the same idiom of mark making established by Barnes and even going so far as to use the same pencil with which Barnes has persevered throughout, to record his own greater height despite having been born later. Golding’s intervention is mischievous, antagonistic, confrontational, disruptive and even mocking and like Ulay’s unexpected participation in Abramovic’s  performance, committed him to substantial risk driven by his desire to claim ‘his’ stake in the other’s artwork. Dunlap never made this gambit and ultimately abandoned his artistic ambitions.

Golding’s mark making and intention can be differentiated from that of Barnes as he dramatically commits his own first name ‘Toby’ to the piece. This is an act of intervention not collaboration. In addition it is not known whether Golding faced away from the wall as he marked his own height which introduces the exciting possibility of a contrived fiction in a work otherwise deriving authority from its clearly defined method and discipline. We may ask whether the artist was in fact as tall as he claims to be.

Barnes’ marks however, made whilst facing away from the drawn surface, carry a tortured quality drawn from the artist’s contorted posture which he then develops to expressive effect by physically turning whilst retaining contact between the pencil and wall. This process oriented act extends the critical frame of reference of the work from a basis in the austerity and discipline of a purely documentary format from which anxiety may merely be ‘inferred’ to a format which clearly references a mid- century trope of works rooted in Surrealism and extended in the work of the  Abstract Expressionists in which ‘writing’/mark making are said to tap into the unconscious and approach the seat of anxiety as ‘automatic writing’/gesture. Barnes reveals himself to be both a writer and a maker of images of writing. The emotional scope of the work is thereby extended in this piece as anxiety can be both inferred and ‘read’ by the viewer in a final rendering that recalls the grafittiesque work of the painter Cy Twombly (b.1928 d. 2011).

The work is site-specific being located on the upper landing of the artist’s home adjacent to a body length mirror near the artist’s bedroom door. Whereas Burden and Abramovic both placed their works in an artworld context by performing in an art gallery, Barnes’ choice to eschew an art world context is given added piquancy in its embrace of his father Christian Barnes’ (b.1966) recent practice by situating his work in the locus of his home. Barnes senior’s notebook based works ‘Peak Flow Diary’ (2014 ongoing) and ‘Blood Sugar Diary’ (2016 ongoing) document in a similar way (by recording a single metric at regular intervals) his experience of Asthma and Diabetes and the struggle to resist physical decline against the processes of ageing and chronic disease. ‘Untitled’ 2016 2019 which stands in youthful counterpoint to his father’s stage of life can now be said to have been completed/abandoned by the artists. Barnes jnr. is now the tallest member of the household although irritatingly for him Golding is still taller.

As ‘Untitled’ is painted over we are given the opportunity to reflect on the fabric of the buildings in which we dwell and the extent to which they serve as a palimpsest upon which the narrative of our lives is written/unwritten.

Links/References.
1997; Cizza, G., Chrousos, GP., Anxiety and Short Stature, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9041314 accessed 18/04/2020

2015; uploaded by the failing New York Times, Shot in the Name of Art, Op-Docs, accessed 19 May 2020 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=drZIWs3Dl1k

2012; uploaded by G Mmazz, Marina Abramović e Ulay - MoMA 2010, accessed 19 May 2020 | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OS0Tg0IjCp4

2020; Tate Gallery Website, accessed May 2020 | https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artists/cy-twombly-2079