The publication of my
interview about the Text Festival with Derek Beaulieu in Jacket,
which was actually concluded just after the Festival, turns out to be
coincidental with my ability to return to blogging. It’s been an odd year or
more social media-wise. Almost overnight, I went from active and frequent
verbosity to near silence, which probably seemed a bit odd to people who follow
these writings. Initially there was an element of exhaustion post-festival exacerbated by the urgently
depressing/infuriating battle to save cultural services from the
sado-monetarist onslaught of the evil which is the coalition government. Paradoxically,
the solution to the threat that I came up with precluded even more public
comment. To the many participants and followers of the Text Festival, an
inclusive open maybe even rambling dialogical event, it may be counterintuitive
that my next major cultural project has to be developed in large part through confidential
negotiations but that has what has been engaging me for the last 12 months.
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So I set up to find an
artistic solution.
The answer turned out to be
unexpectedly simple: We should curate our way out of trouble. The arts should
do what Art does. Specifically: to curate exhibitions and projects aimed at
international galleries and networks; to move the cultural horizon beyond the
constricted UK context to where there were still opportunities for funding and
partnerships committed to culture qua culture. It may seem simple now but I
lost count of the number of meetings at which someone said: why has no-one
thought of this before?
I had imagined that this
would be the way forward for Bury, but unexpectedly galleries and museums
across the north threw their hats into the ring realising that it offered
opportunity to all. Pretty quickly I had lost count of how many had joined the
project – it is somewhere around forty now, I think.
I planned to focus on Japan
initially, as we had experience working there; but as the British Council got involved
we were quickly steered to China as the UK’s top priority: hence my trips to
China in October 2011 and April 2012 to negotiate and set up projects. As much
of the detail was delicate, diplomatic and intensely demanding, confidentiality
became essential to progress the plans: so behind the scenes me and my team
(who have been remarkable) have been working on the hardest, most complicated
project we’ve ever attempted; meanwhile outwardly, my social media presence was
near silence.
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Having ‘worked through’ the
transition from the Text Festival to world tours, I thought that my observations
in the interview with Derek would now seem out of date but I think it still
covers what I thought of the Festival. As I predicted despite my protestations
I am now working on a 2014 Text Festival, and as I projected then, the
questions that seemed to me unacknowledged challenges for poets will probably
surface; although maybe not, as poetry has seemed less and less relevant as the
year has passed: my latest poetry book will be lucky if it is read by 50
people; the exhibition I have organised in China will be seen by 4 million.
Maybe this was one of the reasons why my book was called “The End of Poetry”.
I have missed blogging: I
originally started blogging because I liked moaning about crap books, films and
exhibitions. And over the last year there have been many things I could and
should have moaned about, but now I’m back!