Archived entries for Text Artist

Dundee Contemporary Arts – Engage Everyone

As the Summer rolled into Autumn I rolled in and out of Dundee. I was engaged, if you pardon the pun, in a residency as part of the Engage Everyone stream. Engage is all about encouraging people to engage, go visit, interact with Galleries and Museums – in this case specifically focussed around disability. I was interested in how the venue affected peoples interaction as a building as well as a cultural space. I took the approach of a psychological investigation. Yes it really does matter to me and how i interact with a space and how comfortable i feel in that space if that wall is actually a door and likely to move. For more on this see the ‘queue’ work below.

Not only was i interested in the space and the building but also the organisation.  How does the organisation deal with disability? As mental health is a particular interest of mine – then how does the organisation behave as an employer towards stress or anxiety or depression for instance – a few of the easier to get a handle on ones first! From my experience as a therapist and group worker in the past organisations can mirror familys – similarly if a cohort of workers feel comfortable around disability issues then this will be reflected in how the organisation deals with disabled visitors. The tricky thing is though – not all disabilities are visible or obvious. Also there is the fear of getting it wrong. I am frequently around various disabilities and yet sometimes when i meet a wheelchair user i have those moments of panic – do i shake hands, do i sit down – have i stood beyond the natural sitting down time – Jackie was great(Jackie Smith, the other artist) she was just directive and up front. Similarly in one of the photos below ia picture of the rear entrance to DCA – which doubles as the diasabled access lift. Please note the small and seedy nature of it. By contrast you could get a 3 piece suite and a standard lamp in the cargo lift. I know the reality but it does say something to me about where the value lies. However to balance that if DCA didn’t want to address issues they would have hired expensive consultants and got a report rather than getting a couple of artists in. So well done DCA on being progressive. The next stage is attending a conference on the findings of this and its sister residencies in Edinburgh and Glasgow.

Perhaps the biggest learning for me on a practice level was using the laser cutter and wxperimenting with that. This piece below was inspired by a conversation at DCA

I was so amazed at the detail of the laser. This work will not be shown at DCA but it is a personal favourite. And thanks to Rob in the print room for his endless patience and help.

I was amazed at the detail and contrast possible

I had initially thought  i would print – and indeed i did – it was like learning from scratch again and was fantastic. However I had my head turned by the laser. These are a limited edition print run of icons turned into folded books.

In between in Dundee I had 2 other exhibitions and was working with the British Institute for Human Rights on a pilot project encouraging people to exercise their human rights through the arts. I made a QR code that directed to an Article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on the engageeveryone blog site

It wouldn’t be Text Art without a bit of text.

And finally those doors.

Salisbury Arts Centre

In December I went to Salisbury Arts Centre to do a talk with Gini and Juan from The View From Here exhibition. It’s strange going to an exhibition where you have work never having seen it. Usually you are there to over see the installation and know how it looks, make a decision about being happy with it, having tweaked, designed, redesigned the show. This time due to budgetary and time constraints I hadn’t had the opportunity to go and install, I had come up with concepts and sent my instructions and intentions to the curator of the show. Then i had sent redesigns and these were passed on in best ‘chinese whispers’ style. Whilst the execution of the text is low-fi I was happy with the hats.

Initially i had sent text to be placed over the stained glass windows of the old church – a new trinity – Ruminate, Gestate, Initiate. Hoever the ambient light just made the text as it was in situ just not workable. The text was moved onto the columns in the cafe.

Salisbury Arts Centre

I have been asked to respond to the exhibition ‘The View from Here’ at Salisbury Arts Centre This is what they say about my work.

Aidan Moesby works mostly with text. Its physical manifestation is as important as the words themselves, made into objects or created fleetingly for site-specific installations; isolated words and short phrases draw you up short, engage you in a dialogue, interrogate their context and throw you back on your own resources. Here he will be making a new work as a commissioned response to the other artists’ work and the setting of Salisbury Arts Centre, scattered words moving the viewer through the space physically, visually and psychologically, and in some indirect way substituting (perhaps usurping) the absent aural and written content of delGado and Bruch’s conceptual postcards

Do You Think We Can Talk About This?

I have just installed ‘Do you think we can talk about this?’ at the Centre For Life, Newcastle. It is a collection of pieces which reflect on  the personal and cultural agenda surrounding mental health. It runs for a couple of months. Can we talk about mental health? At once we are fascinated by those perceived as kooky, off beat, crazy and then we tire of them and vilify them and perpetuate the stereotypical images and viewpoints of those living with an enduring mental health condition. I hope we can talk about it, I hope we can get a right good open honest discussion going.

Letterpress. Paper, Acrylic,Text 2010

Brief Statement

A socially engaged text based artist Moesbys’ work is informed through the linguistic and visual imagery we use to create and make sense of the worlds we inhabit. Text based installations explore the conflict within the personal and cultural agendas of our Cultural and Psychological heritage. He utilises a variety of media, technologies and approaches in order to realise the artwork yet the text and its imbued meaning is always paramount

Framing of the Work

Aidan Moesby utilises metaphor to provoke a re-evaluation of what it means to experience psychological conflict. The work references the ‘Personal’ and ‘Cultural’ worlds. It explores the preoccupation with the ‘Pop’ psychology of the disposable ‘low brow’ visual media culture which offers the empty promise of 15 minutes of fame through simulated catharsis.

The work has everything and nothing to do with his own experience of Bipolar Disorder. We all experience the highs, lows and ennui of life. To some extent we have lost our sense of Self and our Integrity. Validation is sought from others rather than from within. We yearn for vicarious fulfilment, the projected phantasy, the glossy dream, the ‘quick fix’ down on ‘Easy Street’. We do not wish to look at or acknowledge our own psychological fragilities, and very often we do not wish to attend to those fragilities of others lest we catch them.

Aidan attempts to explore the frailty of the Human Condition in all its’ imperfect splendour. He mines a rich and complex vein of written and visual language in an effort to gain an understanding and awareness of how we can make sense our place in the worlds we create. Ultimately he acknowledges that we are in a state of constant flux and the work remains to inhabit the often subtle, fragile and dynamic boundary between the conflicted continuum of ‘ease’ and ‘dis-ease’.

Mirror. Text. 2004

First Post – An Overview

These days we live in a 24/7 world that never sleeps. We are saturated by images and text yet both have ceased to have any real meaning. The fuller the diaspora gets the emptier it seems. Maybe it’s not devoid of meaning, maybe communication is changing – the how and the what. Language has always evolved. This is further complicated by digital and social media. I am not a native to this landscape as I was recently informed, I am a digital migrant and I am always playing catch up with a culture that is not my ‘first’ – no matter how early I adopt or how much I try and integrate.  This is illustrated by the comparison of this virtual environment with my passion for Letterpress.

My work is all about meaning, trying to make sense of things. Attempting to come to terms and understand our place in the world and the roles we play within it. Oral and visual imagery is key to this and we each have our personal languages, mediated through memory, experience, personal associations. Our personal heritage. This is further layered by our cultural heritage.

A text – an e-mail – a letter. Each is used differently, the words within each, even if similar mean something different, have a different weight, a different impact. The sender and recipient generally know this and understand the code, the unwritten, unspoken rules of engagement.

I hope this site is a location for dialogue, research, inspiration and work.



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