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Press 19 OCTOBER 2009
Sandra Alland
Sandra Alland

A Spot of B)other: LGBTI Deaf and Disabled Cultures
Sandra Alland in collaboration with Stuart Crawford, Nathan Gale, Y. Josephine, Jennie Kermode, Rebeca Pla, Alison Smith, Penny Stenhouse and Kristiane Taylor.

The exhibition opens 26th November 2009 - 21 February 2010

Sandra Alland Open Studio, with members of the b)other collective
Thursday 5 November 2009, 3-5pm and 6-9pm, Free

Trongate 103 Visting Artist Studio,2nd floor, Glasgow Artist-in-residence Sandra Alland with members of the b)other collective is holding an open studio event as part if Trongate’s First Thursday programme. In the evening the rest of Trongate 103, a new arts space with many galleries will also have an open house. b)other is: Sandra Alland, Stuart Crawford, Nathan Gale, Y Josephine, Jennie Kermode, Rebeca Pla, Alison Smith, Penny Stenhouse and Kristiane Taylor.

For more information visit: http://www.trongate103.com/128,137,631/whats_on/events/sandra_alland_open_studio_event/

A Spot of b)other
Amy Birchard, Mon 19 Oct 2009

Originally published in The Skinny, October 2009

There is already a wealth of material for artists to address on issues surrounding the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community, but GoMA's upcoming show A Spot of b)other also harnesses the experience of another marginalised group in society - those within deaf and disabled cultures.


b)other is the title of the artists' collective formed in July 2009 by GoMA's artist-in-residence Sandra Alland comprising artists Stuart Crawford, Nathan Gale, Y. Josephine, Jennie Kermode, Rebecca Pla, Alison Smith, Penny Stenhouse and Kristiane Taylor. Spanning a variety of media this exhibition features text pieces, photo works, Fingers - a British Sign Language filmed poetry performance by Alison Smith, and Here - Alland's documentary that deals with LGBTI immigrants in Edinburgh. Accompanying this are 9 portraits of b)other members. Studio work by the group is also on display including poems, videos, digital art and paintings.


The show aims to broaden perceptions about gender and intersexuality and force individuals to rethink their ideas about ability. Alland pointed out to The Skinny that "the majority of art presented in galleries is still by straight, white, able-bodied, cissexual men". But in case you were about to dismiss the exhibition as an angry outcry about the exhibiting artists' plight, she firmly sets the record straight: "this show challenges a lot of assumptions about what kind of art you might assume an LGBTI disabled or deaf person would make (or what they might look like). Although b)other ask some difficult questions, we lean more towards the celebratory than the screaming banshee".


Addressing the notion of 'otherness', a label that haunts these communities, the exhibition and accompanying 'zine' (an independent magazine available at GoMA's front desk) function as an exploration into the shared experiences of these groups. b)other, as is perhaps self-evident, refers to various aspects of the group's artistic intentions and standpoint. This collective have bothered to tackle the issues faced by these communities but acknowledge the arduous task of attempting to overcome prejudice in the face of engrained discrimination. Although their identity might render them 'other' they seek to highlight their differences rather than comply with any definition of 'normal'.

Exhibitions which confront ongoing, underlying prejudice are a necessary interlude to the vast array of self referencing and self involved exhibitions that speak solely to people within the art community. Whilst this show may not whip up quite the media frenzy some of its recent predecessors at GoMA have, it does defiantly tackle LGBTI and Deaf and Disabled issues head on without taking itself too seriously. Kristiane Taylor's drawings, not least, are sure to draw a smile, if not a few resounding guffaws.

 

   
 
   
 
   
 
   
 
   
 
   
 
 

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