Trans-Horse: Horse & Performance for TeaK 2020

We were fortunate to organize the fourth Horse & Performance course for the Theater Academy in the fall of 2020. Together with Pietari, we experienced challenges teaching art during a pandemic face but in the end things sorted out well. At the time COVID spread in Finland was at a decline and the University of Arts Helsinki deemed the course possible. The horse-hobby and equestrian industry here seems well equipped for dealing with the pandemic. Riding group sizes seldom exceed 10 members (and horses) and activities are organized in sparsely spaced sites, which deems it a safe activity. In fact horseback riding is a booming hobby, it offers a much needed outdoor experience and companionship. We were kindly welcomed to Malminkartano by Kaarelan ratsutalli Oy. Kaarela was a well suited site for organizing the course, it is easy to access with public transport and the area has an interesting history.

Horse & Performance had seven participants: Antonia Atarah, Anna Lehtonen, Daniela Pascual, Martta Jylhä, Gaspare Fransson, Mikael Karkkonen and Jouni Tapio. On previous courses most of the participants have been from the acting department but this time around attendees formed a balanced mixture of dramaturgist, actors, live-artists, pedagogist and sound/light designers. In 2017 we started to collect course notes to collective study journals which participants can access online. The journals present open ended questions which the course stirs up, links to texts people refer to and discussions on the exercise we partake in. This time around the document is semi-public and can be accessed  as a .pdf document. We didn’t offer the same volume of practical horse handling exercises as before. Instead we focused on working with the animals at their pasture and got to engage in an array of stable chores. Participants build a hay-shelter, erected fences and collect a lot of droppings from the pasture. I think the course was ultimately about maintenance art and laced with a crafty approach to non-human knowledge.

Taru Svahn who had established the stables twenty years ago gave a thorough introduction to the site. We learned that there has been horse related activity in the area at least since the 18th century and that the site had been a farm until the 60ties. She presented us documents from -62 which detailed farming experiments Helsinki University conducted on site and provided a history of the Malminkartano mansion from 1579 onward. Svahn told us that her motivation for establishing the riding school was set in motion by a dream which presented her a galloping horse. The dream led her to equestrian studies in Ypäjä and eventually to start a business in Malminkartano. Quite recently they have managed to expand the stable by building a manège which enables them to organize courses comfortably during the winter. When we started with horseback riding with Pietari in 2014 the manège was yet to be build and the outdoor classes in Malminkartano were really cold.

As expected working with city officials for permits to build a horse stable to a suburb was an enormous effort. Rights were eventually granted based on the site’s historical value and history with horses. In short: The horses of the past, paved way for the horses of the future. There are archaeological sites (röykkiöhauta) close by and the nearby forest is protected from development (Malminkartano was an island until 3000BCE). Svahn explained that ultimately the permission process was paved by personal relations she formed with individual city officials and a lucky coincidence where the right mix of city committee representatives happened to be in the same room at the same time. It is revealing that charisma and luck are central for city development. Svahn’s motivation for establishing the site was to grant access to horses to the youth of the district. The suburb was troubled in the 90ties. Still is.

Each day started with a morning meeting at a forest opening. Pietari heated water with a portable stove, we all sat on a branch and chatted while having coffee. The morning sessions worked well for establishing a casual relationship to the texts and theory which we structured the teaching on. There were lectures in the forest too. I fondly remember Pietari’s introduction to speciesism, with yellow rays of sunlight reflecting from the moss. When preparing for the course we were inspired by the Gustafsson&Haapoja: Museum of Becoming HAM exhibition and picked up texts by Cary Wolfe and Terike Haapoja from it. The main culprit for the theory of human-horse-relations was yet again Haraway and we turned to Soppelsa for developing insights to the role horses have had for the development of modern Europe.

At the end of the two week long course participants were invited to develop group exercise or artistic outputs, which reflected their evolving relationship to horses. This lead us to organized a miniature horse-art festival of sorts. It offered dance pieces (witnessing a horse-human dance led me to understand the relationship as a highly choreographed communication), audio-based-works (which presented arbitrary horse movements as dance), meditation and body awareness sessions (we could imagine ourselves as plants and experience ourselves as a self organizing assembly). Summaries and group reflections on the exercises are documented in the collective study journal. One of the most memorable experiences I had was a session titled “Horse’s Birthday” (Jylhä & Karkkonen). The session started with us setting a picnic table in the middle of the pasture. As we started to eat cake and to perform a birthday ceremony, our gathering and the sweet smells lured the horses in and soon our assembly was rearranged by a herd of animals. They revealed their ultimate power-move: Breaking crowds with their hulls and caused disarray in organization. Our picnic was efficiently disbanded and we were caught between rivaling horses.

Previously, in teaching art I’ve emphasized the act of “stopping” and we often practice it as a part of physical exercises: I encourage students to be rude, to halt the charismatic flow for making notes, formulate opinions and set new plans in motion. During the pasture-birthday session I noticed that I have not developed artistic exit strategies which would afford sensible and secure retrievals from difficult situations. Most horse-human exercises I’ve participated in have been focused on becoming with the animal and after the exercises have peaked we look for an opening where we can depart peacefully. This works great for establishing a sense of security but requires that the horse-human session is carefully planned: I’ve witnessed numerously how facilitators work towards soft departures. Working in the pasture –which is the horse’s domain– requires that people would also be equipped with skills in distancing themselves from the horse at haste. I think I should develop artistic skills to escape a bad situation (like a rodeo clown). I was petrified during the performance. We got stuck between five horses, a table and the cake we brought with us. I didn’t know how to safely distance our group from the dominant maneuvers of the horse herd.

On the last day of the course we got a tour of the Ruskeasuo Police horse facilities. Senior Constable Jukka Aarnisalo took us in and offered a glimpse to the offices of the 130 year old police unit. We were invited to their very compact kitchen and debriefing room, which is located in a corner of the Ruskeasuo horse stables. Inside we were presented with old Russian era swords (brought from their old headquarters in Kasarminkatu), WWII memorabilia and trophies from past competitions. Their current stables were built for the Helsinki Olympics and manifest the functionalist architecture movement in its prime. Modernist traits can be identified in the facilities waste disposal arrangements and the usage of natural light, which early modernist architects associated with hygiene (as defined by Kirsi Saarikangas).

Our visit to the stables ended the course to a very conflicted setting. Participants had just spent two weeks (re)sensitizing themselves to the nuances of horse-human communication, after which we were confronted by a professional with over 30 years of experience in working with animals in urban settings and effectively teaching multiple generations of horses skills for desensitizing themselves. To add to the confusion the skills in question were taught in a respectful working relationship, in institutionally monitored and publicly scrutinized setting. All done just so that the police-horse and the police-human could enforce the law effectively. It safe to argue that mounted officers (and their horses) are the most visible public servants and most criticized law enforcers. I personally enjoyed the conflict because the sensitive and emotional sessions we shared with  horses in Malminkartano, were balanced by the reality and lived experience of people working with animals and animals working with people.

Horse-pedagogical efforts will continue in the spring as well organize a course called Horse & Build Environment for Aalto University. On this course we will explore horse stable designs and the relations they afford us.

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Returning from a teaching gig at Villa Arttu youth art school in Hyvinkää. I had the opportunity to spend a weekend with 28, 12-17 year olds, teaching “Performance Architecture” (as defined by Schweder) by using various movement, body awareness and voice based exercises. Participants came from Rovaniemi, Hämeenlinna and Hyvinkää. The group was divided in two batches which alternated each day between my workshop and a sound/media sessions taught by Simi Ruotsalainen.

The “Performance Architecture” workshops started with fake-laugh yoga and an exploration on how voices resonate inside bodies. Voice-making was framed as an internal-organ sculpturing exercise. Participants massaged the insides of their mouths using their tongues and attempted to identify where different tones resonate from. The idea of sound-making as an internal-organ sculpture practice was inspired by әṾӨȻΔ𐐉 -exhibition by Jenna Sutela & Lars TCF Holdhus at Sinne (2015). After the warm up we begun massaging your imaginations in a “What if…” session, in which participants only communicate by asking “What if…”. This exercise is something I picked up from a seminar called “Performative Utopias” organized by Reality Research Center in 2013 (for Baltic Circle).

Then we continued doing echo-izings: Each group member was expected to utter a word or tone, which others repeated. The word or tone had to relate to the space we were in. The exercise continued until everyone had shared their voice. The idea that everyone has to speak out for an exercise to end, was motivated by Peggy Pierrots community talk-shop guidelines from 2017. We practiced deep breathing, standing and walking in a confined space. These exercises were based on basic contact improvisation teaching techniques: The group begun by moving in a rigid grid pattern (90° turns, slow and fast walking). After a while they were allowed to stop their movements when they felt like it. The act of stopping was framed as a personal political strike, which offered an opportunity to reflect the situation. Striking as an action comes from an idea by Jussi Koitela: Activism becomes political, when people stop being “active” and reflect their situation.

After the trust within the group was founded, they begun to use the space more freely and we combined echo-izings to the movement. When people spotted motivating objects, shapes or things in the space, they were advised to stop, to point at the thing and voice their observation. Group members then followed the action: Stopped, pointed at the same thing and repeated what was said about it. This method of reading a space collectively was inspired by Patterns of Life by Julien Prévieux (2015). Participant were then advised to use the same technique for reflecting the joined movements and actions, that were emerging from within the group. Then the group spend a long silent session moving and exploring each others clothes, garments and jewelries. This lead into a very nice session, were people touched each others softly and recognized each others. Each phase of the exercise was discussed collectively before progressing.

Then we performed a repetitive minimalistic stepping dance choreography, which I saw executed as a part of the “Monstera” performance by Essi Kausalainen. I consulted Kausalainen about using her pattern in teaching and got some insight on it. The movement was framed as something intrinsic to living things and when setting it up for the participants I compared the dance to the movement of plants when they are seeking light. People associated the movement with something they do while “idling”, when waiting for a buss etc. We then performed very long sessions following the choreography and discussed what it felt like. People experienced the movement as soothing and enjoyed performing it collectively. We executed it in a large circle and the size of circle alternated during each session. It felt like we were breathing. I recorded the rhythm of our feet and we listened to the recordings, discussing how movement can be documented and how we can hear movement articulated. People seemed to really like listening and spend up to 10 minutes in silence, returning to the rhythmic noise they had produced earlier.

The group was then divided into 3-4 sub-groups, which were tasked to invent their own movement patterns. I presented the authoring of these patterns as a process were we write shapes inside our brains and recall them using muscle memory. We contemplated the ethics of writing inside an other persons brain and tried to visualize how our brains were altered by this experience. Reading was presented as a method of writing into oneself. The sub-groups then developed their own patterns in semi-privacy. After a while we returned to the collective circle, groups taught their pattern to others and performed them for as long as it took for everyone to incorporate them. After this we performed all of the different dances, so that they followed each other with out any forced direction. These sessions were recorded and we listened to them reflecting the experience. Here is a clip from the first session (12 students moving).

The event ended in a soft-lecture, trough which I attempted to explain what “performativity” and “post-structuralism” are. These sessions were more like chats as participants could ask questions and share their ideas during the presentation. The lecture was loosely based on Richard Schechners Performance Studies book from 2013 and the group was tasked to contemplate how repetition inscribes attitudes to our bodies. The workshop was a continuation of the “Post-Structuralism for Kids” sessions I taught in the same school in 2017. There is a short text about it in Finnish: Kehittäkää itsellenne lukihäiriö ja istukaa lattialla [Develop Dyslexia and Sit on the Floor] (2019).

[En] How to teach Performance Art: Media & Performance (2016)

The 90 hour long “Media & Performance” course was organized for the Kankaanpään Art School under the supervision of Aapo Korkeaoja and Matti Velhonoja. Participants learned how to analyze their relationship to technology and to develop their artistic praxis in dialogue with other practitioners. Catarina Pulli, Heikki Korkala, Ilkka Wahala, Karoliina Korvuo, Terho Sulkala and Viljami Nissi co-authored a detailed study journal which is available for download. The group also wrote short texts which examine horses as media by detailing technologies, tools and infrastructure which is used to control and define the animal (See chapter “Horse as a Media” for details). The course materials (3d designs, images and texts) are licensed under: ​Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)​.

Download the document: 20170130_media-and-performance_kankaanpaa-art-school.pdf (4,6mb).

[Fi | En] Esittelyssä Bellinin Akatemian tuore dosentti! | Presenting the New Adjunct Professor of Bellini’s Academy!

After a long discussion we’ve agreed that I’ll assume a position as an Adjunct Professor in Bellini’s Academy. We haven’t set a duration for the work and I’ve yet to accept any teaching. The title is anyway fancy and a nice gesture to acknowledge the quality of my work. As I except my first students and start researching in the Academias framework I’ll learn how the title really tastes like.

Keskustelun päätteeksi olemme sopineet, että vastaanotan dosentuurin Bellinin Akatemiasta. Dosentuurin kestosta ei erikseen vielä keskusteltu enkä ole vielä vastaanottanut opetustehtäviä. Titteli on kuitenkin hieno ja mukava osoitus työn laadusta. Katsotaan miltä se maistuu kunhan vastaanotan ensimmäisiä opetustehtäviä ja käyn tutkimustyöhön.

[En] How to Craft Portfolios: Course Material Online

Updated 12.4.2013

The “How to Craft Portfolios” course I run for the Finnish Academy of Fine Art (KuvA) is now complete. The week was fun but unfortunately only 3-5 students attended the course. I’m told this is quite common at KuvA.. To make the best of the situation I changed the program and ended up teaching 3-5 different courses simultaneously; each fitted for a partisipant. This was great as we could look into how the participants write about their art in detail and I’m satisfied with the technical progress too.

The course material we used will remain online indefinitely. I also had time to make an exemplary InDesing “Artist portfolio layout” for download (.zip) . It’s not perfect but it’ll get you started. If I get the opportunity to host the course next year or is the fall I’ll make a similar layout with scribus too. Below is an overview of the week.. Following learning from it you’ll learn how to make portfolios to suit the Finnish art scene. See also CREATING AN ARTIST WEBSITE, or The Art of Storytelling by Toccarra Thomas

To make your career as an artist easier: Prepare a printable portfolio and a website for yourself. Make them simple so that you can personally update BOTH regularly! Don’t make this too complicated for yourself. It’s just a portfolio – Not a tombstone. Please compare these guidelines to your own experiences and please leave some feedback in to the course etherpad. http://ldezem.muistio.tieke.fi/kuvataideakatemia-portfoliokurssi-kevat-2013-paiva-1

Making a printable portfolio can be as simple as:

  1. The first page should show your name in big letters and a short (max 1300 character) artists statement (and contact details).
  2. Present max. eight artworks. Each artwork presentation should have one-to-three photographs and some 500 characters of technical details (name of artwork, year of completion, format, size, duration (etc) followed with optional artwork descriptions.
  3. On the last pages of the portfolio you ought to place your CV. With (again) your name in big letters, contact details followed with CV categories education, solo-exhibitions, group-exhibitions etc.

The eight artworks you present in the portfolio should be selected for the specific occasion you intend use the portfolio for… You may also add a cover photo and a DVD/CD/USB-stick with video-works, audio and multimedia into the package. Try adding business cards to the mix too. The portfolio pages should be printed on min. 180mg paper using ink. The sheets should be placed in A4 polypropylene display book (that has black covers). All of this will costs some 30-50€ and (if you have the materials, digital texts and images ready) making it ought to take some 4 hours. A portfolio can be made as a speed project – sprint.

The reason printed portfolios are made this way is cruel.. Curators, jury members etc. (people who are responsible for selecting artists for galleries and group shows) go trough a lot of portfolios in their line of work.. It’s convenient for them if all of the portfolios are presented in an uniform manner. Un-uniformity frustrate readers.. Because then one needs to work more in order to understand what the art is about.When you meet a curator or a collector face-to-face it’s good to have a printed portfolio with you but I imagine today it’s common to present artworks on laptop screens and tablet computers too. Check that your portfolio is easy to read even on small PDA screens. A portfolio manifests your art and you must learn how to talk about your work. I think that the less *bling* and tricks your put in the portfolio the more time you will have time to talk with a curator or customer. Talking is more important then text or pictures. The people you socialize with will employ you.

Online portfolios serve different functions then printed ones. They are ideal for reaching out to new audiences, getting feedback and networking with peers.. I like it when artists write blogs and sharing inspiring images works too. When I’m interested in an artist everything they share about their life is useful for me. If you want to stay connected to your audience you should update the pages frequently. It’s smart if the layout of the pages mimics what the printed portfolio looks like.

To make things easier on yourself I recommend using commercial (but free to use) social website services and content management systems like wordpress, tumblr or even blogger.. Updating such can be much easier then updating a site you’ve made yourself. Even if you don’t mind showing your art behind the service providers domain (i.e. yourname.tumbrl.com) you should eventually lease a domain in your own name.. Or if you are smart you’ll lease a domain name together with you friends! This way you can share the costs and accumulate more traffic on the site.

When you have your own domain you are more independent from commercial companies. I recommend that you don’t use the email address your university has provided you.. After you graduate you won’t be able to access it.There is nothing wrong in buying and using website templates someone else has designed. Decent wordpress themes cost as little as 20€! Hosting your portfolio behind a domain (www.your-personal-artist-name.com) cost 30-80€ a year. But don’t trust these services… Always keep a duplicates of the content on your own hard-drive. Remember to make backups of everything and name all of your files in an URL friendly manner.

Your name should be found in every digital file name you produce.. So that if you send ant files to the press etc. they’ll have enough metadata to credit the content accordingly. More detailed tips on how to name files available here under Organising files “Tehdas Workflow” http://ldezem.muistio.tieke.fi/kuvataideakatemia-portfoliokurssi-kevat-2013-paiva-1

The division between online- and printed media is blurry as practically everything is digital. This is great news for us because after one masters desktop publishing software one can just as easily make a .pdf for printing or a website in the same template. Computers systemize creativity. But working efficiently with computers requires that you work systematically too. Consider your hard-disk an archive and keep it in good order. Name your files properly, so that people who you work with (or inherit the hard-drive) understand how the files link to each other (based on the file names).

During this course we’ll be working “under the hood” of your portfolios. This means that we won’t concentrate as much in their graphical design and the visual appeal. The more simple you keep your portfolio the more easier it’s to maintain. We’ll focus on learning how to “manage digital media” and “organise digital archives systematically” (a little into writing and how CVs should look.. And anything you feel important to address). When you keep your digital archives in order, you’ll be able react to questions concerning your practice accurately and quickly. In praxis the most important thing is that you provide swift answers and deliver media in the right formats to people who ask for it. This is even more important then having a portfolio.

Artist today are in a relation to the digital world like it or not and today we cannot hide form the internet – But we can effect how we are portrayed there. I enjoy it a lot if I can’t find any information of some artist online. That’s a statement! On the other hand I think t is the duty all artists to to make their practises accessible for the general public and having a webpage is best device for that. A good portfolio provides an insight to your creative practice. After you know the basics and feel confident about your practice you can make any sort of a portfolio you like. I think a portfolio *should* eventually look more like an Artist’s Book. It’s should not provide easy answers. Don’t make a manual on how to understand your art.

When I’m fiddling with my own portfolio I’m also learning about my practice. I’ve never been content with the idea of building a portfolio for only marketing my practice. I see my portfolio(s) as “tools for systemising personal creative practices”. It’s never perfect or ready. If you want feedback on your writing and if you have specific problems with your portfolios. Please let me know and we’ll look at those face-to-face or in small groups.