Ian Golding
The Papayas
Resident artist
Ian’s practice is guided by a framework, written by himself, which he revisits and updates continually.
- I want to avoid defining the creative outcomes that I make.
- I want to be able to use anything in my work, not just physical material.
- Work is integral to being human, it makes sense to think of art emerging from work.
- My hands are part of the process of making, but other hands can participate in this.
- I am not interested in creating the novel for the sake of it, I would rather synthesise that which I know or can know.
- All my work is in some way political, but it need not be complex.
- I don’t want to be obsessed by any one thing, but I do want to be interested in many things.
- Failure is a feature of being human, I always want my work to relate to being human.
- I want to make things that somehow alter the world, my work then is evidence of my intervention.
- I am not interested in representing truth, but I am interested in examining truths.
- All my work is built upon a small part of the stuff we know, it is therefore anthropological in nature.
- I like challenge and want my outcomes to challenge others.
- Fixed beliefs in anything prevents progress.
- Imagination is what gives all human the potential to create a better world.