Confetti Cannon Primed to Explode, or Maybe Not
Thursday 31st July 2014
The Times (page 16)
By Rhona Taylor
Confetti cannon that will explode on the night of the referendum if Scots vote for independence will form part of this year’s Edinburgh Art Festival, the UK’s largest annual festival of visual art.
Ellie Harrison’s installation, After the Revolution, Who Will Clean Up the Mess? includes a live event that will be broadcast on the internet on September 18 from Edinburgh University’s Talbot Rice Gallery. If Scots vote “no” the cannon will remain untouched, but if they vote “yes” they will be detonated in the Georgian Gallery.
The work has been commissioned by the Edinburgh Art Festival, which was launched yesterday, and is part of the gallery’s group show, Counterpoint.
Harrison, an English artist based in Glasgow, said she wanted to mirror the sense of anticipation in Scotland in the run-up to the referendum.
“Nothing might happen on the night,” she said. “It could all be a massive anti-climax, and I think the referendum would be if it’s a ‘no’ vote. It could be a massive missed opportunity, but it’s so significant and we don’t know what will happen afterwards either way.”
Other work in the festival, which includes more than 40 exhibitions at 30 venues across the city, acknowledge significant events of 2014, including the Commonwealth Games and the centenary of the First World War.
As part of a national project marking the outbreak of the war, a video installation, below, by Nalini Malani, an Indian artist, will be projected on to the outside of the National Gallery of Scotland on the evening of August 4. The work has been co-commissioned by the festival and 14-18 NOW Lights Out. People across the UK will be invited to join the commemorative work by turning off their lights from 10pm to 11pm on the night of the installation.
Sorcha Carey, director of the Edinburgh Art Festival, said that this year’s programme was “looking to the past while trying to imagine a new future for ourselves”.
Other festival exhibitions include a solo show by Jim Lambie at Fruitmarket Gallery, John Ruskin’s drawings and paintings at the Scottish National Portrait Gallery and an exhibition at the Queen’s Gallery, the Palace of Holyroodhouse, exploring the role of the poet laureate.
Further Reference
- Article on The Times website
- After the Revolution, Who Will Clean Up the Mess? website
- Edinburgh Art Festival website
Other Press
- After the Data Confessional: Interview with Ellie Harrison
- Night at the Museum
- Interview: Ellie Harrison
- A Most Unusual Referendum Results Party
- Art Review: Counterpoint
- Getting Straight to the Point
- Confetti Cannon Primed to Explode, or Maybe Not
- Indyref Confetti Cannon to go on Display at Edinburgh Art Festival
- Counterpoint at Edinburgh Art Festival 2014
- Eat 22 (interview with Ellie Harrison)
- Power For The People! (by Ellie Harrison)
- Counter-Hegemonic Propaganda Machine (by Ellie Harrison)
- The Hunger Artists
- The Artists’ Bond
- Notes Towards Becoming a Good Citizen (interview with Ellie Harrison)
- She Shelves Sanctuary
- National Museum of Roller Derby (interview with Ellie Harrison)
- Early Warning Signs
- Artist Fund Thyself
- Ellie & Oliver Show
- Art for the Age of Information
- Workers Are Not Alone
- Market Forces
- DIY Lottery Art Funding
- Converse Emerging Artists Award: Ellie Harrison
- Fair Exchange
- Vault Art Glasgow
- A Good Climate for Business (by Ellie Harrison)
- Interview with Ellie Harrison
- A Brief History of Privatisation
- Art Monthly Profile
- Work-a-thon for the Self-Employed
- Trajectories (interview with Ellie Harrison)
- Furtherfield Radio
- Funding: One Alternative
- New Forms of Collectivity (by Ellie Harrison)
- The Finished Article
- Art Erupts Out of a Fine Mess
- Artists in a Bid for Success with Different Type of Draw
- Party Politics: Election Art
- Young Scottish Artists
- Budget Buzzwords Prompted Machine to Deliver Crisps
- Lady Dada
- Summer Reading
- Altermodernism: The Age of Stupid (by Ellie Harrison)
- Ellie Harrison Loves Tea
- Confessions of a Recovering Data Collector
- Five Pointers to Becoming the ‘Perfect Artist’
- How Can We Continue Making Art? (by Ellie Harrison)
- This is Not a Circular
- Ones to Watch
- Braziers International
- Two Years of Tea Blog
- Angel Row Closing Party
- The Obsessives
- New Stars on Broadway
- This is Ellie Harrison
- Prime
- Insignificance
- Day-to-Day Data Review
- Sports Day
- Many Conceptual Artists Have an Unholy Delight in Statistics
- Day-to-Day Data Review
- Under the Data, the Stars
- Day-to-Day Data Exhibitions Preview
- Out of the Ordinary
- Just the Facts...
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