this just makes me want to wretch. Its not funny at all.

******************************************************
Simon Fildes & Katrina McPherson
Greystones
Main Street
Newtonmore
Highland Region
PH20 1DR

01540670002
01540673796

07779106593
07798563799

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.left-luggage.co.uk
**************************************************

> From: Gair <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Date: Thu, 03 Oct 2002 19:08:47 +0100
> To: ambit <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED], rob tufnell
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, rose frain <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: <ambit> Centre for Contemporary Armaments
> 
> "We glorify war as the sole hygiene....." Marinetti, Futurist manifesto.
> 
> The CCA in Glasgow may be modest about its programme; all the more
> surprising that one of the largest gatherings in the building recently
> has gone without mention in its October publicity.
> 
> A seminar organised by Scottish Enterprise and the Ministry of Defence
> on Thursday 3rd October featured Anthony Ingram MP ( Minister of State
> for the Armed Forces), representatives from  Nobel Industries, The
> Defence Export Services Organisation, Defence Supply Service, and
> representatives from the Glasgow Universities, mingling with Glasgows'
> would-be body bag suppliers and weapons makers. The Defence
> Diversification Agency exists to diffuse the expertise from Britains'
> defence laboratories into industry, and vice versa.
> 
> A session on "the inventor and the MOD" featured exemplary tales such as
> that of the man who invented a new hygienic non/piercing syringe, now
> used for mass innoculation in the US and UK armies. Unfortunately the
> "percent for art" formula was not applied to this public gathering;
> artists use of the building was strictly confined to CCA6 where Bill
> Drummonds'
> journey from Southampton to Dounreay traced parallel lines of nuclear force.
> 
> When the CCA re-opened, many of us felt a bit puzzled: there seemed to
> be little extra functional space, and a corporate style atrium cafe
> which squeezed artists out. Even more startling was the news that this
> mismatch of environment to its expected uses was up for major
> architectural prizes.
> 
> Now it's clear that these reservations were due to our complete
> misunderstanding of the purpose of Lottery Revamps on arts structures.
> The hermetically sealed CCA5 makes a secure and confidential venue for
> any variety of military-industrial encounters. Assorted nooks and spaces
> make for quiet discussion zones,  excellent service from the cafe
> sweetens each encounter.
> 
> It's good to see the CCA devoting its soul to the necessary expenditure
> on future mayhem. But why leave artists out? If British Airways can
> commission a series of ethnic tailfins, think what contemporary artists
> could do with an F16. Defoliants have huge possibilities in Land Art.
> And a chic desert camouflage motif on the CCA cafe cups will convey an
> ideal zeitgeist punch this autumn.
> Why shouldn't artists get their hands on the incredible beauty
> represented in the apocalypses of tomorrow?
> 
> http://www.topps.com/enduringfreedom.html
> 
> -------------------------------------------------
> a m b i t : networking media arts in scotland
> post: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> info: send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> and write "info ambit" in the message body
> -------------------------------------------------
> 

-------------------------------------------------
a m b i t : networking media arts in scotland
post: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
info: send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
and write "info ambit" in the message body
-------------------------------------------------

Reply via email to