In 2012 I was fortunate enough to travel to Europe in my first year of art school with predominately post-graduate students and lecturers. I was more than excited to have engaging conversations about the meaning of art, its purpose and what it does to you to experience it in the flesh. Unlike most art enthusiasts on the three week trip I did not have any particular focus in mind.
I had already visited many large art institutions around America but not having any formal schooling in the subject it was a pure visual and visceral experience. I had what we call an ‘art moment’ standing in front of an enormous drip painting by Jackson Pollock at a gallery in Washington DC. However I soon began to question my sense of awe, wondering if it was truly the art, or the fame of the artist, or simply the scale that was so exotic and new to me. I am a thinker and without anyone to bounce ideas off (I was traveling alone for a whole year), soon a sense of isolation set in, inheriting the work and my experience of it with a sense of melancholia.
The trip to Europe three years later was going to be different. I had people all around me just bursting to ask my opinion and to share their own. Or so I thought. Instead, after 15 minutes or so of sitting in the hotel foyer in Kassel, Germany searching through the Documenta 13 guidebook and pawing over the map of the town (absolutely riddled with dots marking the spot of each installation, gallery, temporary beer house, sculpture, projection, etc) the ‘we’ became ‘I’. My travel companions scattered to the wind in pairs and threes, on their own voyage of discovery, having recognised certain artists listed and now on the hunt to track them down. The isolation came back and I felt a pang of despair. I was in a town I don’t know, with no one to talk to and no particular interest (just a general one that was slowly dissolving).