Mason Leaver-Yap works with artists to make events, texts and exhibitions. They are based in Glasgow.

1 Transcript, ‘Independent spaces and emerging forms of connectivity: Salon Discussion, Monday 23 June 2008,’ in Eds. Richard Birkett, Mason Leaver-Yap, Nought to Sixty, Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, 2009. Pp. 119-120. It is worth noting that in that time, the ICA had decided to cheaply sell off much of its analogue film equipment some years prior in what was deemed to be a progressive move towards digital-only display, but the exhibitions and screenings we were staging as part of Nought to Sixty, the ICA’s 60th anniversary exhibition project of 60 projects delivered over 6 months, required that we hire back that same equipment at much greater cost to the programming budget. Moreover, the institution no longer had the knowledge to install, run and maintain 16 mm film and so, as a cost-saving measure, I was sent off to learn how to technically handle the installation and running of the equipment, as well as co-run the exhibition programme. I use this example only to indicate the ways in which the idea of “knowledge-sharing” was often haphazardly required in the immediate aftermath of institutional deskilling, and deployed due to financial constraints rather than investment and growth. After leaving the institution, the training allowed me to work as a freelance 16 mm technician.

2 The biggest priority is buying out the artist’s time by paying them a good wage and fee. In one production, I sought to build a budget around the artists’ various expertises and wide skillset, itemising it for co-commissioners in terms of research and development, production, post-production, equipment and studio rental, and an exhibition fee for each venue. The goal was to ensure that each of these costings were routed back to the artist, so that they could spend a full year dedicated to making one work, and conserve all of the purchased production equipment and tools for future projects as an ongoing investment. In another simultaneous project, a small public commission fund allowed basic start-up cash for a film production as if the project were a pilot, so that the artist could try out working with new crew, prepare access to locations on an initially modest scale, and set aside time until a larger fund became available six months later.

3 Revisions of, or at the very least reflections on, institutional protocols that are inconsistent with the subject of the work being undertaken, commissioned, or exhibited should be expected, rather than experienced at immediate cost to an individual. There is a particularly horrific contradiction in contemporary art’s continuing engagement with and extractive learning from artists whose moving image work focuses on displacement, discrimination and abolitionist politics, and the ways in which both the artists and their subjects are invited and treated on entry into those institutions. Basic but crucial forms of in-person support for those guests–such as meet-and-greets at the airport or arrival hub, navigation around an institution’s neighbourhood, information about where to buy local food, as well as supplying out-of-hours support contacts, tend to be the first things to be left out by institutions operating under pressure or at capacity, or else delegated to the least secure members of staff.

4 Richard Birkett and Mason Leaver-Yap, School of Visual Arts MA Curatorial Practice, New York, Friday, October 23 2020 (delivered over Zoom).

Mason Leaver-Yap works with artists to make events, texts and exhibitions. They are based in Glasgow.

1 Transcript, ‘Independent spaces and emerging forms of connectivity: Salon Discussion, Monday 23 June 2008,’ in Eds. Richard Birkett, Mason Leaver-Yap, Nought to Sixty, Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, 2009. Pp. 119-120. It is worth noting that in that time, the ICA had decided to cheaply sell off much of its analogue film equipment some years prior in what was deemed to be a progressive move towards digital-only display, but the exhibitions and screenings we were staging as part of Nought to Sixty, the ICA’s 60th anniversary exhibition project of 60 projects delivered over 6 months, required that we hire back that same equipment at much greater cost to the programming budget. Moreover, the institution no longer had the knowledge to install, run and maintain 16 mm film and so, as a cost-saving measure, I was sent off to learn how to technically handle the installation and running of the equipment, as well as co-run the exhibition programme. I use this example only to indicate the ways in which the idea of “knowledge-sharing” was often haphazardly required in the immediate aftermath of institutional deskilling, and deployed due to financial constraints rather than investment and growth. After leaving the institution, the training allowed me to work as a freelance 16 mm technician.

2 The biggest priority is buying out the artist’s time by paying them a good wage and fee. In one production, I sought to build a budget around the artists’ various expertises and wide skillset, itemising it for co-commissioners in terms of research and development, production, post-production, equipment and studio rental, and an exhibition fee for each venue. The goal was to ensure that each of these costings were routed back to the artist, so that they could spend a full year dedicated to making one work, and conserve all of the purchased production equipment and tools for future projects as an ongoing investment. In another simultaneous project, a small public commission fund allowed basic start-up cash for a film production as if the project were a pilot, so that the artist could try out working with new crew, prepare access to locations on an initially modest scale, and set aside time until a larger fund became available six months later.

3 Revisions of, or at the very least reflections on, institutional protocols that are inconsistent with the subject of the work being undertaken, commissioned, or exhibited should be expected, rather than experienced at immediate cost to an individual. There is a particularly horrific contradiction in contemporary art’s continuing engagement with and extractive learning from artists whose moving image work focuses on displacement, discrimination and abolitionist politics, and the ways in which both the artists and their subjects are invited and treated on entry into those institutions. Basic but crucial forms of in-person support for those guests–such as meet-and-greets at the airport or arrival hub, navigation around an institution’s neighbourhood, information about where to buy local food, as well as supplying out-of-hours support contacts, tend to be the first things to be left out by institutions operating under pressure or at capacity, or else delegated to the least secure members of staff.

4 Richard Birkett and Mason Leaver-Yap, School of Visual Arts MA Curatorial Practice, New York, Friday, October 23 2020 (delivered over Zoom).