I am familiar with the power of simple sound, but I wasn’t quite expecting what would happen next. Up on the gallery, one of the female models [whose name I now know is Christine] starts to make a powerful and evocative sound with her voice – the notes filling the void. The other models – lined up below – reply. There is some movement now, so the drawing and interpretation has to be freer – the marks on the paper somehow reflecting what was happening, both visually and aurally, among the models. They spiral inwards to form a pyramid, with Christine now joined them, and another model – Ursula I believe – at its centre, leading the “choir”. The noises – a combination of clapping, slapping, singing, phrasing, and other sounds made with the voice – A Human Orchestration – filling the church. This is a transformation. A real shift; from interpreting the form, to interpreting the experience. Sometimes difficult. What to do? What mark is that? Just make it and see how it feels!
As we share the experience again in the break – examining each other’s work laid out on the floor, you can see the progression. Some more literal, but many move now to be more abstract and lyrical.
And so we come to the third and final “performance” of the day. Now the stage before the altar is finally used. The 20-or-so models assemble themselves into a tableau across the platforms. We have an hour, but I know that that will not be long to try to capture in some way the multitude of bodies before us; the inter-relations, the occasional shift in structure as a model has to make a move. I now work fast – eye to page, marks here and shadow there, collage of coloured paper forming a back-drop to the scene. There is music in the background, but I mostly don’t hear it.
And then suddenly it is over. The models take a bow to appreciative applause. Five hours passed in a flash. The work is spread out again over the floor. From an artist’s perspective, it is again fascinating and constructive to see how others use their materials – the line, weight, flow of a curve, use of colour, size, collage and form. It always amazes me how, 40, 50 60 artists all make their individual marks. We may all be looking at one image – but there is a multitude of interpretations. Part of the experience is to let go of the powerful desire to come away with something that might be seen as conventionally “good”. It is about exploring, experiencing, experimenting – ultimately, about creating. It is what London Drawing do: creative life drawing.
It was certainly another extraordinary day. And, as usual, quite satisfyingly exhausting. As the metaphorical “final curtain closes” I am always aware of a deep emotion welling up from deep inside. An emotional experience as well as a creative one. It is almost overwhelming. It is such a privilege to be part of these unique and special days. As was pointed out at the beginning of the day at St John’s, they represent a real celebration of the beauty of the body in all its shapes and sizes. But not just the physical body, but the spiritual one, too – those Spirited Bodies.
I look forward to the next Drawing Theatre with Spirited Bodies. I am sure it will offer up something new.
Philip Copestake
October 2013’
*Spirited Bodies was founded in 2010 by life model Esther Bunting as an activist organisation that champions body positivity, feminism and personal empowerment through the practices of life modelling and life drawing.
*Anne Noble-Partridge founded London Drawing with artist *David Price in 2006 while running weekly workshops and events at Tate Modern.