HINTERLAND

‘WE WANT TO DELIVER

THIS AS A NATIONAL

PLATFORM FOR

the promised dream of a new life. But I believe that rejecting the architecture as well as the ideology is kind of throwing the baby out with the bathwater.’ To hear Farquhar speak about the ideology and political intention of a building is fascinating. What disgusts him is not the brutal concrete lines of modernism, but the extravagant, statement-making constructs of the kind that are currently going up across central London. ‘But St Peter’s is the total reverse. All of the beauty, the rigour and the poetry is contained within the building. It’s not a superi cial construction; it’s i lled with aspiration.’

PUBLIC ART‘

Next year NVA will celebrate its 25th anniversary, a period of time which has seen it move around Scotland creating short-term, site-specii c interventions on the landscape, from ‘The Storr’ on Skye in 2005, to ‘Half- Life’ in an Argyll forest alongside the National Theatre of Scotland in 2007, and 2012’s ‘Speed of Light’ promenade performance across Arthur’s Seat at the Edinburgh International Festival. With ‘Hinterland’, Farquhar’s plan is to face the next two and a half decades of NVA’s life in one place, creating an artistic hub and meeting post for the whole country. The birth of ‘Hinterland’, he declares boldly, is intended to be as seismic an intervention on the Scottish arts scene as the birth of Tramway in the early 1990s.

with a shot-for-shot analogue detailing the vandalism, destruction and disappearance of the building over time. ‘This is very much the building’s last chance,’ says Farquhar, talking of NVA’s project. Right now, ‘Hinterland’ is a ten-day light and sound installation around the seminary’s grounds which will transform it for public viewing as the Festival of Architecture 2016’s opening event in March. But in the long term, the focus is on restoring parts of the building as a multi- purpose arts and performance space. ‘We’ve just spent six months clearing asbestos out of the place, and it showed us just how dangerous it was. Nearly 80 vaults were due to fall this winter and we’ve raised nearly a quarter of a million to arrest that. This gives you an idea of how fragile it is.’

Saving this building, says Farquhar, is not just

a simple act of preservation, but about maintaining a physical link to the 20th century and its social changes. ‘Places retain a certain quality and authenticity because they retain the architecture of their period,’ he says. ‘But from about 1920 to 1970, vast parts of that period in terms of its monumental buildings are being destroyed; literally erased. These buildings often haven’t been looked after, but the ideologies which made them have also been called into question. Look at social housing in Britain; it’s seen as failed architecture which didn’t deliver Architect NORD’s model of the new St Peter’s Seminary

D R O N © O T O H P

‘We want to deliver this as a national platform for public art,’ says Farquhar. ‘The intention is to take a bruised, battered, gloriously monumental building and reuse it in a way which is open, generous and sensitive to the times, and to use what we’ve got more effectively. A lot of what’s interesting right now is happening outside galleries, theatres, and typical 19th-century bourgeois ways of presenting art. That’s what I’d dei ne as public art: something which gets out there and connects with people during their everyday experience in a different way. ‘I don’t want to create peripheral work that sits within a neat little hermetically sealed market for those who have got time to dwell on the i ner points of art,’ he continues. ‘As an artist, I want to engage with the horror and complexity of the world as it is now, and create a space for elevated thinking; for thinking beyond what’s going on in the ordinary day- to-day. Because let’s face it, that’s exactly what this space was designed for.’

Hinterland, St Peter’s Seminary, Cardross, Fri 18–Sun 27 Mar.

N O S N H O J S E M A J © O T O H P

Generated image of St Peter’s performance space which will open in 2018

4 Feb–7 Apr 2016 THE LIST 37