Category Archives: fine art

Director Sarah Turner talks about her groundbreaking film Public House

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‘PUBLIC HOUSE’ nominated for the Grierson Award.

 

Grierson Award nominated film Public House premieres on 12th October 2015 at the BFI London Film Festival. This genre-blending documentary of spoken word / text/ opera/ film, funded by a production award from Film London Artists’ Moving Image Network (FLAMIN) and a research award from the School of Music and Fine Art, University of Kent, is directed by Sarah Turner, Reader in Fine Art and Director of Research in the School of Music and Fine Art.

Artist and Ivy House shareholder, Sarah Turner, lives nearby the pub and has been documenting key moments of the community take over since April 2012. Then, the pub’s staff were given a few days notice of eviction and closure; the cherished Ivy

House had been sold for conversion into flats. The creativity and energy of the community ensured this did not happen: the sale was blocked through an English Heritage listing, the pub was registered as the first Asset of Community Value in the UK, then triumphantly purchased. The Ivy House Community Pub re-opened in August 2013 and in doing so has both rewritten London history and proposed the potential for an alternative social imaginary.

We invited Sarah to talk about the inspiration for this ground-breaking work.

“Public House takes participatory documentary to a whole new level. Activated in response to the community take over of the Ivy House pub, London, SE15, the film is a multi layered exploration of memory, community and social reinvention which fuses fact and fiction in a shape shifting genre hybrid that moves documentary into a form of opera. The community owned Ivy House is now itself a shape shifting venue, hosting events as diverse as folk music, swing classes, knitting circles, big band Sunday roasts and samba workshops for pre schoolers. The film mirrors this cultural transformation in a movement through documentary events, to forms of community participation that are rooted in pub culture – in this case, spoken word and performance poetry – to a minimalist opera that is composed of ambient sound and the collective voice. The film’s final image takes the creative energy of the Ivy House out of the pub and onto the streets, where a mass community assembly re-imagines William Blake’s vision of angels on nearby Peckham Rye. A tree filled with angels, bright angelic wings bespangling every bough like stars.

Public House explores the social function of pubs with the Ivy House story at the centre of it. What it means to be local, ideas of insider / outsider, community and participation, home and belonging, are the crucial anxieties of our age, crystallised in our relationship to place and space. Pubs are spaces that allow us to connect with others who are often quite different from us; the encounter with a stranger is at the heart of pub culture, and also – possibly – why we value it. What other spaces allow us to explore our fictions, both the events of our lives, and the complex human emotions which are staples of pub culture – lust, fear, desire and mourning – socially, in a public, as opposed to a private, house?

A unique social choreography took place in the community take over of the Ivy House when a dynamic and defiant community responded to the loss of a treasured public space. The film interweaves portraits of these key characters, events and voices with portraits of the surrounding landscape and streets. Key sequences of animated stills punctuate the work: The Ivy House overlooks a vast field of allotments and wide time-lapsed tableaus have been photographed over a couple of years. This almost pastoral image of artisanal labour, growth and seasonal transformation, offers an alternative portrait of Peckham Rye, an area often associated with the usual urban clichés of blight and decay.

Public House, the film, performs its own unique choreography through its approach to participation: We brought together a group from within the wider pub community to share experience – through writing poetry. We were preoccupied with the idea of remembering an encounter with a stranger that was life changing/ transformative. In the process the poems expanded from that – into – a wider thematic of pub encounters/pub experiences. Empathy, connection and the limits of understanding (what we learn and how we are changed by an other) became a major part of this: participants had to work with /interpret & support the “others” experience and crucially; when they performed the poems in the pub to an invited audience, they were paired off and they performed the other’s poem first. In the film, we intercut both versions of the performance, largely moving from other to self: this produces some uncanny translations – eg, an older woman enacting the story of a much younger man – and is also key to codes of reading; who is inside and outside both the community and the film: There is a synergy in the experience of the pub and film audience: both are re translating, projecting/ re-associating these stories, as we see the person that we suspect is the subject of one story that we’re holding the memory of, narrating or performing another’s.

The multiple levels of voice, memory and performance, are further developed in the word/text poetry of the Soundscape, which carries the underlying structural movement of the film. The Soundscape is composed – as with music concrete – through fragments of spoken word and ambient audio drawn from the immediate environment. Much of this is in the sound design and is developed through accousmatic composition. Accousmatic composers work through an understanding of acoustic ecology, which sonifies ambient sound harmonically and tonally. In the film this builds through sound design/repetitive refrain and culminates in clear shifts where the fragments of voice resolve into fully formed librettos.

These librettos are constructed from verbatim voice recordings of pub users – past and present – engaging in ‘pub talk’: memories of the space as well as their fears, dreams, desires. These recordings form a sonic ethnography of the unconscious of a community: the verbatim performance of memory and imagining – or, the continual and engaged movement of the past in the present – is formed of the collective voice: cyclical refrain builds into harmonics, which stages the creative action and imaginary of the community as a form of creative expression.

The film weaves these elements together: moving from a document of individual memory via the testaments woven through the soundscape, into the pub’s swing dance classes, which re interpret the movement of the 30’s in this 30’s space, through to the staged collective authorship that explores different forms of encounters through performance poetry, the film culminates in a mass assembly which proposes an alternative vision of Blake’s angelic presence. This mass response to a historical image is a metaphor for how our imaginary potential is engaged through an exchange with our past. Public spaces that incorporate our every day, connect us with our past, our fictions and our truths are increasingly being privatised. Public House is an allegory of how the resonance of individual and cultural memory has the potential to reinvent these spaces, and in so doing imagine a different social contract.”

 To view Sarah’s talk about Public House click here: https://vimeo.com/137493399

For more information about Public House go to: https://whatson.bfi.org.uk/lff/Online/default.asp?BOparam::WScontent::loadArticle::permalink=publichouse

The film has a website that was set up in order to liaise with the Ivy Housecommunity and participants: http://thepublichousefilm.wix.com/home

For further information on the Ivy House please visit: http://www.ivyhousenunhead.com

 

 About Sarah Turner:

Sarah Turner trained at St Martin’s School of Art and the Slade School of Fine Art. She is an artist, filmmaker, writer, curator and academic. Her feature films include Ecology, 97mins, 2007, Perestroika, 118mins, 2009, (theatrically released by the ICA in 2010 and featured in Tate Britain’s major survey: Assembly), and Perestroika:Reconstructed, conceived and executed as a gallery work (Carroll Fletcher Gallery, London, April/ May 2013).

Turner’s short films include Overheated Symphony, UK, 10mins, orchestrated for Birds Eye View Film Festival 2008, Cut, 17 mins, 2000, was broadcast on Channel 4, and A Life in a Day with Helena Goldwater, 20 mins, 1996, and Sheller Shares Her Secret, 8 mins, 1994, both headlined Midnight Underground when they were also broadcast on Channel 4. Sarah has had feature scripts commissioned by the BFI, Film Four Lab and Zephyr Films. Amongst other curatorial projects, Turner produced (with Jon Thomson) the launch programme for Lux Cinema in 1997; Hygiene and Hysteria: The body desired and the body debased, a touring programme of artists’ film and video for Arts Council England and programmes for Tate and the National Film Theatre.

ROOM for art

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An innovative mobile art space, ROOM, will soon be sited outside the Pilkington building on the Medway campus as a main campus presence for fine art and music, with plans for a series of residencies, projects and events through the year, thanks to Tim Meacham, Lecturer in Fine Art & Partner College Liaison Officer at the School of Music & Fine Art. ROOM is a studio and gallery inside a shipping container – which transforms a familiar utilitarian object into a comfortable, mobile environment, moving regularly to new locations across the South East to create a flexible space for making and showing art.

Commissioned in 2010 by Art at the Centre Swale, architect/artist Simon Barker designed a series of window boxes in the container’s skin, each with a distinctive character, filling it with natural light and setting up visual connections between the space of the interior and the surroundings.

Says Tim, “ROOM will be a student bookable space helping to extend activities beyond the studio. It responds to and reflects the growing interest in engaged practice.”

For more information on ROOM go to https://roomnorthkent.wordpress.com 

Fun Palaces in October: Exciting Community Engagement Projects

Over the weekend of Saturday 3rd and Sunday 4th October, staff and students from the School of Music and Fine Art are collaborating on two exciting community engagement projects with Kent Fun Palaces.

The 3rd and 4th October, from 10.30am to 3.30pm, sees a project with Gravesend Fun Palace and on Sunday 4th October 9.00am to 4.00pm, a collaboration with Whitstable Fun Palace

SMFA initiated an interdisciplinary Student Success EDI project in collaboration with Gravesend community group, the Fun Palace. Led by Dave Thomas, Student Success (EDI) Project Officer, students from BAs in Fine Art, Music and Event & Experience Design will have the opportunity to work with a broad range of participants, children, teens and adults on a Community Engagement event. This will incorporate Peer Mentoring, peer/vertical learning, and interdisciplinary working and will be run by students along with artists and volunteers from the local community.

Says Dave, “I am excited by the prospects of our students collaborating with volunteers, professionals and people from the local community to use the arts as a therapeutic agent to promote community engagement. I feel this event can be a change catalyst which may provide our students with knowledge of the dynamic use of their repertoire of skills to promote health and wellbeing”

The event will be run over two days. Day 1 will be run at the Gravesend library, with Day 2 to be held at the St Andrew’s Arts Centre, with two workshops which are themed “Environmental Art”. The concept is the brainchild of Emma Griffiths and Ayda Majid Ardekani, two final year BA (Hons) Fine Art students who have established an Environmental Art group. This explores the use of recycled products to create art. The workshop activities will be run by students under the supervision of staff.

The event in Whitstable comprises a building/structure that can be developed during workshops.

Says Peter Hatton, Director of the BA Hons Event & Experience Design, We have discussed using trikes and making two travelling structures – which may be towers of memories, built onto the trikes, with sounds (sound words and actual recordings) that can be cycled from the Seawall to the Umbrella Centre, where most of the activities are taking place. We are delighted to be invited to be part of the Fun Palaces and participation in this event will serve to build a collaborative relationship with the School of Architecture and the local community”

The workshop activities will be run by students under the supervision of staff and there are plans for a web link/live video feed from the Seawall to the Umbrella Centre.

 

About the Fun Palaces

In the early 1960s, Joan Littlewood and architect Cedric Price conceived the Fun Palace as a ‘laboratory of fun’ and ‘a university of the streets’. It was to be a temporary and movable home to the arts and sciences, open and welcoming to all. For various reasons, wasn’t possible in 1961 and the Fun Palace never came to fruition as a building. The idea however, of a space welcoming and open to all, bringing arts and sciences together, where everyone is an artist and everyone a scientist, remained.

Links

This is the link to the Gravesend Fun Palace site, which has tabs for further information about the Fun Palace concept.

http://funpalaces.co.uk/discover/gravesend-fun-palace-d1/

http://funpalaces.co.uk/discover/gravesend-fun-palace-d2

This is the link to the Whitstable site, which has tabs for further information about the Fun Palace concept.

http://funpalaces.co.uk/discover/whitstable-museum-of-fun-2/

 

Staff and Students talk about award winning Meditation Project

A project aiming to provide practical strategies for students to help them manage stress and anxiety, and which resulted in the team responsible being jointly awarded the 2015 Barbara Morris Prize for Learning Support, resulted in the production of an innovative meditation CD.

The innovative collaborative project team included Louise Frith (School of Music & Fine Art/SLAS), Frank Walker  and Moses Malekia (School of Music & Fine Art), Gerard McGill and the Wellbeing Team.

Charlotte Harding, a student from the BA (Hons) Event and Experience Design,  was instrumental in the project, coming 2nd in the 2015 Kent Student Awards for Outstanding Contribution to Equality, Diversity and Inclusivity.

Click the video link to find out more.

Meditation Mix 2015

 

Related links:

https://www.kent.ac.uk/smfa/news.html?view=1310

https://www.kent.ac.uk/smfa/news.html?view=1265

 

Occupy: A People Yet to Come: Book Launch Friday 25 September at ICA

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Friday 25 September at the ICA, London, sees a book launch to celebrate the publication of Occupy: A People Yet to Come, a collection of essays by leading Deleuzian scholars about the nature and impact of the occupy movement. The book is available from Amazon, is open access from the Open Humanities Press and discounted copies will be available at the launch.

The Book Launch will feature presentations from contributors Nick Thoburn (Deleuze and Marx) and David Burrows (Head of Fine Art: Slade) and Dr Andrew Conio (Senior Lecturer and Director of Fine Art at the School of Music and Fine Art: University of Kent).

For the authors, the term Occupy is a synecdoche for the world-wide proliferation of struggles that fall outside of conventional and ‘vanguard’ politic and are based on new tactics, revitalised democratic processes and nomadic systems of organisation. This collection assesses the value of Deleuze and Guattari’s political ontology to the movement and looks at modes of organisation, economics, social and political forces, democracy, representation, occupation, resistance, aesthetics, leadership and so forth. Essays are written by Claire Colebrook, John Protevi, Ian Buchannan, Eugene Holland, Rodigo Nunes, Giuseppina Mecchia, Andrew Conio, Nicholas Thoburn, David Burrows and Verena Andermatt Conley.  The authors hail from USA, UK, Brazil and Australia and most had intimate experience of Occupy

In a review of the book Bert Oliver says ‘It should be abundantly apparent from Conio’s words that the invention of new words or concepts to grapple with the undeniably urgent issues raised by him, above, is a challenge to all the humanities. The incredibly creative work of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari is indispensable in this regard, as the just published book, Occupy – A People yet to Come amply demonstrates.

Book launch time:  2 – 4pm, followed by drinks 4 – 6pm.
Location: ICA, The Mall, London SW1Y 5AH

Further details: www.ica.org.uk

 

Open Day Saturday 10th October, 9am – 2pm

A chance to explore the fantastic facilities in a unique environment and explore our exciting courses in Music, Fine Art and Event and Experience Design.   See the library and student accommodation and the NEW academic facilities and social spaces due to open in September 2015.

Talk to tutors and students and find out more about what we have to offer. Due to the popularity of our open days, we ask that you book a place online. Online booking will open approximately four weeks’ before the event. Please use the link here:  http://www.kent.ac.uk/courses/visit/openday/essentials-medway.html

Our courses:

Music:

  • BMus Music
  • BSc (Hons) Music Technology
  • BMus Popular Music
  • BSc (Hons) Music Technology and Computing
  • BA (Hons) Music Technology with English and American Literature

Fine Art:

  • BA (Hons) Fine Art

 Event and Experience Design:

  • BA (Hons) Events and Experience Design

 

We offer:

  • Award winning facilities, studios, equipment and workshops
  • Inspiring, supportive and award winning tutors
  • Great waterfront location on historic site with easy access to London in under an hour
  • An intellectual culture that provides the basis of cutting-edge practice, research and scholarship
  • Excellent career and professional outcomes
  • The chance to spend a year in industry or a year abroad
  • Flexible course structure, with full and part time options
  • Outstanding professional links and international work placements
  • Many opportunities for collaborative and autonomous practices
  • Financial assistance, fee waivers and scholarships available

 

For more details contact e.dhiman@kent.ac.uk

The Letter: Astounding New Performance Work by Artist Goshka Macuga

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Photo by Stacey Cooper

As part of the Kantorbury Symposium on 18th and 19th September, with 23 UK and international speakers, performances and film screenings organised by the The European Theatre Research Network (ETRN) on the Canterbury campus, in which the life and work of Polish theatre director and visual artist Tadeusz Kantor is celebrated 100 years after his birth, the School of Music and Fine Art are providing support to enable a new performance work by visual artist (and previous Turner Prize nominee) Goshka Macuga, starting at Chatham Historic Dockyard on the afternoon of Friday 18th September.

Led by Adam Chodzko, Senior Lecturer in Fine Art at the School of Music and Fine Art, the performance will involve 7  Fine Art and Event & Experience Design (BA and MA) students walking an enormous letter (over 10m long), as a group, dressed as Polish postal workers, from Chatham Historic Dockyard, in order to deliver it to Goshka at the symposium on the University of Kent’s Canterbury Campus.

The tapestry is a several meter long postal envelope made of textile, bearing the address of the Jarman Building, University of Kent. It refers to the famous happening by Tadeusz Kantor carried out in 1967, but also to the potential tensions occurring between art institutions and the society. At the heart of these tensions lies the censorship in Polish art after 1989, the period sometimes referred to as the cold war of artists against the society, and marked by attacks targeted at artworks, artists, curators, directors, and institutions, often committed on anti-Semitic grounds.

To document those difficult times, Macuga decided to embrace within the show also the hate mail addressed to Zachęta and its then director, Anda Rottenberg. The Letter is a testament to those struggles, as well as to the ongoing transformation in the society, which has to confront its fears and prejudices in order to fully accept artistic freedom. This is how the performance looked when staged in Poland
:  http://artmuseum.pl/en/kolekcja/praca/macuga-goshka-the-letter

 

About Goshka Macuga

Interdisciplinary artist, born in 1967 in Warsaw, Goshka Macuga is now based in London. In 2008, she was among the four nominees for the prestigious Turner Prize, awarded each year to the most outstanding young British artist.  Her practice moves beyond the artist’s traditionally perceived role into a form of ‘cultural archaeology’. Despite incorporating traditional media, such as sculpture, drawing, painting, photography and film, she creates installations in which she also appropriates the work of other artists, archive materials, ready-mades, combining them with objects of her own making. Macuga appropriates the techniques and tactics used by curators of exhibitions or archivists (because of this, her art is often compared to that of Marcel Broodthaers). Macuga has been exhibiting internationally at major museum and galleries since 1999.  In 2016 she has a solo exhibition at the New Museum, New York.

About Tadeusz Kantor:  http://www.cricoteka.pl/en/main.php?d=tkantor&kat=33&id=13

About the Kantorbury Symposium 18-19 September:  https://www.kent.ac.uk/arts/drama/news-summary.html?view=801

Sarah Turner’s film PUBLIC HOUSE shortlisted for Grierson Award and screened at BFI London Film Festival 2015

griersonlogoThe film, Public House, by award winning artist, filmmaker, writer, curator and academic, Sarah Turner, Director of Research and Reader in Fine Art at the School of Music and Fine Art, University of Kent, has been shortlisted for the Grierson Award and is being screened at the 2015 BFI London Film Festival.

The hugely prestigious Grierson Award in partnership with the Grierson Trust, recognises documentaries with integrity, originality and social or cultural significance. Public House, a 120 minute film has been described as “A triumphant genre-blending documentary that turns community action to save the local pub from gentrification into an exhilarating participatory opera….this is not just a film about resistance; it is a film that itself refuses categorisation, reinventing documentary reality as a polyphonic clamour of musical subjectivities. (Helen de Witt on the BFI website).

Sarah’s feature films have been broadcast on Channel 4 and she has had scripts commissioned by the BFI, Film Four Lab and Zephyr Films.

Public House is funded by a production award from Film London Artists’ Moving Image Network (FLAMIN), a research award from the School of Music and Fine Art, University of Kent and is supported by Arts Council England.

Festival screenings take place across London. The film will be shown as follows:

Monday 12 October 2015 20:45, Picturehouse Central, Screen 1

Saturday 17 October 2015 15:20, Rich Mix Cinema, Screen 1

To order tickets for Public House click here: https://whatson.bfi.org.uk/lff/Online/default.asp?BOparam::WScontent::loadArticle::permalink=publichouse

Related news item: https://www.kent.ac.uk/smfa/news.html?view=1397

For info on the BFI London Film Festival go to: http://www.bfi.org.uk/lff

Celebrate the 2015 Platform Graduate Awards at Turner Contemporary, Margate

Saturday October 10th will celebrate the opening of the Platform Graduate Award 2015 exhibition.  The School of Music and Fine Art is delighted that three of our recently graduated BA (Hons) Fine Art students – Ben Crawford, Evdokia Georgiou and Nadia Perrotta are shortlisted for this prestigious award, and their work is currently exhibited at Turner Contemporary, Margate. Now in it’s third year, the Platform Graduate Award aims to support graduate professional development and nurture emerging talent from universities and colleges in the South East region.

Also on October 10th is the opening celebration for Risk, Turner Contemporary’s autumn exhibition – and much more! The day includes:

  • Artist Ruth Proctor enacting her falling stunt from a 4m high scaffold in the gallery
  • Thanet Parkour Academy leading workshops and creating guerrilla-style interventions in, on and around the building
  • Saxophonist Evan Parker playing improvisation experiments
  • Free workshops by the Platform artists
  • Networking with fellow students from East Kent Universities

Students from the University for the Creative Arts, Canterbury Christ Church University and University of Kent students can travel FREE to Margate. To book your free place on one of the coaches leaving from each university go to Platform-travel.eventbrite.co.uk

For more info go to: http://e-turnercontemporary.org/t/24UF-3NI6Y-B9ISH0TZB5/cr.aspx

Turner Contemporary
Rendezvous, Margate, Kent
CT9 1HG
Tel: +44 (0) 1843 233 000
Tel: +44 (0) 1843 233 029
info@turnercontemporary.org

Open Tuesday to Sunday and bank holidays
10am – 6pm (Closed Mondays)

Related news item: http://www.kent.ac.uk/smfa/news.html?view=1528

New facilities for Academic Community at the Chatham Historic Dockyard

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The Chatham Historic Dockyard

The School of Music and Fine Art looks forward to welcoming Kent Business School (KBS) at Medway to the Chatham Historic Dockyard, with new academic facilities and social spaces due to open in September 2015. This exciting venture has been achieved through significant success in student and staff numbers, creating a need for space to grow further.

The project comprises of three distinct developments:

  • Sail and Colour Loft: Originally built in 1723, the Sail and Colour Loft will be the home of Kent Business School at Medway. It will feature: six seminar rooms, a group learning room, a computer suite, quiet study areas, student social spaces and a special reference collection of core text books.
  • Royal Dockyard Church: A new 316 seat lecture theatre for the University of Kent at Medway with embedded technology for lecture recording, interactivity and in-class voting.
  • Galvanising Shop: Reception to the University of Kent at Chatham Historic Dockyard with: a bistro, bar and student performance area.

The University of Kent, working with the Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust, have secured a new £3.8m home for Kent Business School from September 2015. A teaching and learning centre will be created, specifically designed to meet the needs of KBS students.

Students have played an important part in the planning of teaching space design, transport, hospitality and social areas.