Archive for the Bluecoat

PROJECT: Level Five @ Abandon Normal Devices Festival 1st Oct 2011

Over the summer I worked on the production of Level Five, a project by Brody Condon as part of Abandon Normal Devices 2011.

Here is a short video documenting the project. Its only two minutes long and well worth a look, if only for the kooky 1970′s clips pinched from Adam Curtis documentaries!

FEATURE: In the Big Society, not all art is equal 14 July 2011

Published in The Guardian

Dancers at an exhibition at the ICA – Sketches for Regency Living by artist Pablo Bronstein. Photograph: Graham Turner for the Guardian

Dancers at an exhibition at the ICA – Sketches for Regency Living by artist Pablo Bronstein. Photograph: Graham Turner for the Guardian

The arts have always been required to justify their access to government funding by performing a civic duty. Even while New Labour presided over a golden era in arts funding, its streams of cash flowed only in response to the party mandate that the arts should be “central to the task of recreating the sense of community, identity and civic pride that should define our country”.

In the age of austerity these sentiments have been recycled in accordance with the political rhetoric of the day. Arts Council England’s website waxes lyrical that “arts leaders and organisations occupy a major place in the Big Society”. Meanwhile the RSA’s pamphlet Arts Funding, Austerity and the Big Society suggests the arts should do more to renew instrumentalism, quantify social impact and provide better statistical justification for its access to the public purse.

Maybe this is a fair deal in times of economic crisis and certainly ACE appeared to consider artistic excellence a key litmus test while allocating its national portfolio. The new NPO status awarded to InBetweenTime and Fierce, two of Britain’s most exciting multi-art form festivals should serve as testimony to this. Yet surely government expectation that the arts can perform an enhanced civic duty while absorbing a 29.6% cut in funds amounts to a demand for greater quantitative return for significantly less investment? As match-funding schemes are announced to kick-start a new era of philanthropy, what criteria will be used to judge each art form worthy of financial investment?

The transition that is creeping through Britain’s best multi-art form venues is a telling example of how cuts to the arts are beginning to bite. In the new national portfolio venues such as Arnolfini and the Bluecoat (where I was recently acting performance programmer) have taken the equivalent of an 11% cut. The ICA took a hit of 42%, a decision that reports suggest was prompted by a spell of bad management. All three of these venues’ mission statements include programming an eclectic mix of talks, performances, literature and visual art. Now cuts need to be made and these diverse art forms are losing out to visual arts, based – it seems to me – on the instrumentalist perspective that galleries yield greater footfall and are more attractive to wealthy donors.

The Bluecoat in Liverpool, a combined arts centre with a heritage of hosting performance and literature artists, from Yoko Ono to Jeanette Winterson has recently made my former post of live programmer and the position of literature programmer redundant and placed programming on hold, while it reviews options for the future. Meanwhile the ICA has a number of staff that programme its multi-art form events under consultation for redundancy, while staff who curate visual art appear to be protected. A review of their combined arts offer is underway. In a telling precursor the Arnolfini have not employed a senior live producer since 2009, after they decided also to review their live activity.

Galleries that are open seven days a week can easily be pitched as civic and social spaces that offer free access. While these are positive assets, they are not the only criteria on which the comparative merits of the art form should be judged. Literature readings, talks and live performance can create uniquely life-enhancing engagement opportunities for the public even though they have limited capacities, happen at specific times and require the purchase of a ticket. Do we live in an era where the demand for accessible culture has become so pervasive, that these modest requirements are now insurmountable obstacles?

During a visit to the ICA last weekend, I took a peep at the ominous “Bronsteinification” of the theatre space that had set tongues wagging about the future of its live programme. On their website the ICA say that Pablo Bronstein’s Sketches for Regency Living is a “groundbreaking exhibition” that facilitates the artist “choreographing extraordinary art and ballet performances”. As an exercise in multi-art form programming it is scintillating, offering one artist the opportunity to exercise their oeuvre across a range of platforms. Yet as a practical exercise this exhibition appears to have facilitated the conversion of the ICA’s theatre into a space for visual arts.

In times of crisis it is vital that multi-art form programming remains agile and responsive to the need for change. Each art form must prove its worth, but analysis of value should be based on qualitative concerns rather than the need to generate footfall. Without arts centres to make a financial investment in a broad range of cross art form activity, the quality and diversity of our cultural output is at risk.

REVIEW: Liverpool Biennial 18 Sept – 28 Nov 2010

Published in IdeasTap

Daniel Bozhkov

Daniel Bozhkov, Music Not Good For Pigeons: image courtesy of Phil Olsen/Bluecoat

The approach of Biennial time means three things for anyone involved with the arts in Liverpool: hard work, lots of parties and some very bizarre antics. I have had some wonderful experiences, including leading a live horse around the interior of one of Liverpool’s largest hotels, and working with a team of volunteer stewards who spent most evenings after work drinking free wine at exhibition previews. Not only does Liverpool Biennial inject £30m into the city’s economy, it also yields a wealth of opportunity for young creatives to showcase their artwork and experience life behind the scenes of the UK’s largest visual arts festival.

Liverpool Biennial was founded in 1998; its sixth event kicked off on 18 September and runs for 10 weeks. Featuring 900 artists and over 100 venues, the festival is a mix of international shows presented at major galleries, public realm commissions for unusual sites, and artist-led DIY installations in disused shop spaces, hotel lobbies and pubs.

This year, the International strand responds to the theme of “Touched”, and asks if art can have an emotional impact on the inhabitants of a city. Must-see works include Korean artist Do-Ho Suh’s public realm installation Bridging Home (pictured above), which replicates a life-size traditional Seoul house wedged between two vacant warehouse buildings on Duke Street. At city-centre art space the Bluecoat (where I work as Performance Programmer), Bulgarian-born artist Daniel Bozhkov has created a replica of Liverpool Football Club dressing room to house his installation Music Not Good For Pigeons (pictured below). Having returned to the city almost 25 years after his first visit, his work investigates the Liverpudlian cultural icons that caught his attention both then and now.

In addition to major commissions produced by big galleries, Liverpool Biennial has a thriving fringe programme of artist-led ventures keen to capitalise on the festival. These low-budget, high-enthusiasm projects are often where the most vigorous and interesting work is shown. An old hardware shop on Renshaw Street hosts arts collective Mercy’s Midnight Specials: experimental performances with cutting-edge artists held every Saturday at midnight. Studio group The Royal Standard are exhibiting the work of maverick artists Pil and Galia Kollectiv, whose videos of cutlery wielding youths in elaborate costumes are not to be missed.

If all of the above sounds enticing, then fear not: there is still time to get involved in this year’s event. Both Liverpool Biennial and the Bluecoat are currently recruiting for festival volunteers. Potential visitors should check out Mercy’s weekly pod cast, for an insider’s perspective on what to see and do. A visit to Liverpool Independents’ website also provides a useful index of grassroots activity where savvy young artists may be able to negotiate an exhibition.

Above all, this is an event with countless opportunities for anyone who is ready and willing to experiment and explore.

PROJECT: Andre Guedes in residence @ the Bluecoat 07 Nov- 06 Dec 2009

Andre Guedes Backyard of a building, 2005

Andre Guedes Backyard of a building, 2005

I have had the pleasure over the past six weeks of helping to host Andre Guedes on his co-commissioned residency through the Bluecoat and Visiting Arts. Choosing to produce a project that evidences the present state of the institution by drawing a trajectory through its past, he has been trawling the archives of the Bluecoat for unusual documents, images and objects. Accompanying him to the Bluecoat’s offsite storage space in an empty warehouse in Liverpool’s old business district, I was overwhelmed by the sheer volume of exhibition catalogues, VHS tapes and random artifacts that we found from the Bluecoat circa 2004, prior to its redevelopment.

Andre’s exhibition and performative interventions will open at the Bluecoat in November this year.