Tags
Art, Birmingham, cities, communities, Creative economies, The Drum
Cultural Intermediation’s photostream on Flickr.
Here’s some images of the activities and exhibitions written about on our project blog!
13 Tuesday Nov 2012
Posted Exhibitions
inTags
Art, Birmingham, cities, communities, Creative economies, The Drum
Cultural Intermediation’s photostream on Flickr.
Here’s some images of the activities and exhibitions written about on our project blog!
12 Monday Nov 2012
Posted Exhibitions
inTags
Art, Birmingham, Community, Creative economies, Culture, Engagement, Envision, Intermediation, Project Pigeon, The Drum
It’s been a packed past week visiting organisations and exhibitions, learning more about what work is being done with communities in Birmingham. Beyond the large higher-profile institutions of the city centre (IKON’s Autumn Almanac; BMAG’s new interactive History Galleries), I’ve been off to:
Aston (The Drum; Envision programme launch at Aston Villa Football Club);
Perry Bar (Birmingham City University, with a presentation from Project Pigeon);
Balsall Heath (Ort’s first birthday at Old Print Works);
…And also to Manchester to see research-through-exhibition-making (Sustainable Stories, the CUBE). The Mistra – Urban Futures and SURF Centre / University of Salford exhibition mobilised community researchers to help map the stories of residents in Greater Manchester around the theme of Sustainability in cities. These researchers were also active in the space of the exhibition documenting the stories of visitors and embodying the project’s partnership between grass-roots localism and academia.
Back talking about Birmingham, I wanted to pick up on just a couple of the brilliant intermediary activities happening here:
Meeting with Jonathan Morley from The Drum gave great insights into arts programming in the cultural landscape beyond the city centre. Originally set up with assistance from Probation Services and awarded core funding from the Arts Council and the City Council for the past decade, The Drum acts as a cultural intermediary fostering a sense of place and place-making in the local area of Aston; however for future sustainability it must also attract those audiences who attend city-centre events. With a remit to represent South Asian and Black arts, The Drum needs to connect with local communities and wider communities; to meet commercial targets and deliver artist development aims with a cutting-edge program. Examples of impressive work with and within communities include Simmer Down Festival (reaching over 8,000 revellers) and the Arts Champion Scheme. The Drum also runs Birmingham’s annual Black History Month in partnership with Birmingham City Council.
Divergently, Project Pigeon revealed more-than-human geographies of cultural intermediation. The arts organisation run by Alexandra Lockett maintains a pigeon loft in Digbeth with 50 birds. Starting with allotments as a form of curating culture, Alexandra’s practice evolved to working with pigeons and pigeon-fanciers using all kinds of platforms and artistic mediums (pigeon stamps and syndicates, writing classes, performances, plays, exhibitions, oral histories). In her talk at BCU, Alexandra documented the under-represented world of pigeon-fancying in Birmingham, drawing its inter-cultural, cross-generational relations. Brummie pigeon fanciers from Chinese communities were shown alongside the white male fancier that has typified representations of the sub-culture. Through funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund, Project Pigeon Achive is in the process of being developed and will be integrated into the Birmingham Library Archive in Autumn 2013.
02 Friday Nov 2012
Posted Meetings
inHad a meeting today with David Tittle of MADE – a regional centre of excellence for architecture and urban design in the Midlands. David is part of our steering group and came along to last Friday’s Continuity Day meeting. We hooked up to chat partly about another project I’m running (‘MapLocal’), using a smartphone app to help communities map their neighbourhood assets. Mostly, however, we talked about the intermediation project and David gave me some excellent feedback about the need to deliver a clear narrative linking together the historical and other elements of the project. Indeed, I think it’s something we’ve always been acutely aware of when setting up this project that we need to ensure the different parts of the project speak to each other (both metaphorically and literally) – which is, of course, part of the point of having the Continuity Day presentations and steering group meetings.
One of the advantages of having someone like David on the steering group is in giving us access to a range of networks around creative urban design in the Midlands, including ways of getting communities more involved in these design processes. There are also interesting overlaps with one of the other projects funded in our call, Understanding the value of the creative citizen led by Ian Hargreaves at the University of Cardiff. One of the issues they’re interested in is the nature of hyperlocal media – volunteer reporters covering local news and issues. MADE have a lot of people who want to volunteer to work with them and have been asking some to act as journalists, writing about the many exciting initiatives happening in the region around urban design / architecture / planning. David’s intention is to rework MADE’s website to be even more of a hub feeding information back to those working in the sector about the many interesting things that are going on locally, to connect different people and projects and promote best practice. Really exciting stuff sitting very much in the centre of our interests about practices of intermediation.