Summit 2012 - Videos from the 10th May event at London's City Hall

We've begun to upload the collection of videos from Contemporary Visual Arts Network's 2012 Summit, held at City Hall in London.

All sessions from the 10th May event were recorded and we are slowly but surely getting them uploaded to Vimeo. The first two videos are embedded below.

Each time a new video is added we will post a News item on this site. We are also building a Summit Video page that will launch as soon as the last video is up, providing a full archive of the event for future reference. For more information about the Summit, please click here. 

A full transcript of Gavin Wade's address can be read here...

Visual Arts South West presents Weymouth 2012 Visual Arts Networking Tour

A one off opportunity to experience the wealth of visual arts activity in Weymouth & Portland this summer and develop new conversations and collaborations on the way in a selected tour of the Cultural Olympiad Visual Arts exhibits and events.

Wednesday 1 August 2012, meet 11.15am Weymouth Railway Station (finish approx. 6pm)

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Photo: Max McClure

Presented by Visual Arts South West, a member of the Contemporary Visual Arts Network, the coach tour will comprise visits to SW's Artists Taking the Lead project 'Nowhereisland' by Max McClure; a selection from b-side multimedia festival including weird & wonderful mis-guided walking tours, film screenings and artist talks;  'Boat Project' from the South East, a trip to Portland Bill for an exploration of science and art through one of ExLab's commissioned projects; and opportunities for discussion with artists, curators, producers and directors of arts organisations in the region.

The tour is free, but booking is required as places are limited. For more information and to book you place, please follow this link: www.weymoutharttour.eventbrite.com

North East Contemporary Visual Arts Network in collaboration with Axis Online Media Workshops

Photo Credit: Jeremy Webb

VALUE ADDED: Making and Presenting Content for the Web

12.30 – 4.45 pm on Wednesday, 11 July 2012 | Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art 
 
Just how effective are we in harnessing the web’s potential as an information-giving and audience development tool?
 
The web is part of the fabric of our lives, the place where we daily find information, interact with other people and market our organisations. Yet some still regard a website as an add-on – something more akin to an online brochure than a dynamic experience in itself.
 
North East Contemporary Visual Arts Network in partnership with Axis, have developed a day of workshops all about how we can create and present web content that users will actually want to read and view. The aim is to make users STAY on our website and return again, giving existing audience-members a deeper insight into what we do and encouraging others to take an interest for the first time.
 
The day will take place at mima on Wednesday 11th July, beginning at 12.30pm with a chance to catch up and network over lunch, and the workshops take place from 1.30-5pm. These workshops are free to attend, however places for the workshops are limited, and will be booked on a first come first served basis.
 
The workshop sets out to encourage a user-centred approach to making and presenting content for the web, with a range of practical activities, presentations and tips designed to help us sharpen up our skills.
 
The event has been designed for staff working in visual arts organisations, galleries and artist-led spaces – it’s for anybody who is interested in developing web content that can better support their business aims and artistic programme.
 
To book a place for the event, or if you have any enquiries, please email Ali Brown.
 
Please note: you can attend both events, or just one of them, please indicate when booking what you would like to do and also if you would like lunch so we can confirm catering.

Hercules displayed at the De La Warr Pavilion this summer

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Herakles at the tree of the Hesperides, bronze, Roman, 1 century AD. Image: courtesy British Museum

Until 31 August, the wonderful roman bronze figure Herakles at the tree of the Hesperides, from the British Museum's collection, will be on display in the foyer of the De La Warr Pavilion in celebration of the London 2012 Olympic Games

The loan is the first outcome of a relationship that Turning Point South East is building with the British Museum, linking people working within the visual arts in the South East with curators and other staff at the Museum to explore opportunities for collaboration.

Through dialogue between the De La Warr Pavilion and the British Museum, in particular the Senior Curator of Greece and Rome, Ian Jenkins, Herakles at the tree of the Hesperides was identified for loan during this year's olympic season. 

DLWP curator David Rhodes says in The Guardian:

"I dreamed of bringing a piece of classical sculpture into this very modern space which is known for contemporary art," ..."but my wish-list to the British Museum was mostly big lumps of stone. The Herakles is really wonderful – he is so beautiful and sexy, but he is not a golden youth but a real athlete who has had a hard life, with his broken nose and lumpy forehead."

Dating from the 1st century AD, this important statue was excavated at a temple in Byblos, Lebanon and depicts Herakles (Hercules), legendary founder of the Olympic Games and a patron god of the gymnasium - the training ground for atheletes in ancient Greece. 

The Herakles figure will act as the centrepiece for our Olympics season this spring and summer. The impressive physical presence of this object from the anicent world will create a surprising juxtaposition to the Pavilion's modernist architecture.

Herakles will act as a fascinating tool through which audiences can be introduced to the history of the Olympic Games and will mark a dynamic new departure in the De La Warr Pavilion's programming.

TPWM announces Artist Residencies & Critical Writing Programmes for 2012- 2013

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Faye Claridge, Descendants of the Unfamiliar, series of framed photographic prints, courtesy of the artist and Danielle Arnaud Contemporary Art, 2009

Four organisations in the West Midlands will lead on TPWN new artist residency opportunities and one organisation on a critical writing project:

Library of Birmingham

The West Midlands based artist Faye Claridge will develop new work that engages with the work of Sir Benjamin Stone photographic archive in the new Library of Birmingham. Faye Claridge uses photography, video and installation and shows work internationally and through Danielle Arnaud Contemporary Art.  

 Faye Claridge says: 

I’m excited about the TPWM funded residency because it will allow me to work with a collection that I’ve been interested in for years, both for its content and its ostentatious ambition of creating ‘A Record of England’ in photographs. It’ll be fantastic to bring a new audience to Sir Benjamin Stone’s work and use the opportunity to look at how photographic projects from the turn of the 20th century can be part of a critical debate about the role of photography today.

The Library of Birmingham is building on its recent programme of exhibition and publication projects, these include Brian Griffin; Face to Face A Retrospective, Take to the Streets, Magnum Street Photography, Perspectives, Ghosting the Archive: Keith Piper and Reference Works, Library of Birmingham by establishing this Artist-In-Residence commission in 2012/13.  There will be an exhibition of new work in 2014.

National Trust, Dudmaston

The National Trust will invite an artist to explore the collection at Dudmaston Hall in Shropshire. The collection includes works from the 1920's to the 1960's by modern British artists such as Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth and Ben Nicholson.

The National Trust will increase links between Dudmaston and contemporary art and artists and has identified partners and networks with which to work, including Shropshire Visual Arts Network, Shropshire and Telford Arts Partnership and Shropshire Audience Development Network. It already has links with the curatorial team at New Art Gallery Walsall from the time the artist Bob and Roberta Smith responded to the Epstein archive.

University of Worcester, with Movement Gallery and Worcester City Museum

The University of Worcester with partners Movement Gallery and Worcester City Museum and Art Gallery will work to support a new artist in residence. The artist will interact with the context of the City of Worcester with the City as site for intervention, production and discourse and as a resource that includes archives and collections.  The artist will have the opportunity to contribute to a critically engaged environment and will engage with other artists, curators, academics and the people in Worcester and the wider region. 

Eastside Projects

The Residency opportunity will focus on research and development and studio experimentation. Two short term residency opportunities for West Midland based artists will be offered to emerging and established artists. Eastside Projects works with a network of prestigious arts organisations outside the West Midlands and the artists will be hosted by these organisations to develop their ideas, thinking and networks and to develop new work in contexts outside the region. Mentoring will also be offered as part of the residencies.

Writing Bursary: Grand Union

TPWM has awarded a writing bursary to Grand Union (in association with Eastside Projects), in order to offer an opportunity for a new or emerging writer to develop skills in critical writing for publication and encourage writing practice within the West Midlands.  The writing bursary will be awarded following an open submission. 

We received several strong proposals and although not possible to fund them all, TPWM will work and help support groups and organisations that are keen to collaborate with each other. The proposals that have been selected all demonstrated a high level of support for the artist, a strong knowledge of quality and ambitious work and clear plans to develop links with others beyond the lead institution.

Each lead organisation (with the exception of the Library of Birmingham) will put a call out to artists to apply in due course and this will be included in TPWM's Artists' News & Opportunities Bulletin.

PRIMARY and East Midlands Visual Arts Network present: The Longest Lunch

Join East Midlands Visual Arts Network and PRIMARY for their first PRIMARY Picnic.

Celebrate 2012’s longest day by coming along to PRIMARY and enjoying a lunch in the inspiring surroundings of Nottingham’s newest visual arts venue.

Not only will there be culinary delights to sample but there’ll also be a chance to see round some of the studios and to meet some of the resident artists. Alternatively, this is a chance to get away from it all and take it easy over in PRIMARY’s Playground.

Bring a friend and some food to share!

PRIMARY, 33 Seely Road, Nottingham, NG7 INU

www.weareprimary.org.uk

Contemporary Art of Walking and East Midlands Visual Arts Netwalk present: Encounter, Nottingham

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Photo: Elizabeth Hawley

EMVAN is working with Contemporary Art of Walking to hold a series of netwalks, Encounters, in each of the counties of the region to follow on from its recent 'On Tour' events.

The walks will offer the opportunity to develop the conversations that were started or connections that were made at those events. The third walk in Nottingham which will include ‘micro navigation’ as a way of experiencing urban walking and becoming more aware of the subtle changes in the street and ground levels will take place between 9.30am and 12.00pm on Thursday 21 June. Participants will be led to PRIMARY, where they are welcome to join The Longest Lunch.

Alison Lloyd of Contemporary Art of Walking will lead the walks, which are designed to bring people together to walk, and in walking together to share an experience. The walks will feature art in a variety of ways, upholding a long-practiced artistic convention of using nature as a catalyst for thought and creativity, Alison has designed and led walks for and in collaboration with Beacon Bi Monthlies, Fermynwoods Contemporary Art, QUAD, Skegness Arts Festival, New Research Trajectories, and the Still Walking Festival, Birmingham.

The other walks will take place over the coming months, the dates of which are to be confirmed.

Book a place at http://contemporaryartofwalking.com/events/

RELAY event at Aspex, Portsmouth this Friday

A Hundred Seas Rising - artist, Suki Chan in conversation with Dave Beech

Friday 15 June, 6-8pm

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Image: courtesy the artist

Hear Suki Chan discuss her new RELAY commission, A Hundred Seas Rising with one of its contributors, Dave Beech, artist and a regular contributor to Art Monthly and other journals. Dave has written widely on the politics of art and revolution.

The evening will also be a chance to experience the 100 channel sound installation, inspired by Charles Dickens' novel 'A Tale of Two Cities'.  A Hundred Seas Rising explores how literature might be implicated in the imagination and trajectories of revolutions.  The installation uses the sound of 100 individual voices as a sculptural material, re-imagining Dickens' revolutionary mob sonically by creating surges of ideological thought that reverberate across the gallery space.

A Hundred Seas Rising is part of RELAY, a programme of contemporary art in the South East of England commissioned in response to London 2012.  The commission is a partnership project between Aspex, Space, Creative & Cultural Industries Faculty, University of Portsmouth and Quay Arts, Isle of Wight.  

Production of this work has also been supported by Turning Point South East, the Creative Campus Initiative, Westminster Kingsway College and part-funded by the European Union. Aspex is supported by Portsmouth City Council and Arts Council England.

This event is free...

Go to the Aspex website for more information.