Archive for “March, 2015”

Architecture 2: Architecture as Art with Turner Prize Nominees – Assemble (October 12th 2015)

What can we learn about engagement and new thinking from Assemble as they prepare for their Turner Prize Show?

Following our London Festival of Architecture event, we welcome Turner Prize nominees Assemble Studios.

Monday 12th October 2015

Will Assemble be the next winners of the Turner Prize? Will you be able to catch up with them and chat with them over a glass of wine for a tenner if they do (we are sure you still will… but anyway – come to this discussion… it’ll be fantastic!)

Their Turner competition exhibition will have opened the proceeding week and so there will no doubt be a huge amount of focus and debate happening about their work and practice, so come and hear from them, debate with them and hear about the Turner Prize from the inside!

Assemble have been nominated for projects including the ongoing collaboration with local residents and others in the Granby Four Streets, Liverpool. They are an exciting London-based collective who work across the fields of art, design and architecture to create projects in tandem with the communities who use and inhabit them. Their architectural spaces and environments promote direct action and embrace a DIY sensibility.

There has been tons of press about their nomination – take a look at your preferred media outlet!

http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/architecture-design-blog/2015/may/12/assemble-turner-prize-2015-wildcard-how-the-young-architecture-crew-assemble-rocked-the-art-world

http://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tramway/exhibition/turner-prize-2015/turner-prize-2015-artists-assemble

http://www.dezeen.com/2015/05/12/assemble-turner-prize-shortlist-2015-first-design-studio/

http://www.architectsjournal.co.uk/news/assemble-and-the-turner-prize-a-rebuke-to-a-profession-that-has-sold-its-soul/8683005.article

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/art/turner-prize/11599068/Turner-Prize-2015-shortlist-Liverpool-council-houses-nominated.html

http://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/whats-on/arts-culture-news/artists-work-toxteth-nominated-turner-9241165

The nomination of an architecture practice has caused quite a lot of debate, but the Royal Academy has shown architecture in its galleries for many years, so is this really such a surprise?

The team at Assemble have said that they will be able to talk about their Turner Exhibition entry, their practice, how they work with the public on their projects and how they build ownership and engagement whilst also creating extraordinary spaces!

Some of the questions we might be asking could include;

* What can we learn for our own lives and work from the way that Assemble lives and works?

* How does Assemble’s practice shape what we expect from artists and architects?

* What would we like to see Assemble doing in our communities?

* What other innovations are we excited about seeing in the near future?

12th October 2015

Book Now

Come to The People’s Salon, where being the audience is the performance and explore the impact of privileged actors keeping all of us off the red carpet! – listen, think, question and share…

Acting – what a privilege… Who gets to act and what effect does that have on our society?

Acting – Oh what a privilege! 

With the press often full of highly privileged actors and a live debate about who gets access to a drama school education, we thought we’d take a look at the question through the other end of the telescope…

Who are the people who are acting today and how did they build their careers?

What is the social impact of diversifying the people who we see on our stages and our screens and what impact does that have on the way young people see opportunities and possibility in their lives?

Where are the social and educational origins of casting decisions? What impact does education, facilities and environment have on the skills and talents of our young people to develop into extraordinary actors and performers?

We are bringing the Principle of LAMDA (London School of Music and Dramatic Art) Joanne Read to the House to start off our discussion. LAMDA has alumni that includes Jim Broadbent, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Benedict Cumberbatch, Brian Cox, Hermione Norris, Paterson Joseph, Toby Stephens, Anna Chancellor and Anna Maxwell Martin. With a national and international outreach programme and a significant bursary programme, Jo will be exploring the ways that LAMDA does and should find and support the development of diverse people to reflect the diverse society we inhabit. She will be joined by alumni and some current students to explore the barriers and social implications as well as debating some of the initiatives that we might advance to increase diversity within the acting profession.

As ever at a ‘People’s Salon’ event, the discussion will be shaped by you, the audience so that we have live and real debate and everyone’s perspective, questions and concerns are heard and responded to… So come along, get a ring side seat, explore these questions with us, and debate the ideas and implications with actors who you see daily on your stages and screen.

Postponed from 7th September – New date to be released soon

Book Now

Come to The People’s Salon, where being the audience is the performance and explore the impact of the arts on the way we live and engage – listen, think, question and share…

The soft power of arts and culture (Saloned in April!)

What does soft power make you think and how do they make you think that?

In the first of our two salons exploring the politics of culture (we’re trying to ignore party politics, but social politics still has a place in our daily discourse doesn’t it?!) we are focussing on soft power. We often think about the ways in which our values and cultural credentials are projected overseas, but in this salon we are thinking more about our perception of others and how that is affected by their cultural exports and soft power programmes.

Has China’s role in the world been affected by it’s cultural exports? Have the cultural investments by Abu Dhabi and Qatar affected the way we see these states? What about Brazil, India and Kazakhstan? How are these nations seen around the world, and are our perspectives affected by their cultural policy?

We will hear from the extraordinary Lesley Katon, who is (among many things) an International producer of Cultural and Historical documentary film that often explores untold national stories from new perspectives, and who always has a range of projects in the pipeline (some of which she will naturally not be able to share with us at the moment) that are designed to explore and shine a light on lesser known cultural stories and artists. We will also hear from two People’s Salon regulars who will share their thoughts to get the discussion started…

Some of the questions we will be asking might include;

* What cultural exports have the greatest impact on our perceptions of other states and nations?

* Which countries have shifted your perceptions about them in the recent past?

* Where would you like to go or know more about, triggered by a cultural experience?

13th April 2015

Book Now

Come to The People’s Salon, where being the audience is the performance and explore the politics of global culture – listen, think, question and share…