archive
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Fragments from a Broken World – artists Anthony Haughey, Cat Phillips, Peter Kennard and Sean Hillen 1/2
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The artists discuss the background and inspiration to Fragments From a Broken World
Artist Anthony Haughey curated Fragments From a Broken World as part of PhotoIreland Festival 2010.
Fragments from a Broken World (National Photographic Archive, Temple Bar, Dublin 2 July 2 - 2 August 2010) presents the work of three artists who search newspaper archives, picture libraries, corporate advertising literature and printed ephemera for source material to generate their vision of the world. The artists - Peter Kennard, Cat Phillipps and Seán Hillen consider these archived images as inherently unstable and open to manipulation to generate new meanings. They discussed collaboration, the riches in the archives and politics at a panel discussion in MeetingHouse Square.
Part One: Anthony Haughey discusses how he first conceived of the show. Cat Philips and Peter Kennard give the background and inspiration to their work and the key role of collaboration and its importance to them.
Part Two: Seán Hillen talks about his art, and Cat Philips, Peter Kennard and Hillen discuss the role of art and politics with questions from the audience.Recording Date: 03-Jul-2010
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Fragments from a Broken World – artists Anthony Haughey, Cat Phillips, Peter Kennard and Sean Hillen 2/2
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The artists take questions and discuss art and politics
Artist Anthony Haughey curated Fragments From a Broken World as part of PhotoIreland Festival 2010.
Fragments from a Broken World (National Photographic Archive, Temple Bar, Dublin 2 July 2 - 2 August 2010) presents the work of three artists who search newspaper archives, picture libraries, corporate advertising literature and printed ephemera for source material to generate their vision of the world. The artists - Peter Kennard, Cat Phillipps and Seán Hillen consider these archived images as inherently unstable and open to manipulation to generate new meanings.
Part Two: Seán Hillen talks about his art and Hillen, Cat Philips, and Peter Kennard discuss the role of art and politics with questions from the audience.Recording Date: 03-Jul-2010
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Scarred Landscape. Scarred Mindscape? PhotoIreland Festival: Ray Yeates, Debbie Castro, Philip Lawton
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What are the real consequences for the communities that border the new motorway routes?
PhotoIreland Festival programmed this timely debate in response to Debbie Castro's photographic exhibition. In the aftermath of the Celtic Tiger, with its ambitious infrastructure representing the vision of a 21st century Ireland , what are the real consequences for the communities that border the new motorway routes. Is the legacy for communities dislocation or a new found confidence and progress? The Scarred Landscape. Scarred Mindscape? panel with artists (Debbie Castro and Ray Yeates) and geographer (Philip Lawton) Leslie Hendy (farmer from Kildare) discussed the recent changes on our shared geography and psychology. Chaired by Sarah Tuck, director Create.
Recording Date: 03-Jul-2010
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Many Bodies of Contemporary Dance, Raimund Hoghe and Tere O'Connor 1/2
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Choreographer Raimund Hoghe with responses from Tere O'Connor, Change Caroline Bowditch and John Scott
The Many Bodies of Contemporary Dance with choreographer Raimund Hoghe, and lecturer, dancer and choreographer Tere O'Connor took place at DanceHouse in May.
Create worked in partnership with Dublin Dance Festival, Gradcam and ADI on this seminar that explored the many representations of the body through dance, questioning the politics of representation and movement. The panel included distinguished choreographer Raimund Hoghe and Professor Tere O'Connor, choreographer and lecturer on dance. Chair: Deirdre Mulrooney
Read more about the event here. To discuss the issues and debate the topic The Many Bodies of Contemporary Dance go our online forum dedicated to the topic
Part One: Raimund Hoghe presented some of the philosophies which have influenced the creation of his work, in particular Young People, Old Voices with responses from Tere O'Connor; disabled performance artist and choreographer and Scottish Dance Theatre's Dance Agent for Change Caroline Bowditch and John Scott from Irish Modern Dance Theatre.
Part Two: Dance critic Mary Kate Connolly on storytelling in dance and questions on kinship and empathy, what is a lived body onstage with response from choreographer and dancer Cindy Cuming.Recording Date: 19-May-2010
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Many Bodies of Contemporary Dance, Mary Kate Connolly and Cindy Cuming 2/2
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Dance critic Mary Kate Connolly with choreographer and dancer Cindy Cuming.
The Many Bodies of Contemporary Dance with choreographer Raimund Hoghe, and lecturer, dancer and choreographer Tere O'Connor took place at DanceHouse in May.
Read more about the event here. To discuss the issues and debate the topic The Many Bodies of Contemporary Dance go our online forum dedicated to the topic
Part Two: Dance critic Mary Kate Connolly on storytelling in dance and questions on kinship and empathy, what is a lived body onstage with response from choreographer and dancer Cindy Cuming.Recording Date: 19-May-2010
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Transplant - photographer Tim Wainwright and sound artist John Wynne 1/2
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Victoria Hume, Tim Wainwright and John Wynne discuss Transplant
Transplant. Create in partnership with Waterford Healing Arts and Artlink.
Transplant is is a critically acclaimed art installation by photographer Tim Wainwright and sound artist John Wynne talk examining the issues surrounding heart and lung transplantation. A public talk with the two artists who created Transplant was held at Waterford Regional Hospital in April 2010.
Photographer Tim Wainwright and sound artist John Wynne spent a year as artists-in-residence at the Royal Brompton & Harefield, working with Victoria Hume, manager of the hospital’s own arts programme, rb&hArts. Funded by Arts Council England, they photographed and recorded patients, the devices they were attached to or had implanted in them, and the hospital environment.
Transplant comprised a large-scale photographic sound installation, and an accompanying DVD and book of critical essays. It documents the stories of patients waiting for a new heart or lungs, and those undergoing major surgery, at the world-renowned transplant unit at the Royal Brompton & Harefield in Middlesex.
Part One: Victoria Hume, Tim Wainwright and John Wynne discuss Transplant, introduced by Gordan Watson of the WHAT Centre for Arts & Health.
Part Two: Q&A with Victoria Hume, Tim Wainwright and John Wynne. Concluding remarks by Gordan Watson.Recording Date: 27-Apr-2010
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Transplant - photographer Tim Wainwright and sound artist John Wynne 2/2
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Q&A with Victoria Hume, photographer Tim Wainwright and sound artist John Wynne
Transplant. Create in partnership with Waterford Healing Arts and Artlink.
Transplant is is a critically acclaimed art installation by photographer Tim Wainwright and sound artist John Wynne talk examining the issues surrounding heart and lung transplantation. A public talk with the two artists who created Transplant was held at Waterford Regional Hospital in April 2010.
Part Two: Q&A with Victoria Hume, photographer Tim Wainwright and sound artist John Wynne. Concluding remarks by Gordan Watson.Recording Date: 27-Apr-2010
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Theatremaker and actor Mat Fraser talks to Sarah Tuck of Create
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Mat Fraser discusses "From Freak to Clique?"
Mat Fraser was in Dublin at axis ballymun in March and spoke to Sarah Tuck about his performance piece From Freak to Clique?, as well as discussing disability arts, American freak shows and live art practices. Sarah Tuck is Director of Create.
Recording Date: 11-Mar-2010
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People’s Postcard Project: Artist Carl Doran in conversation with Katherine Atkinson
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Carl Doran discusses his Ballymun-based People’s Postcard Project with Create's Katherine Atkinson
In 2008, Carl Doran was commissioned by Breaking Ground to undertake a project which would respond to the emerging, new, intercultural communities in Ballymun. The result was the People’s Postcard project.
Basing himself within the Civic Centre, Ballymun and at the Ballymun Farmer's Market Carl offered to make personalised postcards for passersby, which were to be sent to a recipient of their choice for free. He took photographs of the individuals, which formed the front of the postcard.
On 29 August 2009, after all the postcards were sent, Carl hosted a one-day open culture event for all participants, friends, family and the greater Ballymun Community, to celebrate in a festival of food and music. Carl commercially produced a postcard compiling images from across the project, including all the languages involved, which will serve as a memento of the project. These 3 'composite' postcards were made available free from Breaking Ground.
Carl discusses the processes of negotiation and issues which arose during this collaborative project with Katherine Atkinson, Professional Development, CreateRecording Date: 10-Mar-2010
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Nic Green talks to Katrina Goldstone 1/2
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Nic Green, theatre artist and creator of award winning show Trilogy talks to Katrina Goldstone
Nic Green, theatre artist and creator of award winning show Trilogy talks to Create's Katrina Goldstone.
In Part One, Nic Green, in conversation with Katrina Goldstone, discusses the encounters that inspired Trilogy and the diverse processes involved in creating the show that won her a Herald Angel Award at the 2009 Edinburgh Fringe Festival. The show ends in a celebratory dance by a multitude of naked women of all ages, sizes and ethnicities.
Since 2005, work under the artistic direction of Nic Green has spanned solo and group theatre performance, community and public art projects, pedagogical and holistic learning experiences and interactive web-based endeavours. Nic is committed to creating hopeful and accessible art with emphasis on the notion of making positive change, and empowering others to do the same.
In Part Two, Nic Green discusses the politics of trust, participatory performance and the hard work of in creating relationships of trust. Nic also reflects on unexpected audience reactions to nudity and her hopes for the continuing legacy of Trilogy.Recording Date: 03-Mar-2010
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Nic Green talks to Katrina Goldstone 2/2
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Nic Green discusses the role of trust and genuine participation and its influence on the joyous celebration in her work, Trilogy
Nic Green, theatre artist and creator of award winning show Trilogy talks to Create's Katrina Goldstone.
Part Two: Nic Green discusses the politics of trust, participatory performance and the hard work of in creating relationships of trust. Nic also reflects on unexpected audience reactions to nudity and her hopes for the continuing legacy of Trilogy.Recording Date: 03-Mar-2010
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Dylan Tighe talks to Peter Crawley 1/2
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Peter Crawley and Dylan Tighe discuss the challenges of transferring Lorca’s play from 1930s Spain to a modern day halting site in Ireland.
Peter Crawley theatre critic is in conversation with theatre director Dylan Tighe about The Trailer Of Bridget Dinnigan. Dylan is directing a forthcoming production which is a translation and adaptation of Federico García Lorca's play The House of Bernarda Alba. In 2008 Dylan contacted the Blanchardstown Traveller Development Group about collaborating on the adaptation and has been working on the development of the work as a full scale production of this work at the Project in 2010.
In Part One, Peter and Dylan discuss the process of translation and adaptation and the challenges of transferring the action of Lorca’s play from 1930s Spain to a modern day halting site in Ireland.
In Part Two, Dylan talks about the input and collaboration of Catherine Joyce and the eleven Traveller women who will take the key roles and how that collaborative process shaped and influenced the adaptation. Dylan also discusses the politics of representation in relation to culturally diverse groups in the theatre.
The Artist in the Community Scheme funded a research phase for the production, while the ongoing development of the work is funded by a Once-Off Award from Arts Council.Recording Date: 07-Dec-2009
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Dylan Tighe talks to Peter Crawley 2/2
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Dylan Tighe discusses the politics of representation and the input and collaboration of Catherine Joyce and the eleven Traveller women on the adaptation.
Peter Crawley theatre critic is in conversation with theatre director Dylan Tighe about The Trailer Of Bridget Dinnigan. Dylan is directing a forthcoming production which is a translation and adaptation of Federico García Lorca's play The House of Bernarda Alba.
Part Two: Dylan talks about the input and collaboration of Catherine Joyce and the eleven Traveller women who will take the key roles and how that collaborative process shaped and influenced the adaptation. Dylan also discusses the politics of representation in relation to culturally diverse groups in the theatre.Recording Date: 07-Dec-2009
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Triptik – new dances for not-so-new people 1/2
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Fearghus Ó Conchúir, Ríonach Ní Néill and Rebecca Walter discuss the genesis of Triptik and the way this work challenges preconceptions about dance
Cliodhna Shaffrey, independent arts consultant and curator, in conversation with the creators of Triptik, Fearghus Ó Conchúir, Ríonach Ní Néill and Rebecca Walter. From Dec 15-19 at the Project Arts Centre, Triptik is a unique collaboration, in which the three contemporary choreographers invited people in their 60s and 70s to join in the creation and performance of new works. The outcome is three new dances, created in close collaboration with and performed by a combined company of professional and non-vocational dancers.
In Part One the three choreographers talk about the genesis of Triptik and the way this work challenges preconceptions of who should be on stage, who can make art and who can dance. In Part Two the three choreographers discuss in detail the collaborative process and how it affects the work they create.
Triptik is produced by Ciotóg in association with Project Arts Centre, funded generously by the Arts Council and Dublin City Council, and was inspired by the Bealtaine Festival.Recording Date: 19-Nov-2009
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Triptik – new dances for not-so-new people 2/2
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Choreographers, Fearghus Ó Conchúir, Ríonach Ní Néill and Rebecca Walter discuss the collaborative process with Cliodhna Shaffrey
Cliodhna Shaffrey, independent arts consultant and curator, in conversation with the creators of Triptik, Fearghus Ó Conchúir, Ríonach Ní Néill and Rebecca Walter. From Dec 15-19 at the Project Arts Centre, Triptik is a unique collaboration, in which the three contemporary choreographers invited people in their 60s and 70s to join in the creation and performance of new works. The outcome is three new dances, created in close collaboration with and performed by a combined company of professional and non-vocational dancers.
Part Two: the three choreographers discuss in detail the collaborative process and how it affects the work they create.Recording Date: 19-Nov-2009
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Create AGM Performing Culture 1/2
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Asa Simma, Saami theatre maker and musician in conversation with Catherine Joyce, Chair of the Irish Traveller Movement
Asa Simma, Saami theatre maker and musician in conversation with Catherine Joyce, Chair of the Irish Traveller Movement Chaired by Ray Yeates. Venue: Sean O Casey Community Centre, St Mary’s Road,East Wall, Docklands Dublin br> br> Performing Culture Part One: Åsa Simma’s approach to performance is to combine the traditions of her culture with her theatre training and modern media. The content of her work deals with both the day-to-day and the spiritual. Åsa discussed the role of theatre as an agent of change and a means of giving new expression to traditional Saami culture; how theatre and culture helped in the struggle for self-determination of the Saami people; and together with Catherine Joyce reflected on the broader implications of culture and politics. br> br> Performing Culture Part Two: Ray Yeates opens up to the floor for questions to Asa Simma and Catherine Joyce
Recording Date: 17-Jun-2009
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Create AGM Performing Culture 2/2
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Ray Yeates opens up to the floor to questions for Asa Simma and Catherine Joyce
Asa Simma, Saami theatre maker and musician in conversation with Catherine Joyce, Chair of the Irish Traveller Movement Chaired by Ray Yeates. br> br> Performing Culture Part Two: Ray Yeates opens up to the floor to questions for Asa Simma and Catherine Joyce
Recording Date: 17-Jun-2009
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What Isn’t Socially Engaged? 1/2
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Faisal Abdu’Allah in conversation with Sarah Tuck, director of Create, the national development agency for collaborative arts
Create Learning Development Talks Series at the LAB
What Isn’t Socially Engaged?
Faisal Abdu’Allah in conversation with Sarah Tuck, director of Create, the national development agency for collaborative arts
As part of the Create Learning Development Talks Series at the LAB, Faisal Abdu’Allah an artist whose work evolves primarily from the interface of photography, the printed image and lens-based installations, explores some of the issues of the descriptions of what constitutes socially engaged art.
Abdu’Allah appropriates iconography from popular culture to constantly reposition values and ideologies pertaining to representation. Recent projects include: Britannia Works (Xippas Gallery, Greece 2004), Garden of Eden (Chisenhale Gallery, London 2003). He graduated in Fine Arts at the Royal College of Art in London. He is a recipient of the “Decibel Visual Arts Award” (Visual Artist 2004-5) and is currently Artist in Residence at The Serpentine Gallery London.Recording Date: 24-Apr-2009
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What Isn’t Socially Engaged? 2/2
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Faisal Abdu’Allah in conversation with Sarah Tuck - Questions from the audience
Create Learning Development Talks Series at the LAB
What Isn’t Socially Engaged?
Faisal Abdu’Allah in conversation with Sarah Tuck, director of Create, the national development agency for collaborative arts
Part 2: Questions from the audience.Recording Date: 24-Apr-2009
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Public Action Research Forum 1/2
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Emily Kyriakides of Lighthouse (UK) talks about the Guiding Lights mentoring programme in conversation with Pádraig Naughton
Public Action Research Forum
Part of the Collaborative Arts Mentoring Programme
Create and Common Ground at The LAB
Emily Kyriakides of Lighthouse (UK) talks about the Guiding Lights mentoring programme in conversation with Padraig Naughton, Director of Arts and Disability Ireland and member of the Collaborative Arts Mentoring Programme Advisory Group.
Emily has worked in the film industry in a number of roles. Emily is responsible for the management of all Lighthouse's work with filmmakers including Guiding Lights and Write Moves, as well as Cineville, Lighthouse’s regular masterclass/networking events.
Pádraig Naughton is Director of Dublin based Arts & Disability Ireland (ADI), a national resource organisation promoting the engagement of disabled people in the arts at the highest level through a range of arts programming and services. He was Director of EQUATA the disability led arts development agency in the South West England for a number of years and has extensive experience in mentoring schemes and programmes.
Part 2 is a Question and Answer session with questions from the audience to Emily Kyriakides and Padraig NaughtonRecording Date: 16-Apr-2009
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Public Action Research Forum 2/2
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Audience Questions and Answers with Emily Kyriakides and Pádraig Naughton
Public Action Research Forum
Part of the Collaborative Arts Mentoring Programme
Create and Common Ground at The LAB
Part 2/2: Question and Answer session with questions from the audience to Emily Kyriakides of Lighthouse (UK) and Pádraig Naughton, Director of Arts and Disability Ireland and member of the Collaborative Arts Mentoring Programme Advisory Group.Recording Date: 16-Apr-2009
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Declan Gorman Interview 2/2
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Declan Gorman on writing and staging I ♥ Mullaghmatt
Declan Gorman talks to Create about the project that became I ♥ Mullaghmatt.
Part Two: Writing and staging – process and issuesRecording Date: 10-Apr-2009
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Declan Gorman Interview 1/2
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Declan Gorman discusses the genesis of I ♥ Mullaghmatt
Declan Gorman talks to Create in detail about the genesis of the project that became I ♥ Mullaghmatt.
Declan Gorman is a playwright and theatre director with a background in socially-engaged arts practice and policy. He is currently Associate Artistic Director of Upstate Theatre Project, Drogheda and Chairperson of CityArts, Dublin. In 2007, he was commisioned by the community of Mullaghmatt, Monaghan to devise a play collaboratively and this became “I ♥ Mullaghmatt”, a play remembering and celebrating three decades of the Mullaghmatt Community staged in September 2008.
Part One: Declan discusses the genesis of the project and first meetings with residents of Mullaghmatt.
Part Two: Writing and staging – process and issuesRecording Date: 10-Apr-2009
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Peggy Shaw talks to Peter Crawley
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Peggy Shaw, New York based independent artist/performer, writer and producer talks to jounalist Peter Crawley
Peggy Shaw, New York based independent artist/performer, writer and producer, co-founder of radical UK theatre company Split Britches, and founder of the WOW Cafe, New York talks to journalist Peter Crawley, who writes on theatre for publications including the Irish Times and Irish Theatre magazine. br> br> She discusses her early work with the company Hot Peaches, how she and Lois Weaver founded Split Britches and also her work on the Performing Medicine programme. She was in Ireland as a guest tutor on Create's Learning Development programme. She is taking time out from her UK tour of Must.
Recording Date: 26-Feb-2009
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Anthony Haughey interview 2/2
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Anthony Haughey discusses “How to be a Model Citizen” and the development of a new work as part of "The Pre-History of the Crisis"
Anthony Haughey talks to Create about “How to be a Model Citizen”, his collaborative work with the Global Citizens network supported by a Projects: New Work Award from The Arts Council/An Chomhairle Ealaíon, which ran from 9-12 December 2008 in the Atrium, Dublin City Offices. He also discusses the development of a new work as part of "The Pre-History of the Crisis" at Project Arts Centre 2/2
Recording Date: 10-Feb-2009
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Anthony Haughey interview 1/2
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Anthony Haughey, artist and Lecturer in Photography, discusses "Between" and "Postcards"
Anthony Haughey is an artist and Lecturer in Photography in the School of Media and formerly Head of the Department of Media, DIT. He was a Research Fellow (2005-8) at the Interface Centre for Research in Art, Technologies and Design at the University of Ulster.
He talks to Create about "Between": a collaborative research project exploring issues of contested citizenship and emerging migrant narratives in a Government of Ireland reception centre for asylum seekers and "Postcards"Recording Date: 09-Jan-2009
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Collaborative Arts: Community, Authorship and Practice 1/5
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Visual Artist Michael Fortune talking about his work inspired by the everyday lives of ordinary people
Create event in partnership with the Arts Offices of the Midlands
Venue: Tuar Ard Arts Centre, Moate, Co. Westmeath.
Panel Discussion chaired by visual artist and curator Michelle Browne, with artists Michael Fortune (film maker and visual artist), Deirdre O' Mahony (visual artist), Martina Coyle (visual artist) Mary O'Sullivan (Cork Traveller Women's Network ) and Feidlim Cannon, (co founder, Brokentalkers).
More information and panellist biographies.Recording Date: 03-Dec-2008
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Collaborative Arts: Community, Authorship and Practice 2/5
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Mary O’Sullivan of Cork Traveller Womens’ Network, talks about how Barrel Top became part of the Civic Museum’s permanent exhibition.
2/5. Mary O’Sullivan Cork Traveller Womens’ Network, talks about the project as part of the Cork 2005 European Capital of Culture which resulted in the Barrel Top becoming part of the Civic Museum’s permanent exhibits in Cork, the only one of its kind in Ireland.
Recording Date: 03-Dec-2008
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Collaborative Arts: Community, Authorship and Practice 3/5
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Feidlim Cannon of Brokentalkers talks about their collaborative work with Dublin communities
3/5. Feidlim Cannon, artistic director Brokentalkers talks about how their collaborative work with different communities is part of their remit to reflect and to look at urban life in Dublin
Recording Date: 03-Dec-2008
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Collaborative Arts: Community, Authorship and Practice 4/5
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Visual artist Martina Coyle talks about two rural public art projects
4/5. Visual artist Martina Coyle talks about two public art projects in rural locations, In Your Own Words in Co Wexford and Silver in Black Salt Bay, funded by Mayo Co Council
Recording Date: 03-Dec-2008
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Collaborative Arts: Community, Authorship and Practice 5/5
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Michelle Browne sums up the key themes from the presentations and the panel respond
5/5. Chair Michelle Browne sums up the key themes of the presentation – the role of the artist, co-authorship and the response from the panel
Recording Date: 03-Dec-2008
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Culture and the City - Keeping Dublin Creative! 1/8
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Planning for Culture in the City (1). Dick Gleeson
In October 2008, Temple Bar Cultural Trust* hosted a conference on the theme of Culture and the City at the National Gallery of Ireland, in partnership with Dublin City Council.
This one-day conference provided a platform for discussion, debate and exchange of experience from Irish and international practitioners around some of the key issues affecting cultural development in Dublin.
The conference explored ways of achieving a more integrated approach to planning and development for culture in Dublin city. It also explored ways of enhancing the level of civic engagement and public participation in the cultural life of the city.
Speakers: Dick Gleeson, Franco Bianchini, Laura Magahy, Jude Woodward, Mary Cloake, Catherine Bunting, José Manuel Amaral Lopes. The Keynote Speech was given by Sir Ken Robinson, World Renowned Expert on Creativity and Innovation.
Session 1: Planning for Culture in the City
1. Dick Gleeson, Chief City Planner Dublin City Council and Director of Temple Bar Cultural Trust.
*Temple Bar Cultural Trust is a private limited company that works on a not-for-profit basis to support cultural development in Temple Bar and the city. For more information on TBCT’s cultural programme visit templebar.ieRecording Date: 21-Oct-2008
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Culture and the City - Keeping Dublin Creative! 2/8
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Planning for Culture in the City (2). Franco Bianchini
National Gallery of Ireland. Temple Bar Cultural Trust in partnership with Dublin City Council.
Session 1: Planning for Culture in the City
2. Franco Bianchini, Researcher and Writer on Urban Cultural Policies in Europe.Recording Date: 21-Oct-2008
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Culture and the City - Keeping Dublin Creative! 4/8
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Planning for Culture in the City (4). Jude Woodward
National Gallery of Ireland. Temple Bar Cultural Trust in partnership with Dublin City Council.
Session 1: Planning for Culture in the City
4. Jude Woodward, Consultant on Urban and Cultural Policy.Recording Date: 21-Oct-2008
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Culture and the City - Keeping Dublin Creative! 3/8
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Planning for Culture in the City (3). Laura Magahy
National Gallery of Ireland. Temple Bar Cultural Trust in partnership with Dublin City Council.
Session 1: Planning for Culture in the City
3. Laura Magahy, CEO, MCO Projects.Recording Date: 21-Oct-2008
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Culture and the City - Keeping Dublin Creative! 5/8
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Sir Ken Robinson expert on creativity and innovation
National Gallery of Ireland. Temple Bar Cultural Trust in partnership with Dublin City Council.
Keynote Speech: Creativity and Innovation: maximizing the creative potential of our citizens
Sir Ken Robinson, World Renowned expert on creativity and innovationRecording Date: 21-Oct-2008
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Culture and the City - Keeping Dublin Creative! 6/8
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Culture and Citizenship (1). Mary Cloake
National Gallery of Ireland. Temple Bar Cultural Trust in partnership with Dublin City Council.
Session 2: Culture and Citizenship
1. Mary Cloake, Director, The Arts Council of Ireland.Recording Date: 21-Oct-2008
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Culture and the City - Keeping Dublin Creative! 7/8
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Culture and Citizenship (2). Catherine Bunting
National Gallery of Ireland. Temple Bar Cultural Trust in partnership with Dublin City Council.
Session 2: Culture and Citizenship
2. Catherine Bunting, Director of Research, Arts Council of England.Recording Date: 21-Oct-2008
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Culture and the City - Keeping Dublin Creative! 8/8
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Culture and Citizenship (3). José Manuel Amaral Lopes
National Gallery of Ireland. Temple Bar Cultural Trust in partnership with Dublin City Council.
Session 2: Culture and Citizenship
3. José Manuel Amaral Lopes, Member of the EU Commission’s Directorate General for Education and Culture.Recording Date: 21-Oct-2008
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Socially Engaged Art - Contesting Terms and Meaning
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Peter DiMuro in conversation with Willie White
Peter DiMuro in conversation with Willie White explores the meaning and significance of the provocative term socially engaged art. Followed by questions and answers with audience.
Drawing on 25 years experience as a collaborative dance artist Peter DiMuro discusses the subtler nuances of socially engaged practice, challenging reductive concepts of collaborative arts process and practice. Willie White is Director of Project Arts Centre Dublin.
Create AGM public lecture in partnership with Bealtaine Festival. Venue: Science Gallery, Trinity College, Dublin.Recording Date: 21-May-2008
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Changing the Story 1/3
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An afternoon of reflection and radical optimism with local residents and artists living and working in Ballymun
Create, in partnership with axis, Ballymun and SIPTU:
Changing the Story
Axis, Ballymun, May 1st 2-5pm
Campaigns for civil rights and civil justice motivate much of global politics today. These campaigns can be traced back to the passion and subversive imagination of a generation whose formative political moment was forged in the radical ferment of 1968.
On the 20th December 1968 it was reported in the Irish Times that the Ballymun project, the model new town, was officially complete. Forty years later, is the radical vision of 1968 exhausted or irrelevant? How might we continue Changing the Story ? Join us for an afternoon of reflection and radical optimism with local residents and artists living and working in Ballymun:
Ollie McGlinchey, (Ballymun Communications Manager), Stewart Dowie (Neighbourhood Arts Worker), Aine Rooney, (Ballymun Welfare Rights Co-ordinator), Colm Downes (educator), Dean Scurry (comedian / youth worker / artist), Aideen McBride (storyteller), along with poet and playwright Dermot Bolger, Professor Alan Read (Kings College, London), writer Evelyn Conlon and Little John Nee as he composes a new protest song for Ballymun. Changing the story...Recording Date: 01-May-2008
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Changing the Story 2/3
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Evelyn Conlon, Dean Scurry, Ollie McGlinchey, Aine Rooney and Colm Downes
Create, in partnership with axis, Ballymun and SIPTU:
Changing the Story
Axis, Ballymun, May 1st 2-5pm
Changing the story, part 2/3: writer Evelyn Conlon, Dean Scurry (comedian / youth worker / artist), Ollie McGlinchey, (Ballymun Communications Manager), Aine Rooney, (Ballymun Welfare Rights Co-ordinator), and Colm Downes (educator).Recording Date: 01-May-2008
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Changing the Story 3/3
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"Ballymun, Ballymun"
Create, in partnership with axis, Ballymun and SIPTU:
Changing the Story
Axis, Ballymun, May 1st 2-5pm
Changing the story, part 3/3: Professor Alan Read (Kings College, London) and Little John Nee as he composes a new protest song for Ballymun.Recording Date: 01-May-2008
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Create on the Arts Show
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Richie Beirne talks to Create Director Sarah Tuck and songwriter Little John Nee
Create on The Arts Show, RTÉ Radio 1.
This audio is available on the RTÉ website. To listen please click here. (6m 32s)
To celebrate the spirit of protest, Create, the national development agency for collaborative arts, organised an event called 'Changing the Story' in partnership with axis, Ballymun and SIPTU.
Richie Beirne talked to Sarah Tuck, director of Create, and songwriter Little John Nee, who wrote a May Day protest song for the event. 2008 © RTÉ.Recording Date: 01-May-2008
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Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium 1/12
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Dragan Klaic Keynote Address on the significance of Dialogue
Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium. Create & Leitrim County Council, The DOCK, Carrick-on-Shannon, County Leitrim, 13,14-Sep-2007
Focusing on themes of Dialogue as methodology and intercultural competence, and Ritual as collective cultural memory, the symposium challenges conventions about public art and offers insights into practices, projects and outcomes. Cultural analyst Dragan Klaic and John Fox as Keynote Speakers.
Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium, part 1/12: Dragan Klaic Keynote Address on the significance of Dialogue.Recording Date: 13-Sep-2007
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Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium 2/12
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Sarah Searson - Dialogue as Public Arts Practice
Dialogue as Public Arts Practice.
Public Art artists dialogue chaired by Sarah Searson.
Introduction by Sarah Searson with case studies of Public Art projects from Kerry, Carlow, Dun Laoghaire and South County Dublin.
Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium, part 2/12.Recording Date: 13-Sep-2007
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Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium 3/12
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Vivienne Dick and Aileen Lambert
Vivienne Dick, film maker and Aileen Lambert, live art /performance artist. Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium, part 3/12.
Recording Date: 13-Sep-2007
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Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium 4/12
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Seamus Nolan and Gary Keegan
Artist, Seamus Nolan and Gary Keegan, theatre maker and social choreographer. Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium, part 4/12.
Recording Date: 13-Sep-2007
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Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium 5/12
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Panel discussion
Panel discussion with Dragan Klaic, Vivienne Dick, Aileen Lambert, Seamus Nolan, Gary Keegan. Chaired by Sarah Searson. Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium, part 5/12.
Recording Date: 13-Sep-2007
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Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium 6/12
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John Fox on Arts and Ritual
John Fox Keynote Address - Arts and Vernacular Ritual. Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium, part 6/12.
Recording Date: 13-Sep-2007
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Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium 7/12
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Rituals and Public Art Practice: Cliodhna Shaffrey presents five projects
Rituals and Public Art Practice
Cliodhna Shaffrey presents five projects on the theme of Rituals. Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium, part 7/12.Recording Date: 13-Sep-2007
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Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium 8/12
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Jesse Jones and John Byrne
Artists Dialogue
Jesse Jones, visual artist and John Byrne, live art practitioner. Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium, part 8/12.Recording Date: 13-Sep-2007
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Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium 9/12
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Fearghus Ó Conchúir and Sarah Browne
Artists Dialogue
Fearghus Ó Conchúir, dance artist and Sarah Browne, artist and curator. Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium, part 9/12.Recording Date: 13-Sep-2007
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Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium 10/12
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Panel discussion
Panel discussion: John Fox, Jesse Jones, John Byrne, Fearghus Ó Conchúir and Sarah Browne. Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium, part 10/12.
Recording Date: 13-Sep-2007
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Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium 11/12
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Panel discussion on Memory, Place and Identity
Cliodhna Shaffrey introduces a panel discussion on Memory, Place and Identity.
Panellists: Dragan Klaic, cultural critic and analyst, Declan Redmond, academic, Susan Kelly, artist and David A Bailey, artist and curator.
Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium, part 11/12.Recording Date: 13-Sep-2007
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Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium 12/12
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Panel discussion on Working in Partnership - Initiating New Visions
Sarah Searson introduces a panel discussion on Working in Partnership - Initiating New Visions.
Tania Banotti, Theatre Forum, Alan Fitzpatrick, Filmbase, Deirdre McCrea, Music Network, Orlaith McBride, National Association for Youth Drama, Jane O’Hanlon, Poetry Ireland, Katherine Atkinson, Create. Resource organizations from arts sector. Questions from audience.
Dialogue and Ritual in Public Art - Symposium, part 12/12.Recording Date: 13-Sep-2007
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Process, Practice and the Role of Audience 1/6
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Alan Phelan and Rosemary Miller; Louise Walsh and Ghislaine Boddington
Process, Practice and the Role of Audience. Create and National College of Art and Design Dublin; ResCen, Middlesex University.
Ten artists across artforms from Ireland and UK took part in intense conversations over two days about process practice and the role of audience at Soho Theatre London.
Part 1: Introduction by Chris Bannerman. Alan Phelan, visual artist and Rosemary Miller, dance artist, and Louise Walsh, sculptor and Ghislaine Boddington, performing arts specialist in conversation. More about Process, Practice and the Role of Audience....Recording Date: 27-Feb-2007
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Process, Practice and the Role of Audience 2/6
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Graeme Miller and Shane Cullen
Graeme Miller, sound artist /theatre maker and Shane Cullen, visual artist. Process, Practice & the Audience, part 2/6.
Recording Date: 27-Feb-2007
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Process, Practice and the Role of Audience 3/6
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George Higgs and Lorraine Gallagher
George Higgs, composer and Lorraine Gallagher, visual artist. Process, Practice & the Audience, part 3/6.
Recording Date: 27-Feb-2007
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Process, Practice and the Role of Audience 4/6
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Tom Creed and Richard Layzell
Tom Creed, theatre director and Richard Layzell. Process, Practice & the Audience, part 4/6.
Recording Date: 27-Feb-2007
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Process, Practice and the Role of Audience 5/6
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Audience Discussion part 1
Discussion with audience, including Graeme Miller, Tom Creed, George Higgs, Ghislaine Boddington, Alan Phelan, Shane Cullen, and Louise Walsh. Process, Practice & the Audience, part 5/6.
Recording Date: 27-Feb-2007
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Process, Practice and the Role of Audience 6/6
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Audience Discussion part 2
Discussion with audience including Shane Cullen, Louise Walsh, Graeme Miller, Tom Creed, George Higgs, Ghislaine Boddington, and Alan Phelan. Process, Practice & the Audience, part 6/6.
Recording Date: 27-Feb-2007
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Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes 1/6
Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes. Create and the Arts Council's Critical Voices 3: Suburbs and Cities. Discussion on Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes in partnership with Draiocht, Blanchardstown.
Suburbs and Cities explores how artists respond to and engage with the specifics of place, including the intangible qualities of location – history, desire and identity. The panel of invited artists talked about examples of their work, sharing insights into their specific practice and drawing connections between and across art disciplines and discussed how their work is informed by the changing urban landscapes of Europe and the US.
Chaired by journalist and critic Gemma Tipton, the panel included acclaimed writer Iain Sinclair, theatre director Lisa Goldman, sound artist and theatre maker Graeme Miller, photographer /film maker Andrew Cross.
Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes, part 1/6: Journalist and critic Gemma TiptonRecording Date: 06-Sep-2006
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Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes 2/6
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Iain Sinclair
Writer Iain Sinclair. Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes, part 2/6.
Recording Date: 06-Sep-2006
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Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes 3/6
Theatremaker Lisa Goldman. Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes, part 3/6.
Recording Date: 06-Sep-2006
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Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes 4/6
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Graeme Miller
Sound artist/ theatre maker Graeme Miller. Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes, part 4/6.
Recording Date: 06-Sep-2006
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Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes 5/6
Photographer /film maker Andrew Cross. Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes, part 5/6.
Recording Date: 06-Sep-2006
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Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes 6/6
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Audience Questions and Answers, chaired by Gemma Tipton
Audience Questions and Answers, chaired by journalist and critic Gemma Tipton, with acclaimed writer Iain Sinclair, theatre director Lisa Goldman, sound artist and theatre maker Graeme Miller, photographer /film maker Andrew Cross.
Artists’ Responses to Changing Urban Landscapes, part 6/6.Recording Date: 06-Sep-2006

