Allowing creativity to flourish: how we support individual artists

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Allowing creativity to flourish: how we support individual artists When you think of Arts Council England and how it supports arts and culture, it’s probably the National portfolio organisations (there are 696 of them!) that receive regular funding that come to mind – particularly the big flagship organisations like the National Theatre. But a vital part of our work also involves supporting individual artists working in all spheres. We do this either directly through our funding programmes such as Grants for the arts or by investing in organisations and initiatives that help artists establish themselves and develop their work. We know that the North is a place where artists want to train, live, work and make a career. Here we describe just a few of the people we have helped to fulfil these ambitions, and how.


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How our investment directly helps individual artists

Sculptors • Our National Lottery-funded programme, Grants for the arts, awards funding to individual artists for activities carried out over a set period. The West Yorkshire-based ceramicist James Oughtibridge received support for the production of a new body of work in 2010. Since then, he has gone from strength to strength, producing his trademark flowing sculptures in his studio in West Yorkshire. A recent year-long private sponsorship has enabled him to devote himself full-time to his ceramic art. His work was exhibited in April at Ceramic Art London 2015 – the major international showcase for ceramics.

A sculpture by James Oughtibridge. Credit: James Oughtibridge


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The chandelier at St Mary’s Hospital. Credit: Helen Kitchen

• A sculpture of a very different kind was the result of £9,500 Grant for the arts award to the artist and maker duo Sagar and Campbell. In 2012/13, with the help of our funding, they created a 2.5 metres high Chandelier of Lost Earrings made from thousands of donated earrings. Some of these came from the staff and patients at St Mary’s Hospital, Manchester, where the work was first exhibited. Our investment made a huge difference to the careers of these two artists. Lauren Sagar said: “Grants for the arts funding helped us show that we could create large, quality artworks that have a substantial appeal and increase participation from audiences. It gave us the time we needed to make the sculpture and confidence to those we requested support from for the project.” Dancers • Company Chameleon is another North success story nurtured by Arts Council funding. Artistic directors Anthony Missen and Kevin Edward Turner were originally from Manchester, and trained at the Northern School of Contemporary Dance in Leeds. They spent their early careers working with top dance companies and teaching in major contemporary dance institutions elsewhere in the UK and abroad. In 2007 they achieved their dream of a return to Manchester


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to found Company Chameleon. Their venture received recognition in 2012 when they were awarded regular Arts Council funding for the first time. As Anthony Missen explained on learning that their National portfolio organisation status had been extended to 2015, “It’s a hugely exciting, rewarding moment for us. Kevin and I only formed Company Chameleon seven years ago and to have our work recognised in this way, to have an opportunity to make plans for the next few years with the support of the Arts Council, is just fantastic.” His co-founder Kevin Edward Turner added “It’s brilliant to know we can continue to develop our performance and educational work, to grow and perhaps take those chances that we’ve been thinking about over the last year or so.” Get a taste of Chameleon’s work in this promo video for Beauty of the Beast. • Robby Graham is another dancer who has been able to establish his own company with a little help from the Arts Council. Without any formal dance training, Robby developed his skills via Bad Taste Cru, the pioneering UK Hip Hop Theatre company. In 2012-13 he was commissioned to create a new outdoor piece, Faust, by Without Walls, a Manchester-based Street Art Consortium which we support via Grants for the arts and the Strategic touring programme. Critical acclaim for Faust’s national tour generated considerable interest and direct funding to Robby via Grants for the arts for 2014-15 enabled him to re-rehearse the work with a new cast. Faust is now touring internationally on a commercial basis, performed by Robby’s own company, Southpaw Dance. Based in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, the company’s plans for 2015 include Rush, a mass movement spectacle for audiences in South Shields. Get a feel for Faust – watch this video. Writers • 22-year-old poet Matt Miller is one of three winners of The Verb New Voices (VNV) Competition, an initiative created by Arts Council England and BBC Radio 3, searching for talented Northern writers. His prize included mentoring from the BBC and partner organisations, a place on an Arvon course on writing for radio, and a special commission to create a piece of work for The Verb, which he got to perform at Radio 3’s Free Thinking Festival at Sage Gateshead in Autumn 2014. River Fragments – the end result of his commission – was inspired by growing up beside the River Tyne. Now Matt has created a piece of one man theatre with dramaturgical support from Peader Kirk and Matt Fenton as part of the VNV development scheme. He says: “Welcome to Ryton


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incorporates elements of poetry, music and story-telling to recount stories from my own adolescence, with the hope that it will allow audiences to reflect on their own experiences of growing up. It draws on similar themes to River Fragments but is not directly related to it.” Read about Matt’s experiences on the Arvon course here. • The Arts Council enables individual voices to be heard through its regular funding of world-class poetry publishers like Carcanet. In 2012 Carcanet published Otherwise Unchanged, a debut collection from Lancashire-based poet Owen Lowery. The poems are the quite extraordinary result of Owen’s very challenging life journey. A talented judo competitor who had won several major titles by the age of 18, a serious spinal injury brought that career to Poet Owen Lowery. a close in 1989, leaving him paralysed from his shoulders down. Owen felt that poetry could play a part in helping him to deal with the situation ‘as well as providing a means of escaping it for a time, or for the timelessness of a poem’. Learn more about the remarkable story of how his writing and studying led to him becoming a published poet here and here. In 2014 we awarded Owen a grant via Unlimited, the fund that celebrates the work of deaf and disabled artists, to support a reading tour of Otherwise Unchanged. The tour began at the Southbank Centre in London. There are still readings to come in 2015, one of them in the North at the Arvon Centre at Lumb Bank on 3 June. Owen’s second collection of poems, Rego Retold was published in January 2015. • Another publisher is Comma Press. Based in Manchester, it pours its efforts into promoting new fiction and poetry, particularly in the form of short stories. Two recent developments illustrate the difference the work of organisations like this small, committed publisher can make to the lives of the writers it publishes. The Book of Gaza was one of the first books Comma published under its translation imprint, which brings foreign writers into the British market. The publisher has found itself in the unique position of acting as a conduit for eye-witness, often harrowing, accounts


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from the heart of Gaza to reach Western media. This development culminated in three major articles by Atef Abu Saif, the book’s publisher, appearing in The Guardian, The Sunday Times, and in the New York Times. Ra Page, the founder and editorial manager of Comma Press, makes the point that it was through the support of the Arts Council for Comma’s translation input that he was able to connect with these writers in the first place, allowing him to ‘help in a process that, in some small way, humanises the news stories and enables readers around the world to connect with normal, non-political Gazans.’ Listen to Atef Abu Saif discussing Gazan literature and The Book of Gaza. Comma also set the Iraqi author Hassan Blasim on a path that led to a collection of his short stories – The Corpse Exhibition – being chosen by Publishers Weekly, the main US trade magazine, as one of their top ten books of 2014. It was Comma’s translation imprint that first published two sets of his stories – The Madman of Freedom Square and The Iraqi Christ. These were sold to Penguin for an amalgamated American edition which became The Corpse Exhibition. As Ra Page says: “Some feat for a book that little old Comma created.” • The Writing Squad is an independent organisation working in partnership with Sheffield Hallam University and National portfolio organisations the Manchester Literature Festival and New Writing North. It operates a programme for emerging young writers in the north of England which has, since 2001, worked with 65 writers; and has allowed for collaboration between artists, who together develop projects initiated by the squad as a whole. On each two-year squad programme, around 30 writers work with each other and with professional tutors. The organisation offers continued support after that, helping writers make their way in the profession. It also acts as a support network for a burgeoning community of emerging writers and producers in the north of England Visual artists and designers Chrysalis Arts, a National portfolio organisation, has over the years helped dozens of individual practitioners through their Art Connections project, providing marketing, information, professional development and retail and other opportunities for visual artists based in York and North Yorkshire. Andrew Cheetham, a painter based in Scarborough, is among those more than happy with the help he was given when he was selected for a residency in Rosedale on the North York Moors, “I received excellent support from Art Connections – practical advice, liaison support with the host organisation, arranging mentor


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Andrew Cheetham during his residency in Rosedale on the North York Moors. Credit: Porl Medlock

support, financial and promotional assistance with the exhibition. I felt confident I had their full support as artist in residence.” See some of Andrew’s Rosedale pictures here. Here are some more organisations and initiatives we support that help visual artists fulfil their potential: • The ‘Artists’ City’ project at Liverpool School of Art and Design (LSAD) is designed to nurture emerging artists from a range of disciplines to further strengthen Liverpool’s creative communities. With our support and close partnerships with Liverpool’s public-facing organisations much has been achieved already. For example, a partnership with The Royal Standard, an artist-led gallery, studios and social workspace, has meant that artists in the early stages of their career have been provided with studio space and encouraged to connect to other organisations in the city • The Vane gallery in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, directed by Paul Stone and Christopher Yeats, represents the work of a number of artists from across the UK and abroad. Similarly, the Workplace Gallery, run by artists Paul Moss and Miles Thurlow in Gateshead, represents a


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portfolio of emerging and established artists through the gallery programme, curatorial projects and international art fairs • The International 3, based in Salford and run by directors Paulette Terry Brien and Laurence Lane, works with emerging and established artists, independent curators, galleries and organisations to produce a year round programme of new commissions, solo shows, group exhibitions and events both on and off-site. The International 3 also works with a core group of artists, exhibiting and selling their work at national and international art fairs • The Manchester Contemporary, which is co-ordinated by the International 3, gives a platform every year to emerging galleries and their artists. It is hugely popular with serious collectors and the public alike, as this video shows. In 2015 the Manchester Contemporary returns for the fifth consecutive year, running from 24-27 September in a new home in the iconic Old Granada Studios. The Great Northern Contemporary Craft Fair (GNCCF) takes place at the same venue a few weeks later (8-11 October). The GNCCF attracts over 6,000 visitors annually and provides a great shop window for designer-makers. Watch this video to get a feel for the event • Supported through our National portfolio funding, East Street Arts is a contemporary arts organisation based in Leeds that focuses on the development of artists through events and professional development. It also supports artists and creative industries nationally, offering specific development support to individuals and emerging companies in accessing the marketplace, developing new entrepreneurial approaches, bridging arts and creative business practices and the set up and management of new artist-led spaces. A rolling programme of long term support to ‘incubate’ and launch emerging companies in the visual arts has been established and recent companies that have been supported include Compass Live Art and Invisible Flock • One of the challenges artists face is how to increase their sustainable income. We have supported Yorkshire Visual Arts Network (YVAN) to deliver a Cultural Entrepreneurship Programme (CEP) providing business planning, mentoring and support to emergent or established cultural entrepreneurs. For example Patrick Murphy of Made North initiated and delivered a Northern craft and design festival and the new Made North showcase gallery in Sheffield shows the contemporary designs, materials, skills and products of Northern individual designer/makers


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• The Arts Council’s Artists International Development Fund supports artists to develop new artistic international connections, make new work and make contact with a new market. Yorkshire based anthropologist and photographer, Alinka Echeverria Samperio was supported to undertake a six week residency at the NIROX Foundation in Johannesburg, South Africa. Alinka developed a new series entitled Deep Blindness and the foundation helped to facilitate significant international connections in South Africa. The fund also helped Christopher Daniels, a North West based artist, to engage with the Transnational Dialogues programme in China. The project has led to exhibitions in Rome and at the Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art in Manchester; and both artists have seen a growth in curatorial interest and engagement in their work since the awards were made • We have recently recognised Castlefield Gallery’s success in putting artists’ development at its core by welcoming it as a new entrant to our portfolio for 2015-18. Alison Clark, Director, North, Arts Council England explained: “In a challenging funding environment we’re pleased that we were able to support Castlefield Gallery. They’re a strong and resilient organisation that plays a vital role in supporting artists. They’re at the heart of the visual arts ecology in Greater Manchester, helping develop its huge potential as a major centre for artists outside London.”


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Supporting organisations and initiatives that benefit individual artists

a-n The Artists Information Company, one of our National portfolio organisations, is the foremost national information resource for individual artists. It has over 19,000 members and identifies and explores issues that impact on artists’ practice as well as focusing on conversations around the critical and professional environment for the visual arts. Arts Council’s Own Art scheme celebrates its 10th anniversary this year. It helps buyers to start their own collection by spreading the cost of a purchase over 10 months with an interest free loan thereby benefiting the individual artists. Over 250 galleries are involved in the scheme. Multi media organisations • Islington Mill in Salford provides workspace for the creative industries, housing more than 50 creative entrepreneurs ranging from fashion designers to welders, plus a gallery space. It also hosts exhibitions and concerts. In the latest round of our capital funding we awarded the Mill nearly £1 million towards improvements in its main building that will underpin its distinctive creative ecology, where diverse artists and artforms combine in the delivery of a contemporary programme, attracting participants from across the world. The major building works will include a brand new Artist-in-Residence facility – new work and living spaces that will enable up to 20 artists to be accommodated at the Mill at any one time, and a new production and showcase space • Hoot Creative Arts is a specialist arts and health organisation based in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, working creatively with adults with mental health needs, and older people with dementia. Their work – we support them as a National portfolio organisation – uses art and creative approaches to improve physical and mental wellbeing. Regular activities on offer include singing, dancing, visual arts and creative writing. One of its latest ventures on a grand scale, involving all these media and more, is Going Sane – an exploration of what is meant by sanity. Going Sane will culminate in a big public festival in Kirklees in 2016. Sally Barker, Project Manager and Creative Lead Artist for Going Sane explained: ‘We really want to elevate this discussion about sanity and madness and open it up to the public.’


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Skimstone arts – a performance of Natural Anthem at Discovery Museum Dec 2014. Credit: Louise Taylor

• Skimstone Arts is a multidisciplinary arts organisation based in Newcastle. It produces collaborative, socially engaging artworks, performances and exhibitions, regionally, nationally and internationally. In 2013 a Grants for the arts award for organisational development enabled Claire Webster Saaremets to examine and develop her role there as its artistic director, with the aid of a mentor and evaluator. “Having the time and space to reflect on the quality of our arts practice, method and ethos has made a huge difference.’ While Skimstone Arts does do important work with elderly people, it is perhaps particularly recognised for helping young people to fulfil their creative potential. What is special about its approach is the way it gives equal weight to the work of the two different groups that collaborate in its studio setting: the Ensemble, made up of professional actors, audio and visual artists, photographers, live performers, film makers and composers; and the Young Artist Collective, an ever-growing and dynamic group committed to exploring artistic practice in film, music, performance and photography. The national Arts Award, which Skimstone Arts has pioneered since 2007, is embedded in all its work and plays an important role in enabling the young people to think of themselves as artists. You can catch Skimstone Arts’ latest large-scale project, A Natural Anthem, at the Discovery Museum, Newcastle-upon-Tyne. More information can be found here.


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Stuart McCallum and the Real String. Credit: Porl Medlock

Musicians • Merseyside Arts Foundation is an independent development organisation supporting engagement in the arts and creative industry. The foundation works both with young people who exhibit significant talent and potential and with more established artists demonstrating artistic excellence, using a variety of approaches which are always owned and delivered by the artists involved. In September 2013, with funding from Arts Council England, the foundation was able to launch a ground-breaking music development programme which provided invaluable expert music industry advice and studio sessions to 30 emerging early-to-mid-career bands and solo artists based in Merseyside. • On the other side of the Pennines, we also support Higher Rhythm, the award-winning music and media organisation based in Doncaster. The many facilities it offers to local musicians and other artists include a community radio station, recording studio, plus music


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publishing and events organisation businesses. Higher Rhythm is also the Music Industry Development Agency for Yorkshire. Through Music Industry Yorkshire, the region’s music business support network, Higher Rhythm and its partners provide support for musical enterprises and artists through events, seminars, advice and networking opportunities. See the Beaus and other musicians fostered by Higher Rhythm in action here. • Jazz North aims to increase the profile of contemporary jazz in the region by developing opportunities for artists and by building audiences through collective partnership working. Its main method is the Northern Line scheme. Since launching the scheme in 2013 Northern Line artists have given over 250 performances for 110 promoters including eight jazz festivals and three rural tours. Artists can take one booking outside of the North, and these have included bookings at London Jazz Festival, St Ives Jazz Club (last jazz club before New York) and Beijing, China. Visit the website to learn just how the scheme is welcomed by musicians and promoters alike. The scheme is now recruiting its third set of artists and in April this year Jazz North became an Arts Council National portfolio organisation. Creative media • Jemma Tanswell and Rachel Rogers are directors of Reform Radio Community Interest Company, a shared, digital arts platform working mainly with 18-30 year olds who are not in employment, education or training. With our financial support through Grants for the arts and practical help via Contact Theatre’s Future Fires programme (which helps young emerging artists to plan and deliver their own community arts outreach projects) Jemma and Rachel have been able to develop Harry, a new radio sitcom, for their station. Harry follows the trials and tribulations of a young man trying to find work in a challenging economic climate. The six-part series has been written by a group of unemployed 18-30 year olds working alongside award-winning creative writer Louise Wallwein and informing the story line with their own experiences of unemployment. Listen to Harry. Theatre • Theatre in the Mill, a National portfolio organisation based in the University of Bradford, has a range of programmes that develop emerging artists. Every year it offers six £5,000 cash commissions in a deal that includes artistic, marketing and technical support. Head of Arts and Artistic Director Iain Bloomfield explains their approach: ‘It is always our intention to


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allow audiences to take a formative role in the development of new work and we encourage our commissioned and other artists to think in that way. In fact, we won’t commission unless they are happy with an ‘open’ model of making their work.’ Theatre in the Mill’s Open Space programme offers a week long residence at the venue for artists to explore new ideas with artistic mentoring. Participants – of whom there are at least six but usually 10 or more a year – have the opportunity to show at the end of their residency, but there is no compulsion. • National portfolio organisation West Yorkshire Playhouse (WYP) runs Furnace, an ongoing new work development programme. This gives emerging artists, or those in mid-career, the opportunity to test out new projects and realise ambitious ideas. Selected artists receive producing and production support, mentoring, rehearsal space, a seed commission and support with fund-raising. The process culminates in a showcasing of the new work at a Furnace weekend, and with advice and support in terms of taking the work further. • Slung Low, the ‘company that makes adventures for audiences outside of conventional theatre spaces’ was in fact one of the first organisations to be selected for the WYP Furnace scheme when it was launched in 2011. Now an National portfolio organisation, with the Hub in Holbeck as its home, it has its own mission to share resources with artists ‘making and performing on the M62’. This includes not only making the Hub available as a performance space for visiting companies but also sharing the organisation’s van and equipment – and not necessarily on a money basis either. It promotes a culture of trading resources and ideas as opposed to cash. This is in response both to an identified need by artists to have access to such resources and also to the current economic climate which restricts this. The Arts Council awarded Slung Low capital funding of £100,816 in 2014 for improvements at The Hub • The National Rural Touring Forum, a National portfolio organisation, does important work to engage individual artists and companies in rural touring. For example, in 2014 NRTF worked together with PANDA (the performing arts network and development agency) and a northern consortium of rural touring networks to develop and extend a pitching and mentoring project across the North. Twenty eight companies experienced in touring but new to rural touring applied for the opportunity to pitch an existing performance or a developing project to a panel of rural touring scheme managers and promoters. Eight acts were selected to make their pitch at a Rural Touring Pitching Day in March 2014. The benefits for those selected included mentoring from a rural touring manager or promoter,


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potential inclusion in future rural venue programmes and ongoing support, advice and training from PANDA. Even those not chosen to pitch benefited from follow-up and feedback. One of the successful pitchers, the poet, playwright and performance artist Chanje Kunda, was subsequently invited to perform at NRTF’s Rural Touring Showcase Festival, New Directions, where she also discussed her work with rural touring schemes and promoters across the country. View the trailer for Chanje Kunda’s performance art piece Amsterdam, which toured the UK at the end of 2014 with our support Dance • Ballet Lorent, one of the dance companies we support as National portfolio organisations, is committed to providing opportunities for dancers, choreographers and administrators to be able to develop their careers in the north east. Its dancers come from diverse backgrounds: the current company includes two B-Boy-trained dancers plus performers from Poland, Spain and Australia, as well as several trained at the Northern School of Contemporary Dance. See them in action in The Night Ball, which celebrates the beauty and intimacy of social dancing and is influenced by several movement styles from Breakdancing to Quickstep.


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