Cognitive Composition: Embracing the Unexpected - a New Model on the Cross Pollination of Statutory Mental Health Services, Professional Arts and Cultural Industries.
“Creativity comes from looking for the unexpected and stepping outside your own experience.” — Masaru Ibuka – (Co-founder of Sony Corporation & founder of The Institutes for the Achievement of Human Potential).
This report has been constructed by Colin Park, Christine Eade and Sarah Laughton and ratified by the Pea Pod Collective. We would like to thank the many associates and collaborators that have offered their support and whose words have been woven into the text.
CONTENTS ABSTRACT SUM OF THE PARTS The Pod The Pod and Revive café Taylor Johns House Music and Arts Centre The Peapod Collective Core Members of the Peapod Collective Creative Collaborators by organisation Creative Collaborators by artist and discipline Relationship Dynamics INVESTMENT Investment Chart Return on investment Testimonials ARTS BY CATEGORY Music Still Image - Photography Fine Art Studio Practice Foundations Love Creativity//Love Arts# Moving Image Narrative Creative Practice for narrative environments – collaboration of media EMBRACING INTERNATIONAL ARTISTS AND ARTS PLATFORMS Pecha Kucha Doug Tielli, Tin Angel Records CREATIVE INTENT Future Framework ENDS//BEGINNINGS
Abstract The Pod and Pea Pod Collective continually strive to cross pollinate creative skill, artistic intent, human drive, creative excellence and inherent curiosity by facilitating and constructing environments conducive to inter-disciplinary practice and experimentation. They encourage, inspire and enable people to engage with the issues, practices, opportunities and insights that run across creative industries. They incubate and assemble events led by creative professionals who are practicing artists, composers, film makers, programmers, writers, curators working or influential in the creative industries and provide an exciting climate for challenging cross-disciplinary debate on contemporary cultural themes and issues. cu·ri·ous/ adjective 1. eager to learn or know; inquisitive. 2. prying; meddlesome. 3. arousing or exciting speculation, interest, or attention through being inexplicable or highly unusual; odd; strange: a curious sort of person; a curious scene. 4. Archaic. a. made or prepared skilfully. b. done with painstaking accuracy or attention to detail: a curious inquiry. c. careful; fastidious. d. marked by intricacy or subtlety. Creativity challenges and infiltrates what we do (and how we feel) both subconsciously and consciously. Through collaboration with professional artists and creative industries on a local and international platform, symbiotic and transformative relationships have evolved. The Pod inspires, engages and reaffirms people’s connection with the arts and creative industries. Access to the arts in Coventry was ordinarily via community education, community arts or clinical art therapies. It was evidenced that there was a need to plug a gap, as although these approaches are of value in some stages of a recovery journey, people recognised that they wanted to validate their existing skills through co-production with professional artists, industries and environments. From this recognition grew the determination, impetus and personal resilience to shift from being silenced recipients of statutory or entry level services, to composers, performers, co-producers, mentors, critiques, designers, commissioners and providers of opportunity to experience the arts at a level that is accessible, yet challenges perspectives. Working with experienced arts professionals has had the effect of both allowing people to reveal assets they had not previously applied worth to or re –immerse themselves in to the professional arena. The
creative process develops people's critical thinking and eye. Through critiquing work and having your work critiqued via stimulating conversation and debate, emotional intelligence and resilience is enriched. Inspiration (countable and uncountable; plural inspirations) 1. The act of inspiring or breathing in. 2. breath 3. The act or power of exercising an elevating or stimulating influence upon the intellect or emotions; the result of such influence which quickens or stimulates; as, the inspiration of occasion, of art, etc. "The worst enemy of creativity is self-doubt." - Sylvia Plath
Sum of the Parts The Pod The Pod is a Coventry City Council resource for people determined to improve their mental health. It advocates that people have capacity to direct and control their recovery journey. The Pod’s Personalisation and Recovery pathway is multi-faceted and incorporates Foundation Planning which creates focused time to develop recovery plans. The support offered is solution focused, personalised and responsive. The Pod's approach aims to optimise a person's connectivity to and inclusion in their community and thus build fast, firm and diverse sustainable social support networks. As an outcome of partnerships with the third sector and statutory organisations and our grass roots neighbourhood based work we create sustainable bridges to universal opportunities or employment. The Pod utilises Social Brokerage skills to directly support people to research, appraise and cost new opportunities and then complete Direct Payment applications when and where relevant. All of the above has been proven to reduce people's dependency on, or revolving usage of, both secondary mental health and specialist health and social care commissioned services in the third sector. Recovery is about focusing on building the resilience of people with mental health issues, not just on treating or managing their symptoms. Recovery enables the re-establishment of connectivity to the 'ordinary' thereby helping people reduce the sense that they are defined by their diagnosis and encouraging them to see themselves as a valid member of the wider community. This often has the effect of increasing the level of personal ownership of and control over their condition, resulting in improved self-management and a reduced reliance on health services.
Although the Pod’s remit and work is multifaceted, a common strand is that all facets either implicitly or explicitly aim to build individual and /or organizational capacity for creativity, innovation and resilience. The Pod leverages funding streams and entrepreneurship and as an outcome generates social capital and cross sector/mixed economy investment. Its ‘can do’ approach acts as a catalyst for collaboration and clustering and thus aligns creative sector development opportunities to the broader public policy objectives. Whether by intent or default the Pod has successfully enabled the emergence of a community of practice which is driven by and has a focus on collaboration-based innovation. As a consequence the Pod has gained a reputation as a creative hub or a ‘convergence centre’. The Pod, in co-production with the Peapod Collective, commissions professional arts practitioners to achieve its aims & encourages an interaction with the arts. The Pod encourages artists to remain as artists rather than give too much away to tutoring. Arts in community settings are often presented in a teacher student style, which leaves participants following instruction rather than taking a lead in pushing their own curiosity. This approach places emphasis on the impressions & conclusions that people naturally form when confronting new types of experience. Similarly, spectators will often look for familiar paradigms and seek out assurances of these from the artist, which can diminish the impact of the Art and dissuade people from acknowledging any further impressions. “I see the residency at the POD as a kind of landing platform that will allow me to continue my practice in a very stimulating environment.” Mircea Telega –(Fine Arts and Illustration studio residency @the Pod). n. 1. 2. 3. 4.
pl. re·cov·er·ies The act, process, duration, or an instance of recovering. A return to a normal condition. Something gained or restored in recovering. The act of obtaining usable substances from unusable sources.
Revive café is the core of much of attracts around 300 customers a week semi-permanent Fine Art exhibitions) outlet for Taylor John’s House Music the Pod.
Pecha Kucha
Adult Learners Week (NIACE)
2012
Visit Slots for artists on Tin Angel Records
2011
Pea Pod Collective steer Interventions
Adult Learners Week (NIACE)
Being Heard Workshops (Angry Fish)
Revive your Evenings Open Mic compered by Angry Fish(March
2010
Disability Arts
Pod Manager Intervention
The Pod and Revive Café
2013
the and and and
cultural exchange that occurs on site at the Pod. The Café also functions as a training kitchen, an exhibition space (for a general performance area. The Café also serves as a ticket Arts Centre offering a 20% discount for people associated with
The café hosted ‘Revive Your Evening’, a monthly Open Mic event, compered by Angryfish, a disability arts activist who was associated with the Pod via Being Heard workshops which he delivered in 2010. Working with a Disability Arts Activist was an approach that service users, The Council and social care leads understood and accepted. The ‘Revive Your Evening’ model became formulaic and closed, not attracting a diverse audience and was preventing citizens from progressing on to wider interests in music and the Arts. It, by default, became part of the ‘mental health’ establishment as opposed to part of the creative industries in the city. This led to the Peapod Collective taking control and reshaping events. Subsequent and transformational taster and foundation events are still held in the café, but are steered by the Peapod Collective, who evaluate the risk benefits impact. An Example is ‘LOVE ARTS // LOVE CREATIVITY #’ which serves as opportunity to explore possibilities either as contributors or as spectators.
Taylor Johns House Music and Arts Centre Taylor John's Music & Arts Centre is a mixed arts, not-for-profit organisation which delivers music tuition, community projects, provides performance and rehearsal space and programmes high quality music concerts. The arts centre is based in two neighbouring venues; one is two conjoined former Coal Vaults and the other is a 5 room, mixed rehearsal space in Coventry's Canal Basin. Taylor John’s House has operated as a non-for-profit company limited by guarantee since 2008. Since Taylor John’s House opened in 2006, having developed out of ‘The Tin Angel’ café music venue, they have grown their own in-house audience and are regionally synonymous as an intimate place to see world class acts alongside local and national musicians. Over the years Taylor John’s has built relationships with national and international promoters/agents and has managed to secure unique bills (the Tin Angel was the first venue Jose Gonzalez played in the UK). As well as live music performances Taylor John’s has become a hub for other community events and artistic genres. It has hosted numerous photography and fine art exhibitions, plays and monologues, film and comedy. As of August 1st 2013, Taylor Johns establishing its status as a charity.
Music
and
Arts
Centre
became
‘The
Tin
Music
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The Peapod Collective The Peapod Collective was formed in 2009 through a partnership with the Pod and Taylor John's House. The director of Taylor John's House, the Manager of the Pod, and a person with lived experience of mental ill health were the constituents of this phase in the Peapod Collective’s development and they secured seed funds for pioneering workshops through an Awards for All Lottery grant. As an outcome of this seed project, the Peapod Collective now comprises 8 people with both lived experience of mental ill health and expertise as arts practitioners. This expertise includes; composers, published poets, arts graduates and administrators, sound technicians and musicians. Membership is fluid in response to the self-defined shape of a person's unique recovery journey. The Collective itself is restricted to a maximum of 12 active members and allots 6 month’s membership to new applicants to encourage a reactive approach to its project planning.
The Peapod Collective provide direction to Taylor John’s House, ratify decisions, mentor beneficiaries, ensure the voice of the beneficiary is always heard and responded to, commission work, quality assure and write bids. In terms of practising an art form, the members, as practising artists themselves, are keenly aware of what recipients of Art’s funds are most likely to benefit from and as such are able to identify where positive long term gains are most likely to be found. In this regard, when 1:1 workshops are requested by people accessing the Pod, it is acknowledged that successions of workshops are often required to sustain the learning curve and reinvigorate creative thinking. This is in keeping with a tradition of artistic process, where a phase of discovery is regarded with equal or greater importance than the result achieved. With guidance from a professional, this discovery can become self-sustaining, focused and empowering; an outcome facilitated by someone who is equally interested in the emerging process of the individual attending the workshop.
Core Members of the Peapod Collective Christine Eade In addition to her work in the role of POD Manager, Christine is also a key Collective member. Drawing on her vast experience in creative activities and collaboration, she has been instrumental in bringing the different people and elements together to ensure that the projects, activities and events delivered by the Pod are made even more effective. Her boundless enthusiasm and encouragement has been a constant source of inspiration for all participants that have engaged with the Pod and her participation, particularly in the Sound Moves music and dance improvisation sessions illustrates her creative, selfless approach. Sarah Laughton Sarah Laughton facilitates and encourages creative and pragmatic conversations amongst the Peapod Collective and develops connections amongst the members and the wider artistic community. She perceptively encourages signs of awaking enthusiasm with lead-ins to opportunities for personal and artistic development. As a clarinettist and saxophonist, she has frequently used her talents to unite musicians and spectators in collaborations. Her acute sense of the dynamic of these gatherings allow for timely melodies to drift in as invitations of auditory exploration, encouraged breaks from patterns of habit, which are skilfully consolidated in union with the surrounding accompaniment.
Adam Hibberd Adam Hibberd is a pianist capable of accommodating and adapting to various styles of music and is a mainstay in the musical improvisation of the Peapod Collective. He is also engaging as a solo performer and is a composer of complex and often bustlingly intriguing compositions. As a member of the Collective he is a committed and observant contributor, bringing well-timed addendums & elucidations to the fore of discussions. His suggestions are considerate of the group's aims in totality and of the individual aims of Peapod Collective participants. Matt Lister As a key Peapod Collective member and participant, Matt has contributed to Pod activities and events in a variety of ways. As a keen, highly creative photographer Matt has been responsible for collecting many of the images that have been used to document, illustrate and advertise Peapod output. He is also an active participant in many of the music workshops and improvisation sessions and has also turned his hand to acting; playing the lead role in a short film created by the Pod entitled ‘The Jigsaw’. Andy Whitehead Andy Whitehead (BA Hons 1st Class – Music Composition and Professional Practice) is a professional musician, a director of Taylor Johns House Music and Arts Centre and Collective member. Andy is a professional musician who has extensive experience in the music industry as a composer and session musician. Having worked with international recording artists both live and in the studio he has experience in all aspects of the music industry and has appeared on BBC radio and television with a variety of artists. As a member of the Peapod Collective Andy is involved with the Pod as a music tutor and also enables improvisation sessions, inspiring others, respecting and nurturing their own individuality. He has a unique way of bringing together the sounds that everyone offers to the table in a real-time composition. He is a clear and relaxed communicator and has an in depth knowledge of contemporary music (and indeed the history of music) through his music qualifications and his experience of working in the music domain at Taylor John’s House. His informed and passionate contribution is also hugely important in terms of event management and constructing bids. Colin Park Colin is an invaluable participant of the Peapod Collective and his importance was acknowledged by his placement as apprentice to the Pod and Taylor Johns. His contributions to Peapod meetings are incisive and insightful and he is freely able to tap into his broad range of interests which include art, music
(including composition, vocals and bass), film, animation, photography, the internet and indeed IT in general. As a bass player he is a reliable contributor to the improvisation sessions producing music which blends harmoniously yet intricately to the overall soundscape. Lucy Dowden As the most recent addition to the Collective, Lucy imparts clarity and contributes fresh ideas; adding a vibrancy that has positively shifted the dynamic of the core members. Summary The make-up of the Collective ensures that at any one point at least one member is able to commit to, or mentor and inspire others to take the lead on the varied functions of an arts administrator, be they research, bid writing, venue management, programming, promotion, marketing, evaluation and auditing.
Creative Collaborators by organisation: Awards for All Bring Colour NIACE Evolve Projects ICE Coventry University Taylor Johns Music and Arts Centre DeCoda Talking Birds Silhouette Press
Creative Collaborators by artist and discipline: Adam Hibberd (Composer & pianist) Adele Mary-Reid(Photographer) Amber Merrick-Potter(Fine Artist) Andy Guthrie (Musician) Andy Whitehead(Musician) Ben Haynes(Drummer) Brian Harley (Filmmaker) Colin Park (Musician)
Dark Actors David Sanders (Singer/songwriter) Delightful Young Mothers Devon Sproule (Singer/songwriter) DON'T MOVE! Doug Tielli (Singer/songwriter) Drew Coleman (Sound Engineer) Euan Rodgers (Drummer) Feathered Edge Hannah Sutherland (Fine Artist) Ian Whitehead (Sound Engineer) James Birkin (Fine Artist) Janet Vaughan (Pecha Kucha, Coventry) Kate Walters(Music Producer) Kerri Moore(poet) Kristy Gallagher(Singer/songwriter) Lucy-Ann Sale (Singer/songwriter/Musician) Malc Evans (Musician) Martin Green(Fine Artist) Mason Le Long(Musician) Mircea Teleaga (Fine Artist/illustration) Richard Warren (Singer/songwriter) Rosie Bolton(Fine Artist) Sarah Laughton(Musician) Si Hayden (Singer/songwriter) The Pockets
Relationship Dynamics Professional Fine Artists
Eclectic Music & Arts Practitioners
Pe rfo rm an ce ar ea
Social
Pe Pe Pe Workshops rfo rfo rfo Group rm rm rm Workshop an an s an Individual ce ce ce Workshop ar ar ar s ea ea ea
Coventry University
Faculty of Performing Arts
Love Arts /Love Creativity #
Responses
Exhibition area
University Graduates
ICE
Performance area
Venue/ Rooms Resources
Revive Café
Taylor John’s House Music & Arts Citizens
Apprenticeships *Fundraiser *Creative development – Bid Writer
The Pod The Peapod Collective
Pod Staff
Brokerage
Seed Funds
(The Tin Music & Arts Centre) Staff
Investment The time lines embedded in the publication demonstrate power shifts– those power shifts are the markers for transformation; who took the financial lead and who took the decision making lead in terms of design and content. PURPLE indicates the Pod (Coventry City Council) had accountability. ORANGE indicates where Taylor John’s House had accountability. GREEN indicates when transformation took place resulting in the Pea Pod Collective taking accountability. BLUE indicates the level of in kind match.
Pod Budget
2011 - 2012
2012 - 2013
2013-2014
£1,000 (Revive you Evening)
£5,600
£5,000 allocated
£4,000 (EVOLVE Apprentice)
£3,000 EVOLVE Apprentice (coordination role for Collective)
External funds secured by the Pod for EVOLVE apprenticeships and events such as Adult Learner’s Week and projects Awards for All Grant(held by Taylor Johns) In-Kind Match (Pod staff time) Manager plus Development Worker
–
£3,000 (VIP project) £3,000
£6,000
£1,000 (Development Worker)
£4,000 (Development Worker)
£4000 (plus the EVOLVE apprenticeship)
£3,000 (Manager)
£2,000 (Manager) **In–Kind Match – social capital
- Collective’s time
£1,000
£3,750
£3,750
In-kind match Studio Hire (based on other studio rental costs)
£3,000
£6,000
In-Kind contribution from Tin Angel Records
£1,000
**In kind investment from the unpaid members of the Collective is *Time Banked and has enabled films to be made, people to access professional piano tuition - Collective members bank their time and create a virtual pot that others can draw on. Other projects like VIP sub-contract to the Collective so they can commission creative professionals. Total cash investment (combination of grants and revenue) between 2011 and 2014
- ÂŁ28,600
Total in-kind investment ÂŁ27,500 This demonstrates the collective desire to capacity build programmes and source mixed economy investment. The in kind investment in the studio space has a significant strategic impact in terms of the Arts and regeneration in the city. *Time banking is a pattern of reciprocal service exchange that uses units of time as currency.
Return on Investment The approach has been multi-faceted and achieved depth and breadth outcomes. is most readily explained by categorising the impacts.
The return on the investment
Impact 1 The approach has enabled 7 people with severe and enduring mental ill health to take ownership of and management for the development, commissioning and delivery of the programme. Impact 2 The key objective of the approach was to enable professional artists to reach people and people to reach professional artists. All initiatives hosted at the Pod have had an open door policy to maximise opportunities for cross fertilisation and engagement. We estimate that during the life of the initiative we have reached 1500 people. Impact 3 The Peapod Collective has also organised creative programmes off-site to include gigs, Moves, book launches and film nights reaching approximately 750 people.
Pecha Kucha, Sound
Impact 4 25 people with severe and enduring mental ill health have progressed from one off taster sessions to a foundation programme with a professional artist. Impact 5 11 people have further developed their interest via personal investment or a direct payment. Impact 6 The approach is aimed to support and raise the profile of the professional arts community and to date we have been able to pay 30 artists at Arts Council rates. The approach has also enabled us to capacity build the Art’s industries.
Testimonials “My connection with the Peapod Collective has improved my situation in various ways throughout the duration of my involvement. In the early stages, it allowed me to purposefully apply my experience in music and design without having to deal with the pressures of commercial work. The momentum that builds between being recognised as a competent amateur to being held accountable as a professional has always left me lost and susceptible to over evaluating my output; the Peapod Collective has allowed me to steer clear of that. Throughout the course of my time in the Collective, I have had a lot of contact with local creative professionals and I’ve found that interactions with them have revealed certain commonalities that have put me at ease about how I understand life in general. This in turn has inspired me to build on the example and to work so that others can benefit from these kinds of interactions. As a consequence, I have a better understanding of what I want to achieve and how I can go about achieving it.” – Colin, (Peapod Collective to creative development and bid writing). “Sarah, Pod Development Worker, is an accomplished clarinettist and I felt I had to make the most of my acquaintance with her by composing a piece for clarinet and piano. I had in mind a piece I had originally conceived for solo piano which I felt could easily be adapted for clarinet as well. I set about doing this using a music software package called Sibelius which I had already managed to procure on a Direct Payment with the help of the Pod. I thought it unlikely the piece would ever be played so I was delighted and
grateful to the Pod when I was given the opportunity to perform it with Sarah for Adult Learners Week. The rehearsals initially involved a Yamaha digital keyboard and were a bit disappointing because of a lack of dynamic range. However at this time the Pod managed to procure a real upright piano for the Revive Café with a consequent improvement in the performances. I was especially pleased with Sarah’s interpretation of the piece and how she had already got to grips with the technical difficulties of the piece. As a whole I am so appreciative of the Pod because it seems they were essential in every step of the process from bringing this work from tenuous conception to a concrete reality.”- Adam, (Music composition and collaborative performance). “It is the ultimate gift as a musician; being asked by a composer to be the first person to interpret, breathe, live and perform an original composition, with no precedent in terms of how that performance could sound. Adam’s composition stretched both myself and my clarinet technically and organically. Performing with Adam, as composer, as he accompanied on piano, was the joint realisation of the composer’s notes on the stave; transforming them and becoming lost in a culmination of adrenaline, choices and curious accidents.” – Sarah, (Music composition and collaborative performance). “The taster session allowed me to be creative. I also found it fulfilling and awesome to be so expressive and loud. It allowed me to feel kind of free and relaxed. I didn’t feel self-conscious or pressured and the group work at the end was great as I felt we achieved something as a team.” – H, (her response to a collective drumming session at a Love Creativity//Love Arts#). “My mum listens to classical music and I love the sound of the violin. It would be nice to read music, play and learn something new. I've always wanted to learn the violin. I would like to say to my mum that I can play something. I find the sound of the violin soothing. I never had the chance to learn at school. I was never really there. I'd love to have a go. I'd love to be able to play a song.” – V, (his response to a violin foundation session at Love Creativity//Love Arts#). “Katherine the violin teacher is no longer teaching me as she has got a job in Birmingham. She has given me some pieces to learn, which I do every day and the name and number of another violin teacher who I am going to phone to book lessons.” – V again,(after having 10 violin sessions). “My photography gives me a talking point when meeting new people which improves my social interaction skills. It also gets me out of my flat as I spend a lot of time indoors. The three tasters I had with professional photographer, Russell, were clearly structured and he took me right through from composing a picture, to editing on the computer. He is relaxed and easy going and a good listener.” L, (his response to photography foundation sessions).
Arts By Category Music “All Art constantly aspires towards the condition of music.” (Walter Pater - English essayist, critic of art and literature). Music: Definition of Music 1. The art of arranging sounds in time so as to produce a continuous, unified, and evocative composition, as through melody, harmony, rhythm, and timbre. 2. Vocal or instrumental sounds possessing a degree of melody, harmony, or rhythm. Music represents a significant area of exploration and discovery at the Pod and most aspects of music making and appreciation have been covered by the various projects the Peapod Collective has been responsible for. The universal accessibility of music ensures that the overall music-related programme of events has attracted people to The Pod that would not have previously had an association with the building. This has usefully reduced the stigma of the building as a ‘closed community mental health service’ and paved the way for broader Art experiences in the setting. Performances are, however, not restricted to the Pod and Revive Café and formal and semi-formal performances have taken place at other locations, namely Taylor John’s House and at the Department for performing arts at Coventry University. Music is not restricted solely to experiencing live performance and the diversity in terms of the potential to engage with music provides opportunities to discover a variety of instruments, styles and disciplines. The Peapod Collective has commissioned professional musicians to facilitate foundation sessions offering opportunity to taste, test, breathe and feel music in its different guises, and to provide one to one sessions, once individuals have discovered an area of interest. This has included the wider area of music composition, embracing traditional composition and sequencer oriented composition; allowing someone to develop their own compositional voice/performance style and harness the necessary attributes, that are often already present but perhaps not fully discovered. Free-form improvisations that enable participants to react musically to each other and various other stimuli resulting in a form of sonic sculpture, which is best described as ‘spontaneous composition’, have
been another way of stimulating interest. The freedom for participants to explore both as part of a collective and individually, simultaneously allows them to gain experience as a cell working as part of a larger organism and thus develop a more intimate relationship with their own instrument or creative voice by exploring and exceeding the limitations presented by more ‘conventional’ performance and compositional techniques. Some improvisations have incorporated dancers, accompanied Pecha Kucha presentations and provided ambient music for exhibitions. They are responsive to environment, scene and audience. Experimental aspects of improvisation have included the use of randomised sets of instructions on slideshows (at times projected on to dancers) and musical responses to art exhibitions. Many of these experiments form the basis of permutations that result in a gradual evolution of practice and inform both the Peapod Collective and others who have been involved. The documentation of these creations is extremely important to the project as it provides a sense of tangibility to work that sometimes, by its ephemeral nature, the effects of which can vanish. The use of technology has enabled us to capture much of this work in the form of sound recordings from live events such as the PEEP publication and CD and in more traditionally conceived works such as the soundtrack for the Peapod Collective’s collaborative film project, ‘The Jigsaw’. Moving forward, The Peapod Collective aims to continue and build upon these areas in order to allow participants to evolve within the project and as individuals so that more may benefit from what has become a highly creative and vibrant artistic hub.
Still Image - Photography “The camera relieves us of the burden of memory. It surveys us like God, and it surveys for us. Yet no other god has been so cynical, for the camera records in order to forget.” - John Berger, About Looking by John Berger, J. Laslocky (Editor), ISBN: 0679736557 The still image as a medium is familiar, accessible, ordinary and approachable for most; the portability, spontaneity and shareability offered by a mobile phone camera are a case in point. Still images express in all kinds of ways the ordinary and extraordinary and create much debate. Through the Peapod Collective individuals have been connected to professional working photographers, some to develop their creative eye and technical skills for personal interest, others to begin a longer learning journey and others to professionalise their practice. One such individual has been commissioned on a time bank basis to produce work for Coventry City Council publications.
The opening exhibition ‘Found Portraits’ by Martin Green in Revive café, as a collection of photographs, created much interest, comment, response and debate and was quickly regarded as intrinsic to the café environment. Such was the will for it to remain in some form, the original exhibition evolved and became ‘Living Quarters’ a collaboration between Martin and Adele Mary- Reid; defined in part by the artists as, ‘a juxtaposition of two types of photographs that were taken 3 or 4 decades apart; a dialogue between two artists and the users and administrators of the exhibition space.’ “What stirs my curiosity is that which is inevitably lurking within the details of a place, person or thing. I will use photography as a tool to seek what I have never seen, what I don’t expect, or can’t yet imagine, and then contain the small moments of memory by transforming them into a spectacle.” Adele “The true content of a photograph is invisible, for it derives from a play, not with form, but with time. One might argue that photography is as close to music as to painting. . . a photograph bears witness to a human choice being exercised. This choice is not between photographing x and y: but between photographing at x moment or at y moment.” - John Berger - The Look of Things, 1974.
Fine Art Fine Art: Definition of Fine Art: 1 [mass noun] (also fine arts) creative art, especially visual art whose products are to be appreciated primarily or solely for their imaginative, aesthetic, or intellectual content: the convergence of popular culture and fine art. Fine art develops independent and lateral thinking, as well as embracing and nurturing a unique/atypical level of resourcefulness. Individuals develop their own ideas rather than operating only in prescriptive, rigid and narrow terms. The Pod studio, exhibitions and creative narrative program enable people to inform and influence critical debates that surround fine art/arts practice. This encourages people to articulate their work within a broader context, which may be contemporary or may relate to society in general. As creators people develop an innovative and determined personal approach to problem solving, and this has a much wider application and impact. The Pod and Peapod Collective believe that creativity is a vehicle through which people develop independent ideas and their personal concept/relationship with recovery.
2011
2012
New Residencies commence
Pilot Artist Private View
Selection Process for new Fine Artists
Intro ICE
Into Arts Faculty
Pea Pod Collective intervention
Open Studios
Pilot Studio Residency
Professional Studio Space
Hired Art Room
Pod Manager intervention
Arts Classes
Studio Practice
2013
“What does an artist do when they move in to a new space? How do they bring their new practice in to a new territory and how does the histories of those spaces conduct and contrast with the artist's work? Exploring, discovering and cataloguing is sometimes no different within the studio than foraging for weeds and plants in urban and natural surroundings.� – Amber, resident studio artist @ The Pod. The studio space has evolved over the last 20 years. Historically it was an art therapist's clinic and consultation room, evolving in to a space for a day centre officer to run art classes exclusively for those with mental health diagnoses. In the last 12 months, a metamorphosis established it as a revered studio space for professional fine artists. The studio residency at the Pod, allows people to see an artist at work and have the opportunity to have a conversation, debate and share experiences. The variety of responses to this process reveals that people react quite differently to artists and can be inspired to acknowledge the legitimacy of different ways of seeing the world as much as they might also be inspired to create. The scope of the residency, however, provides much more than that, and alters and enhances views of what an artist might be in far more subtle ways. The general enthusiasm for the themes of the art, elicits a renewed sense of permission to be more generally open in sharing impressions about specific passions or about the wider world.
2012
Conceptualising Write and Eat – Narrative Café©
Evaluating Delivery
Commissioning and planning Love Creativity // Love Arts#
Programming Arts Events at the Pod and at Taylor John’s House
Foundations
2013
2014
Foundations: Definition of Foundation: 1: The act of founding, especially the establishment of an institution with maintenance.2. The basis on which a thing stands, is founded, or is supported.
provisions
for
future
The Pod’s creative foundation program is an exploratory stage so is wide-ranging in nature, enabling the acquisition of key practical and conceptual/abstract skills. To date it has covered drawing, painting, film making, three-dimensional design, photography, improvisation, music composition and introductions to playing musical instruments. This innovative cross-disciplinary approach to creative practice is a perfect platform for building a portfolio and kick starting or reigniting creativity and new directions in creative practice.
Love Creativity // Love Arts # Love Creativity // Love Arts # is a significant contribution to the foundations programme and brings professionals together to provide workshops and demonstrations. It is designed to encourage the chance discovery of creative interests and utilises Revive Café as a Hub for this initial convergence of activity.
Experiential learning has led participants to greater involvement with the wider community and the Pod supports the transition when necessary by brokering arrangements with individuals and organisations to ensure that a responsive and fluid engagement is maintained. For the wider community it has also helped to generate an appreciation of cross-disciplinary approaches and has linked people in with each other as collaborators beyond the usual roles of tutors and learners.
Moving Image Moving image: Definition of Moving Image (Performing Arts) a. a sequence of images of moving objects photographed by a camera and providing the optical illusion of continuous movement when projected onto a screen b. a form of entertainment, information, etc., composed of such a sequence of images and shown in a cinema, etc. "Robert Altman once said that filmmaking is a chance to live many lifetimes. This is undoubtedly a sound endorsement that alludes not only to the craft and the subject matter of each film, but to the lives and times that revolve around them." Brian Harley, filmmaker. The Pod made a connection with nationally acclaimed filmmaker Brian Harley through local film network Short Night Films. The relationship has developed momentum, creating an appetite for engaging with film on different levels. The Pod's relationship with film began by testing the validity of becoming a screening venue for Short Night Films, a flourishing network of local filmmakers. Brian Harley creates an eclectic, yet considered ensemble of short films which enables people to have provocative debate. "It's about selecting local work and issues; being enabled to show anything with no censorship however sensitive or controversial this may seem as it is in essence relatable. It's about being democratic. Nights were sometimes artistically programmed, other times randomly. They ranged from the daft and silly to serious and challenging, entertaining and cinematic. It was a great forum in which to exhibit. There is not much opportunity in Coventry for showing short films. The relationship with the Pod added another cultural element to the city. There is and has always been quite a high profile for music in Coventry, but not for film. It was great to exhibit local short filmmakers, creating a theatrical feature, a free event, where audience had access to the filmmakers themselves first hand. It is a rare and useful thing for filmmakers to gain an immediate response to
their work and engage in debate. Equally, how often does an audience have the chance to have a conversation with a filmmaker after watching their film?" Brian Harley Through this relationship, local film makers have utilised the Pod as a film set for a show reel. People with lived experience of mental ill health through involvement with the Pod have moved from audience, to contributors, to commissioners, to filmmakers. Their portfolio of experience includes:
Experiential learning; mentored by Brian Harley, creating Vox Pops with people who attended a Local Authority Personalisation event to record the impact of the event. Creative critiques, contributors and co-directors for a film commissioned by Health relating to stories of those using mental health services across Coventry and Warwickshire. Producers of the Peapod Collective documentary. Executive Editors for Far Away Voices, a film documentary commissioned through Whitefriars Housing. Film makers of 'Jigsaw' a commission devised, filmed and scored for Snapshot mental health equality Training. Film makers and Producers of 'Evolve' documentary for a Strategic Health regional dissemination event.
co·pro·duce verb (used with object), co·pro·duced, co·pro·duc·ing. 1. to produce (a motion picture, play, etc.) in collaboration with others. 2. to manufacture (goods) in partnership with others. Also, co-pro·duce.
2013
Write and Eat – Narrative Café ©–
2012
Response Programs
Silhouette Press
Direct Payment
Desire to Publish
Poetry
Book Launch at Taylor John’s House
2010
Citizen
Open Mic – Revive Your Evening
Narrative
Narrative: Dictionary definition of narrative: 1. an account, report, or story, as of events, experiences, etc. 2. (Literary & Literary Critical Terms) (sometimes preceded by the) the part of a literary work that relates events 3. the process or technique of narrating. All stories are valid and however uncomfortable, should be permitted to create debate. Silencing them or ignoring them, is to deny something real about someone’s experience. Part of the human experience is feeling uncomfortable. Curiosity is also part of the human experience. People have a natural point at which they may choose to cut off when they see something as weird or unusual; this is perhaps the exact indicator as to why it should actually be looked at. “At a time in your life when your voice feels suffocated, detached or stolen, to enter an environment where your words and sounds spring forth seemingly easily is no mean feat. I can't imagine that there are many other 'mental health service provisions' in the UK that have managed to achieve this to such a heightened degree. Perhaps in the future the Pod will look at harnessing the local art and music scenes even more in order to regularly create the kind of invigorated mix on show that night.” (Atma Singh @ Revive your Evening). Historically, within the service, narrative was placed in the context of poetry and play reading groups or creative writing 'classes' and used to explore and focus on ill health and people’s mental ill health experiences. They were psychological interventions run by day centre officers and were by nature of the activity, voyeuristic, passive and investigative and/or stifling in terms of creative and critical thinking.
2010
Response Events
Private View
Living Quarters Exhibition (AMR and MG)
MG Studio Practice (visit to Artspace)
Found Portraits exhibition
Fine Artist (MG)
Gallery Rails
Refurbishment
Pod Manager intervention
Creative practice for narrative environments – collaboration of media
2012 2013
The Pod takes a responsive view to the idea of narrative and encourages people to value a rhythm of evolving enquiry distinct from the retrospective narratives we use to describe ourselves to others. The approach allows for the maturation of ideas that would perhaps have been undervalued as ambiguous or pushed away as unusual if conclusions were drawn too readily. It enables people to explore, develop and share their creative interests through text, image, sound and physical space. The Pod has shifted the organisational culture to incorporate and include the stimuli that can best allow for these types of experiences in the following ways:
Private views and response work “Felt strangely validated by discomfort, I suppose art at its best unsettles to some extent. (Good Crumble!)” - Guest at the ‘Living Quarters’ private view.
The Pod’s first major commitment to establishing itself as a creative hub was in the investment in professional gallery rails. These have been important for the on-site exhibitions and have asserted a clear statement of Art focussed purpose. Each exhibition has been launched with a private view and there have been semi-formal opportunities to respond to the exhibits throughout the course of its duration. One such response involved the collation of both words and musical ideas about perceived themes of the exhibition. These responses became outcomes themselves and stimulated further interest in the exhibition and the methods that were used to produce the responses.
Open studio for resident artists @ The Pod Part of the agreement with the fine artists who have a residency in the Pod studio is that they organise studio open events. It is anticipated that these will be integral to studio holder events regionally. Open studios provide a platform for critical discussion.
Sound Moves copyrighted to the Pod and the Peapod Collective Sound Moves describes an improvisation, creating a sonic and movement landscape in real time using electro/acoustic instrumentation in order to unite performer, audience and space in a unique, ephemeral musical/movement experience. This was in collaboration with dancers from DeCoda. Improvisation: Dictionary definition: 1. to invent, compose, or perform with little or no preparation.2. To play or sing (music) extemporaneously, especially by inventing variations on a melody or creating new melodies in accordance with a set progression of chords.3. To make do with whatever materials are at hand. “I've learned stuff about my breathing, my body + my awareness.” (Sound Moves participant).
Write and Eat - Narrative Cafe Commissioned by the Peapod Collective, this is a monthly event, in its embryonic stage, at which Silhouette Press host an evening in Revive café where writing can be plentiful, and synergy between professional writer and emerging writer can be explored or forged.
Zine Fair This will create a regional point of reference through connecting Coventry venues, writers and small presses.
Narrative Master Classes Master classes are run by professional artists, are public facing and exploratory and are intended to embrace, stimulate and extend people’s knowledge of arenas such as Word Press and You Tube. A narrative environment is a space, whether physical or virtual, in which stories can unfold. A virtual narrative environment might be the narrative framework in which game play can proceed. A physical narrative environment might be an exhibition area within a museum, or a foyer of a retail space, or the public spaces around a building - anywhere in short where stories can be told in space. “The art of narrative is by definition a highly aesthetic enterprise.” (Aesthetic approach to narrative – Wikipedia). aes·thet·ic: noun ( used with the beautiful, the ugly, the establishing the meaning and underlying or justifying such beauty.
a singular verb ) 1. the branch of philosophy dealing with such notions as sublime, the comic, etc., as applicable to the fine arts, with a view to validity of critical judgments concerning works of art, and the principles judgments.2. the study of the mind and emotions in relation to the sense of
“When we read a story, we inhabit it. The covers of the book are like a roof and four walls. What is to happen next will take place within the four walls of the story. And this is possible because the story's voice makes everything its own.” ― John Berger, Keeping a Rendezvous.
Embracing international artists and arts platforms Pecha Kucha Pecha Kucha is a worldwide event held in over 500 Cities. Japanese for Chit-Chat, it utilises a rapid slideshow presentation format where 20 slides are shown for just 20 seconds each. The Pod has been a venue for one such event and Peapod Collective members have participated in several such presentations. One such presentation involved responding to the slides via the improvisation of music and dance. The event at the Pod was unique amongst other Pecha Kucha events because it occurred in the day and attracted a new audience to Pecha Kucha. It was held to promote Adult Learners Week (NIACE) and had a theme based upon ‘learning and unlearning’, which gelled well with both the casual and engaging style of Pecha Kucha and the Pod’s overall creative intent.
Doug Tielli, Tin Angel Records The Pod has worked with international recording artists such as Doug Tielli and Devon Sproule who have performed to an intimate audience in Revive Café. “It was a very special night, a very special get-together. And as often happens at special nights, there will be something that strikes a very particular and very deep chord, for different people and for different reasons. Doug Tielli, a talented Canadian singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist, had been whiling away the days prior in Keresley regularly walking someone else's dogs, having returned from Europe where he had been performing. I found out afterwards that he'd temporarily misplaced his passport and so had cancelled a flight that would have otherwise whisked him away back to Toronto. Instead here he was in the city that his label Tin Angel Records calls home, playing a short and intimate acoustic set. Thanks to the Pod's ongoing and exciting collaboration with Taylor John's, a local performance and rehearsal venue which employs staff connected to Doug's label, this confluence of circumstances meant that his sweetly aching falsetto voice faded in and out at the Pod, as it strolled with simple carefree ease through several songs, whilst we the listeners soaked it in. For me, his voice and music advocated utterly indirectly, regarding a sort of post-environmentalism where nature spoke for itself. Certainly visceral, yet at the same time the tones were mostly restrained. And it was effortless.” (Atma Singh -@ Revive your Evening).
Creative Intent The Pod and the Peapod Collective will extend the benefits of involvement in the arts and broaden people's experience and connections with both the creative industries and mental health. This will be achieved through the continued development of a participatory arts programme that will seek to inspire images of possibility, build personal, professional, and community capacity and resilience whilst informing sustainable and mutually supportive connections across communities of interest, the creative industries and neighbourhoods.
Future framework
To continue to be brave and honest about what is working and what is not working.
To capacity build the Collective with new members.
To have focused fundraising campaigns led by the Evolve Creative Development - Bid writer.
To develop further on our commitment to fine arts graduates in the city through the provision of professional studio and exhibition space.
To build capacity through brokering relationships with professional arts organisations and freelance artists.
To provoke debate about arts sustainability and impact across the West Midlands.
To take ownership of our work and brand our ideas and products.
To encourage positive risk taking amongst all associates of the Pod.
ENDS//BEGINNINGS “The Pod makes access to the arts and culture an everyday experience and I think that there is an opportunity for this model to be adopted throughout the statutory sector... It is my view that the Pod is making a significant contribution to the cultural life of the city.” - Martin Green (Fine artist and exhibitor @the Pod).
“There is pleasure in movement and the unexpected.” (Sound Moves participant).
“Doesn't have to be perfect to be good.” – (Love Creativity // Love Arts# participant).