ON The University of Nottingham’s public arts centre DEC 2009 - MAR 2010 WWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UK
Motionhouse presents
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BOX OFFICE 0115 846 7777 SEE BACK PAGE FOR CHRISTMAS OPENING TIMES
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DECEMBER Tuesday 1 December Wednesday 2 December Thursday 3 December Thursday 3 December Thursday 3 December Friday 4 December Friday 4 December Saturday 5 December Saturday 5 December Saturday 5 December Sunday 6 December Sunday 6 December Tuesday 8 December Tuesday 8 December Wednesday 9 December Thursday 10 December Thursday 10 December Friday 11 December Friday 11 December Saturday 12 December Sunday 13 December Tuesday 15 December Wednesday 16 December Thursday 17 December Saturday 19 December Sunday 20 December Monday 21 December Tuesday 22 December Wednesday 23 December Thursday 24 December Tuesday 29 December Wednesday 30 December Wednesday 30 December Thursday 31 December Thursday 31 December
CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES MUSIC: Pre-concert Talk by Philip Weller MUSIC: Allegri String Quartet CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley EXHIBITIONS: Gallery Talk - Quiet Revolution CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES MUSIC: Pre-concert Talk by Peter Wright MUSIC: Allegri String Quartet with Graham Oppenheimer CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley UNIVERSITY MUSIC: University Wind Orchestra CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley UNIVERSITY MUSIC: University Carol Service CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley MUSIC: Joglaresa EXHIBITIONS: W.E Gladstone: The Grand Old Man in Nottinghamshire CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Doodling with Objects CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Kitchen Art
1.30pm 10.30pm & 1.30pm 10.30am & 1.30pm 6.45pm 7.30pm 10.30am & 1.30pm 1 - 2pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm 6.45pm 7.30pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm 7.30pm 10.30am 7.15pm 10.30am & 1.30pm S 10.30am & 1.30pm AD 7.30pm opens 10.30am & 1.30pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm 10.30am & 1.30pm 10.30am & 1.30pm 10.30am & 1.30pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm 1pm - 3.30pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm 1pm - 3.30pm
JANUARY Saturday 2 January Sunday 3 January Saturday 9 January Saturday 9 January Sunday 10 January Wednesday 13 January Thursday 14 January Thursday 14 January Saturday 16 January Saturday 23 January Saturday 23 January Tuesday 26 January Wednesday 27 January Saturday 30 January
CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Flat Stanley WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Little Lakesiders EXHIBITIONS: Annie Lin EXHIBITIONS: Quiet Revolution EXHIBITIONS: Lunchtime Talk - Gladstone in Nottinghamshire EXHIBITIONS: Meet the Artists - Annie Lin WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Tiny Fingers, Tiny Toes EXHIBITIONS: New Photography: Pavilion Commissions WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES MUSIC: Pre-concert Talk by Matthew Wadsworth MUSIC: Matthew Wadsworth and Carolyn Sampson WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: The Twilight Zone WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: The Twilight Zone MUSIC: Xuefei Yang and Natalie Clein
12.30pm & 3.30pm 12.30pm & 3.30pm begins opens closes 1 - 2pm 6 - 8pm begins opens 6.45pm 7.30pm 4.30 - 6pm 4.30 - 6pm 7.30pm
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FEBRUARY Tuesday 2 February Wednesday 3 February Saturday 6 February Wednesday 10 February Wednesday 10 February Wednesday 10 February Thursday 11 February Tuesday 16 February Wednesday 17 February
COMEDY: Count Arthur Strong COMEDY: Count Arthur Strong MUSIC: Colin Carr and Thomas Sauer EXHIBITIONS: Lunchtime Talk - Gladstone: The Making of the ‘People’s William’ EXHIBITIONS: Gallery Talk - New Photography: Pavilion Commissions MUSIC: Fitkin MUSIC: Kishani Jayasinghe and Vuyani Mlinde UNIVERSITY MUSIC: University Philharmonia and Choir WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Munch Bunch Talking Lunch
8pm 8pm 7.30pm 1 - 2pm 6 - 7pm 8pm 7.30pm 9.40pm 11am - 12pm & 1.30 - 2.30pm
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Wednesday 17 February Thursday 18 February Thursday 18 February Thursday 18 February Thursday 18 February Friday 19 February Friday 19 February Friday 19 February Saturday 20 February Saturday 20 February Sunday 21 February Sunday 21 February Sunday 21 February Sunday 21 February Tuesday 23 February Tuesday 23 February Wednesday 24 February Thursday 25 February Thursday 25 February Friday 26 February Friday 26 February Sunday 28 February
CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Potato Needs a Bath WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Hooray it’s Anime CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Potato Needs a Bath WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES MUSIC: Pre-concert Talk by Philip Weller MUSIC: Wihan Quartet CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Potato Needs a Bath WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Wild and Wonderful WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Vegetable Sculptures CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Cinderella MUSIC: The Orlando Consort WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Whittled Spoons in Woven Socks EXHIBITIONS: Annie Lin CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Cinderella UNIVERSITY MUSIC: University Philharmonia WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Imagining Landscapes DANCE: Scattered MUSIC: Icebreaker EXHIBITIONS: Meet the Artist - David Ainley DRAMA: Beating Berlusconi EXHIBITIONS: David Ainley DRAMA: Beating Berlusconi EXHIBITIONS: New Photography: Pavilion Commissions
10.30am & 1.30pm 10am - 12pm & 1.30 - 3.30pm 10.30am & 1.30pm 6.45pm 7.30pm 10.30am & 1.30pm 10am - 12.30pm 11am - 12.30pm 10.30am & 1.30pm 7.30pm 10am - 4pm closes 1.30pm & 3.30pm 7.30pm 6 - 9pm 8pm 8pm 6 - 8pm 8pm opens 8pm closes
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MARCH Tuesday 2 March Wednesday 3 March Thursday 4 March Friday 5 March Friday 5 March Friday 5 March Saturday 6 March Saturday 6 March Saturday 6 March Tuesday 9 March Tuesday 9 March Wednesday 10 March Wednesday 10 March Thursday 11 March Saturday 13 March Sunday 14 March Tuesday 16 March Tuesday 16 March Thursday 18 March Thursday 18 March Saturday 20 March Saturday 20 March Sunday 21 March Sunday 21 March Sunday 21 March Tuesday 23 March Wednesday 24 March Thursday 25 March Thursday 25 March Friday 26 March Friday 26 March Saturday 27 March Saturday 27 March Saturday 27 March Sunday 28 March Sunday 28 March Monday 29 March Monday 29 March Tuesday 30 March Wednesday 31 March
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Imagining Landscapes CHILDREN & FAMILIES: The Forest CHILDREN & FAMILIES: The Forest CHILDREN & FAMILIES: The Forest UNIVERSITY MUSIC: Blue Shift Rush Hour Concert EXHIBITIONS: Lecture - Without From Within (followed by Private View) EXHIBITIONS: Without From Within CHILDREN & FAMILIES: The Forest MUSIC: London Conchord Ensemble DRAMA: Those Magnificent Men WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Imagining Landscapes EXHIBITIONS: Lunchtime Talk - Gladstone and The Reformed Political World of 1832 MUSIC: Gráda MUSIC: Rachel Podger, Gary Cooper and Friends COMEDY: Laura Solon UNIVERSITY MUSIC: University Sinfonia DANCE: Just Add Water? WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Imagining Landscapes COMEDY: Jo Caulfield MUSIC: Eggner Trio WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Little Lakesiders MUSIC: John Harle and Steve Lodder EXHIBITIONS: W.E Gladstone: The Grand Old Man in Nottinghamshire WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Painting Light UNIVERSITY MUSIC: University Choir WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Imagining Landscapes MUSIC: Cimarron WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Tiny Fingers, Tiny Toes EXHIBITIONS: Gallery Talk - Without From Within MUSIC: Moonlighters Rush Hour Concert MUSIC: Dan Berglund Group WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES MUSIC: Pre-concert Talk by Nick Sackman MUSIC: Ruth Palmer and Alexei Grynyuk DANCE: National Dance Network Triple Bill CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Telling Tales UNIVERSITY MUSIC: Wind Orchestra and Moonlighters Big Band WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Through the Window WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Wacky Windows DANCE: Taj Mahal MUSIC: Breabach
6 - 9pm 1.30pm & 6pm 10.30am & 1.30pm 10.30am & 1.30pm 5.30pm 6.30 - 7.30pm opens 10.30am & 1.30pm 7.30pm 8pm 6 - 9pm 1 - 2pm 8pm 7.30pm 8pm 7.30pm 8pm 6 - 9pm 8pm 7.30pm ends 7.30pm closes 10am - 4pm 7.30pm 6 - 9pm 8pm ends 1 - 1.45pm 5.30pm 8pm 6.45pm 7.30pm 8pm 1.30pm & 3.30pm 7.30pm 10am - 12.30pm 1pm - 3.30pm 7pm 8pm
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ART 04 DJANOGLY ART GALLERY SATURDAY 21 NOVEMBER - SUNDAY 10 JANUARY ADMISSION FREE
QUIET REVOLUTION A HAYWARD TOURING EXHIBITION
This international group exhibition of low-tech sculptural works brings together seven artists whose practices open out a playful, exploratory relationship with familiar objects and commonplace materials. United by a transformative approach to the banal, theirs is a ‘quiet revolution’, a series of open-ended and tentative proposals that sketch out different ways of looking at and experiencing our material world.
David Beattie (Ireland) takes found objects - including hula hoops and mirrors - to create makeshift scientific experiments which suggest our desire to capture and control natural phenomena; whilst Matt Calderwood (UK) introduces a slapstick humour in his counterbalanced and inherently unstable constructions.
Span Matt Calderwood
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LECTURES FRIDAY 20 NOVEMBER 6.30 - 7.30PM (FOLLOWED BY PRIVATE VIEW) DJANOGLY ART GALLERY LECTURE THEATRE ADMISSION FREE Quiet Revolution curator Chris FiteWassilak will give an introduction to the artists and work featured in the exhibition.
GALLERY TALK FRIDAY 4 DECEMBER 1 - 2PM DJANOGLY ART GALLERY ADMISSION FREE Arc, 2009 David Beattie
Rubber, stitches and a twig, 2008 Margrét H Blöndel
Chris Fite-Wassilak in conversation with David Beattie. Icelandic artist, Hreinn Fri∂finnsson, introduces a disarmingly simple poetry in his approach to materials and place which has perhaps informed the abstract plastic and string sculptures of his fellow countrywoman, Margrét H. Blöndal. Mitzi Pederson (USA) works with paper, concrete and wood to create explorations of gravity and form; Alice Channer (UK) approaches similar terrain using fashion and textiles. Joëlle Tuerlinckx (Belgium) uses the sparest of means to make us see and feel differently about the world around us.
Quiet Revolution has been curated by Chris Fite-Wassilak, winner of the first of three annual Hayward Touring Curatorial Open competitions which aim to support emerging and independent UK-based curators in realising innovative contemporary art exhibitions. The first Curatorial Open has been selected and developed in partnership with Milton Keynes Gallery and the Harris Museum & Art Gallery, Preston. A Hayward Touring exhibition from Southbank Centre. The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue on sale from the gallery desk for £4.99
All the lectures and talks are free but space is limited so please book in advance by calling the Box Office on 0115 846 7777. If, after booking, you are not able to attend, please let us know so that we can offer the place to someone else.
ART 06 DJANOGLY ART GALLERY SATURDAY 16 JANUARY SUNDAY 28 FEBRUARY ADMISSION FREE
NEW PHOTOGRAPHY: PAVILION COMMISSIONS Pavilion Commissions is an exhibition of new work by Frederico Câmara, Steffi Klenz, Stephen Vaughan and Tomoko Yoneda produced through the Pavilion Commissions 2009. Pavilion is a visual arts commissioning organisation that collaborates with artists to research and produce lens-based work which resonates with contemporary culture. The exhibition has been curated in partnership with the Djanogly Art Gallery. Brazilian artist Frederico Câmara takes an ethnographic approach to photography which is strongly informed by his experiences as an economic immigrant in the USA and United Kingdom. His new work extends his research into zoological environments, examining the cage as an embodiment of both scientific (environmental and sociological) and artistic ideas. Through her photographic practice Steffi Klenz critically explores notions of place, boundaries and displacement in relation to ephemeral buildings and nomadic architectural structures. In her new work she re-examines the Naiku shrine, a Japanese Shinto shrine which is dismantled and re-built every twenty years.
From top: Frederico Câmara, Installations, Jurong Bird Park, Singapore, photograph, 2009 Steffi Klenz, Untitled from the series ‘La Posa’, 2008
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Stephen Vaughan uses photography as a mode of enquiry within other areas of research including geology, cultural geography and histories of the land. This series is part of a larger research enquiry looking at significant points on the tectonic map. It propels Vaughan’s earlier studies of the Earth’s primordial beginnings to the contemporary landscape of Urban Japan and the geologically unstable region of Shiretoko. Tomoko Yoneda is primarily concerned with tracing history and collective memory. She photographs spaces, interiors and people that weave a thread allowing the viewer to experience what lies beyond the visual document. In her new work Yoneda focuses on human relationships in contemporary culture and the core elements of human interactions that form memories and affect political landscapes and history.
GALLERY TALK WEDNESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 6 - 7PM DJANOGLY ART GALLERY ADMISSION FREE A chaired ‘in conversation’ event at which the Pavilion commissioned artists will be in the gallery to talk about their work. All the lectures and talks are free but space is limited so please book in advance by calling the Box Office on 0115 846 7777. If after booking you are unable to attend, please let us know so that we can offer the place to someone else.
From top: Stephen Vaughan, Ultima Thule (2004-08) Tomoko Yoneda, Lovers, Dunaújváros (formerly Stalin City), Hungary, 2004
ART 08 DJANOGLY ART GALLERY SATURDAY 6 MARCH - SUNDAY 2 MAY ADMISSION FREE
WITHOUT FROM WITHIN
Taking as its subject the view through the window, this stunning exhibition looks at the way artists have treated the relationship between interior and exterior space and examines the development and variation of the motif in the work of major twentieth-century and contemporary British painters. The modernist trope had its roots in the ground-breaking work of the Cubist and Fauve artists at the beginning of the last century. In challenging the traditional representation of space and of objects within it, Picasso and Braque created compositions which, portraying everyday, mundane subjects, subvert our perception of them and the space they inhabit. At the same time Henri Matisse explored the non-naturalistic properties of colour, producing emotive views of the interior and landscape beyond.
In Britain, the artistic revolution in Europe was greeted eagerly by those artists wishing to break with tradition, evident in the earliest works in the exhibition by the Camden Town and Bloomsbury Groups. The deceptively straightforward challenge to portray the dynamic tension “from the space, through the space, to the space” continued to provide artists with the opportunity to reflect developments and movements in twentieth-century art at home and abroad and to explore and extend their own visual repertoire.
Without from Within takes the viewer through the journey of these artistic movements as represented by leading figures such as Roger Fry, Paul Nash, Ben and Winifred Nicholson, Ivon Hitchens, David Hockney, Patrick Caulfield and Howard Hodgkin, and offers a rare opportunity to view their work in the context of some of their European contemporaries.
Without from Within has been curated for the Djanogly Art Gallery by Anne Goodchild, formerly Curator of Art at Museums Sheffield, and develops the theme of her exhibition The Absent Presence Graves Art Gallery 1991.
Image above: Santa Margherita Ligure 1964 Patrick Caulfield (Private Collection) © The Estate of Patrick Caulfield. All rights reserved, DACS 2009 Opposite page, from top: Anemones in a Cornish Window 1930 Christopher Wood, Leeds Art Gallery © Leeds Museums and Galleries (City Art Gallery) U.K./ The Bridgeman Art Library. Window, South of France 1930 Duncan Grant (Manchester City Galleries) © Estate of Duncan Grant. All rights reserved, DACS 2009.
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LECTURES FRIDAY 5 MARCH 6.30 - 7.30PM (FOLLOWED BY PRIVATE VIEW) DJANOGLY ART GALLERY LECTURE THEATRE ADMISSION FREE An introduction to the exhibition by curator Anne Goodchild.
GALLERY TALKS DJANOGLY ART GALLERY ADMISSION FREE THURSDAY 25 MARCH 1 - 1.45PM Guided tour with Anne Goodchild. THURSDAY 8 APRIL 1 - 1.45PM Guided tour with Neil Walker, Visual Arts Officer, Djanogly Art Gallery. THURSDAY 22 APRIL 1 - 1.45PM Guided tour with Ruth Lewis-Jones, Galleries Education Officer, Lakeside. All the lectures and talks are free but space is limited so please book in advance by calling the Box Office on 0115 846 7777. If after booking you are unable to attend, please let us know so that we can offer the place to someone else.
ART 10 WALLNER GALLERY SATURDAY 9 JANUARY SUNDAY 21 FEBRUARY ADMISSION FREE
HUI-CHEN LIN Hui-Chen (Annie) Lin’s work explores her own experience of femininity through a series of abstract acrylic paintings. They depict organic bodies pierced by hooks, knives and thorns evoking danger, desire and constraint. Exposed delicate membranous surfaces give tactile expression to feelings not only of exposure and vulnerability but also of excitement and arousal.
FRIDAY 26 FEBRUARY SUNDAY 11 APRIL ADMISSION FREE
DAVID AINLEY ‘RESERVOIRS OF DARKNESS’ OTHER DRAWINGS & PAINTINGS Reminiscent at first sight of minimalist and conceptual works, Ainley’s intense and subtle drawings and paintings are painstakingly made distillations of responses to abandoned lead mines near Wirksworth, Derbyshire, evoking human endeavour and its visual legacy. David Ainley has twice been shortlisted for the Jerwood Drawing Prize.
MEET THE ARTISTS Thurs 14 January 6 - 8pm (Annie Lin) Thurs 25 February 6 - 8pm (David Ainley) An opportunity to meet the artists and view the exhibition with a glass of wine. Book in advance on 0115 846 7777.
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MAREK TOBOLEWSKI ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE Nottingham artist Marek Tobolewski will be artist-in-residence at Lakeside from the beginning of November 2009 where he will complete a new body of paintings to feature in his solo exhibition at the Djanogly Art Gallery in Summer 2010. We would welcome enquiries from schools/colleges or other groups interested in hearing him talk about his work and perhaps combining this with an arts-based activity. By appointment only - please book by calling Ruth Lewis-Jones, Galleries Education Officer on 0115 823 2218.
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS 12 WESTON GALLERY EXHIBITIONS MANUSCRIPTS AND SPECIAL COLLECTIONS FRIDAY 11 DECEMBER 2009 SUNDAY 21 MARCH 2010 ADMISSION FREE FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM’S MANUSCRIPTS AND SPECIAL COLLECTIONS IN ASSOCIATION WITH NOTTINGHAMSHIRE ARCHIVES
W.E. GLADSTONE THE GRAND OLD MAN IN NOTTINGHAMSHIRE William Ewart Gladstone, who was Prime Minister of Britain and Ireland four times between 1868 and 1894, was in later life popularly known as the ‘Grand Old Man’. This exhibition, which marks the
bicentenary of his birth (29 December 1809), celebrates his longstanding Nottinghamshire associations through pictures, cartoons, letters and publications. Having returned to Parliament as MP for Newark, after the Great Reform Act of 1832, Gladstone became closely involved with the Dukes of Newcastle of Clumber and their neighbours. This connection continued after Gladstone retired from his Newark seat in 1846. As a trustee of the Newcastle Estate he played a role in the development of Nottingham Castle and The Park estate. A direct link with the early history of the University of Nottingham is seen in an illustration of him taking part in the 1877 foundation ceremony of University College.
LUNCHTIME TALKS PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP 1PM - 2PM ADMISSION FREE A series of talks will be held to accompany the exhibition. Places are limited so please book your tickets with the Box Office on 0115 846 7777. WEDNESDAY 13 JANUARY 2010
GLADSTONE IN NOTTINGHAMSHIRE. A BICENTENARY PERSPECTIVE Dr Richard Gaunt of the School of History, the academic curator of the exhibition, illustrates the abiding connection between Nottinghamshire and the ‘Grand Old Man’ of British politics during the nineteenth century. WEDNESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 2010
GLADSTONE: THE MAKING OF THE ‘PEOPLE’S WILLIAM’ Professor Chris Wrigley of the School of History traces Gladstone’s transformation from young Tory MP into the great Liberal statesman of lateVictorian Britain. WEDNESDAY 10 MARCH 2010
GLADSTONE AND THE REFORMED POLITICAL WORLD OF 1832 Dr Philip Salmon, of the History of Parliament research project, takes a fresh look at Victorian conceptions of democracy, revealing what lay behind the election images of bribery and drunken mobs after 1832.
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CHAMBER THURSDAY 3 DECEMBER 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
CHAMBER SATURDAY 5 DECEMBER 7.30pm DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £15 (£12 CONCESSION)
ALLEGRI STRING QUARTET
ALLEGRI STRING QUARTET WITH GRAHAM OPPENHEIMER VIOLA
Ofer Falk, violin Rafael Rodes, violin Dorothy Vogel, viola Katherine Jenkinson, cello BEETHOVEN String Quartet in B flat, Op. 18 No.6 ZEMLINSKY String Quartet No.3 BRAHMS String Quartet No.3 Viennese composer Alexander von Zemlinsky composed his third string quartet in 1924 at the age of 53. His early works were influenced by Brahms; later works are stylistically closer to late Mahler and Bartók. Brahms’s final quartet opens with a cheerful hunting theme which re-emerges at the end of the work. 6.45pm Pre-concert talk by Philip Weller The concert finishes at approximately 9.20pm
HAYDN String Quartet in C, Op.54 No.2 TIPPETT String Quartet No.2 MENDELSSOHN String Quintet No.1 in A, Op.18 Tippett’s second string quartet was written in 1941 shortly after the completion of A Child of our Time. Purcell’s influence is evident in the quartet’s rhythmic energy, while Tippett’s admiration of Beethoven is apparent from the fugal slow movement and concern for the work’s dramatic structure.
Mendelssohn composed his first string quintet at the age of 17 and it shares the exuberance of the Midsummer Night’s Dream Overture of the same year. He added the Intermezzo in 1832 as a poignant tribute to his friend violinist Eduard Rietz on his death from tuberculosis. Haydn’s Op.54/2 Quartet belongs to a set of six dedicated to the principal second violinist of his orchestra at the Esterháza court, a common practice for thanking musicians for their excellent work. 6.45pm Pre-concert talk by Peter Wright The concert finishes at approximately 9.10pm
MUSIC 14 UNIVERSITY SUNDAY 6 DECEMBER 7.30PM GREAT HALL, TRENT BUILDING £8 (£5 CONCESSION, £4 UON STUDENT)
UNIVERSITY WIND ORCHESTRA ‘Winter Dances’ Kieran O’Riordan & Matthew Smith, conductors Claire Game, alto saxophone Malcolm ARNOLD English Dances Set 1 David BEDFORD Praeludium Fergal CARROLL Winter Dances Adam GORB Yiddish Dances Pedro ITURRALDE Pequeña Czarda Eric WHITACRE October In their first concert of the year, the University Wind Orchestra presents a programme shot through with the rhythms of the dance, accompanied by a little winter magic. Malcolm Arnold’s well-loved English Dances, by turns tender and invigorating, are contrasted by Eric Whitacre’s profound and moving tone poem October. Recent music graduate Claire Game is the soloist in Pedro Iturralde’s joyous Pequeña Czarda (little dance). Fergal Carroll’s Winter Dances bring a touch of seasonal flavour in a work described as ‘a sparkling enchantment, a delight’. Finally, Adam Gorb’s marvellous recreation of Klezmer music is a tour-de-force, mixing satire, sentimentality, pathos and tango, ending in a riotous ‘knees-up’ for all concerned! The concert finishes at approximately 9.30pm
UNIVERSITY TUESDAY 8 DECEMBER 7.15PM ST MARY’S CHURCH HIGH PAVEMENT ADMISSION FREE
UNIVERSITY CAROL SERVICE WITH VIVA VOCE A traditional service of music and readings for the Christmas season, set in one of Nottingham’s most beautiful churches.
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EARLY/WORLD THURSDAY 10 DECEMBER 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
JOGLARESA ‘Four Thousand Winters’ A programme of song and spoken word from the Northwestern fringes of Europe - traditional and medieval sources from Ireland, England and Norway - tales of polar bears, crows, princesses, snow, darkness, frost, firesides, love, trickery and some happy endings... for adults and children aged 10+. Joglaresa are joined by storyteller Sally Pomme Clayton who has performed with The London Sinfonietta, The Brodsky Quartet, Welsh National Opera, and at WOMAD.
EARLY SATURDAY 23 JANUARY 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
MATTHEW WADSWORTH LUTE/THEORBO & CAROLYN SAMPSON SOPRANO London was as diverse and multicultural in the early 1600s as it is today. This programme takes the listener on a rich and colourful journey that embraces not only English culture, but that of European counterparts in Italy and France, as well as a few surprises along the way.
Together they create a mesmerising atmosphere of stories and songs as Sally Pomme Clayton draws on her extensive repertoire of tales to create a spellbinding performance. ‘irresistibly catchy tunes … Joglaresa’s imaginative use of improvisation creates an exciting air of authenticity … compulsive rhythmic energy … luxuriantly ornamental solos’ The Telegraph
Matthew Wadsworth and Carolyn Sampson’s eclectic programme draws on Robert Dowland’s ‘A Musicall Banquet’ and ‘A Varietie of Lute Lessons’, both published in 1610, as well as venturing back a few years to the masterpieces of John Dowland and Robert Johnson. The programme also includes works by Ferrabosco, Monteverdi, Kapsberger and Caccini. ‘Matthew Wadsworth really is a quite extraordinary musician, graceful, civilised and intelligent. He has an enormous ability to draw an audience into his own world’ Early Music Review ‘Carolyn Sampson is radiant, voluptuous and utterly captivating.’ International Record Review 6.45pm Pre-concert talk by Matthew Wadsworth The concert finishes at approximately 9.10pm
XUEFEI YANG GUITAR & NATALIE CLEIN CELLO
On her first visit to Lakeside Xuefei Yang dazzled the audience with her sparkling virtuosity and musical imagination. In this concert she is joined by the equally sensational cellist Natalie Clein for an evening of brilliantly colourful music from Spain and Brazil alongside well-known music by Bach.
BACH Cello Suite No.1 in G, BWV1007 VILLA LOBOS Bachianas Brasilieiras No.5 PIAZZOLLA Two South American pieces PIAZZOLLA Two pieces from History of Tango BACH Violin Sonata No.1 in G minor, BWV1001 Stephen GOSS Autumn Song Pablo CASALS arr. Yang and Clein Song of the Birds FALLA Siete Canciones Populares Espanolas
‘The guitar world has a new star.’ Gramophone, July 2008
CHAMBER SATURDAY 6 FEBRUARY 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
Regular visitors and firm Lakeside favourites, internationally renowned cellist Colin Carr and pianist Thomas Sauer return with a programme of Romantic works which spans the gamut of emotions from Schumann’s folk-style inspired pieces to the rich maturity of Brahms’s last cello sonata. Mendelssohn’s D major Sonata opens the concert in joyful mood. His Variationes Concertantes were written for his talented 14 year-old brother in 1829. Brahms’s second cello sonata was written for his friend Robert Hausmann whose generous tone enabled the cello to compete equally with the demanding piano part.
COLIN CARR CELLO & THOMAS SAUER PIANO MENDELSSOHN Sonata No.2 in D, Op.58 SCHUMANN Funf Stücke im Volkston, Op.102 MENDELSSOHN Variationes Concertantes, Op.17 BRAHMS Sonata No.2 in F, Op.99
‘[Natalie Clein] is a performer of such great magnetism that she sweeps her audiences along with her, so much so that it is almost a shock when she stops playing and you find yourself back in the real world once more.’ The Oxford Times The concert finishes at approximately 9.10pm
The concert finishes at approximately 9.15pm
PHOTO: RAY BURMISTON
CHAMBER SATURDAY 30 JANUARY 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
PHOTO: NEIL MUIR
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CONTEMPORARY WEDNESDAY 10 FEBRUARY 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW
FITKIN Graham Fitkin, piano Ruth Wall, harp Nick Moss, saxophone & clarinet Simon Haram, saxophone John Lunn, bass Adrian Spillet, percussion Joby Talbot, percussion Noel Langley, trumpet Alan Thomas, guitar
A brilliant evening of non-stop music by Fitkin including new works, old works and arrangements of classics with an amazing new nine-piece line-up featuring some of the best musicians working in the contemporary music field in Britain. Fitkin’s highly attractive music appeals to a wide range of audiences with stylistic influences from jazz to minimalism, and early to folk. Don’t miss the opportunity to enjoy a great evening of music which will leave you in high spirits.
CHAMBER THURSDAY 11 FEBRUARY 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £15 (£12 CONCESSION)
This is an opportunity to hear two exceptional young singers perform a range of repertoire from Mozart to Gershwin.
KISHANI JAYASINGHE SOPRANO VUYANI MLINDE BASS-BARITONE INGRID SURGENOR PIANO
The concert finishes at approximately 9.10pm
A magical evening of song and opera by two outstanding young artists who have risen to prominence as Royal Opera House Jette Parker Young Artists. Sri Lankan soprano Kishani Jayasinghe is an alumna of the University of Nottingham. She gave a stunning performance of Poulenc’s Gloria with the University Philharmonia and Choir in 2008. We are thrilled to welcome her back for a recital with South African bass Vuyani Mlinde who performed Verdi Requiem with the Choir and Philharmonia in 2007.
MUSIC 18
UNIVERSITY PHILHARMONIA CHAMBER ENSEMBLE & UNIVERSITY CHOIR Jonathan Tilbrook and Sarah Tenant-Flowers, conductors Contemporary composers from Eastern Europe feature in this atmospheric programme, including Arvo Pärt’s meditative Summa, the stunning vocal piece ‘Oremus’ by fellow Estonian Urmas Sisask and the late cantata Legend of o the Smoke from Potato Fires by Martinu.
CHAMBER THURSDAY 18 FEBRUARY 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
WIHAN QUARTET Leos Cepicky, violin Jan Schulmeister, violin Jiri Zigmund, viola Ales Kasprik, cello MOZART String Quartet No.18 in A, K464 PAGANINI 6 Caprices for String Quartet (arr. William Zinn) PAGANINI Grand Quartet in E BEETHOVEN String Quartet in F minor, Op.95 ‘Serioso’ The Wihan Quartet recently recorded Paganini’s Caprices arranged for string quartet and in this concert selections are paired with Paganini’s Grand Quartet. Mozart’s sparkling A major quartet, K464 was much admired by Beethoven. Beethoven declared that his ‘Quartetto Serioso’, Op.95 was written for connoisseurs and should never be performed in public. An intensely dramatic work, its daring compositional experiments are the hallmark of his great late quartets.
‘Retaining its founding members, it is an ideally balanced quartet with immaculate rapport... the playing is excellent... perfect articulation and intonation... sparkles with life’ The Strad The concert finishes at approximately 9.15pm 6.45pm Pre-concert talk by Philip Weller
PHOTO: WOLF MARLOH
UNIVERSITY TUESDAY 16 FEBRUARY 9.40-10.15PM ROYAL CONCERT HALL, NOTTINGHAM FREE ADMISSION TO CZECH NATIONAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA BOOKERS. £3 FOR NON-BOOKERS - TICKETS AVAILABLE ON THE DOOR ONLY
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EARLY/CONTEMPORARY SATURDAY 20 FEBRUARY 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
THE ORLANDO CONSORT Matthew Venner, alto Mark Dobell, Angus Smith, tenors Donald Greig, baritone With Kuljit Bhamra, tabla, Indian harmonium Jonathan Mayer, sitar Shahid Khan, voice ‘Mantra - Musical Conversations Across The Indian Ocean’
In the early 1500s Portuguese missionaries and Goan Indians joined together in music as churches, built in the exotic land known as the ‘Pearl of the Orient’, resounded to the extraordinary blended sounds of Europe and Asia. Drawing inspiration from sublime Iberian and Indian music, these award-winning musicians re-create this historic cross-cultural encounter and apply their collective experiences to create a radical and challenging new dialogue for the 21st century.
The concert finishes at approximately 9.15pm
UNIVERSITY SUNDAY 21 FEBRUARY 7.30PM GREAT HALL, TRENT BUILDING £8 (£5 CONCESSION, £4 UON STUDENT)
Commissioned for violinist Iso Briselli on his graduation from the Curtis Institute of Music in 1934, the restrained lyrical character of the first two movements was deemed a disappointment owing to the absence of virtuosity. In response, Barber wrote a fiendishly difficult perpetuum mobile finale full of humour and energy which Briselli then declared unplayable! Although less frequently performed than his other symphonies, Bruckner’s majestic sixth is suffused with memorable themes. The insistent rhythmic drive and powerful brass interjections that characterise the opening movement, the expansive solemnity of the Adagio, the unusually measured and brooding Scherzo, leavened by bright hunting motifs in the Trio, define a work of great thematic and architectural beauty.
UNIVERSITY PHILHARMONIA Jonathan Tilbrook, conductor Matthew Crockett, violin BARBER Violin Concerto BRUCKNER Symphony No.6 in A Final year medical student Matthew Crockett is the soloist in Barber’s Violin Concerto.
The concert finishes at approximately 9.15pm
MUSIC 20
CONTEMPORARY WEDNESDAY 24 FEBRUARY 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW
ICEBREAKER Donnacha DENNEHY New Work - world premiere Gavin BRYARS Jesus Blood Never Failed Me Yet Philip GLASS Music with Changing Parts
A very special event as we welcome the internationally renowned contemporary music ensemble Icebreaker for its debut performance at Lakeside. Celebrating the University of Nottingham’s acquisition of the Icebreaker archive which will be used for teaching and research, the programme features two classic 20th century works. Gavin Bryars’s Jesus Blood, written in 1971, is heart-rending in its simplicity: a recording of a homeless man singing a simple melody is looped and overlaid with a rich palette of instrumental lines. Music with Changing Parts is a seminal work for the early 1970s’ minimalist movement. Early performances lasted up to two hours; tonight’s performance is likely to be of about an hour’s duration. Audience members will be permitted to exit and re-enter the auditorium during the performance.
Icebreaker has been at the forefront of the contemporary music scene for twenty years and has commissioned numerous new works. This evening’s concert will feature the premiere of a new work by leading Irish composer Donnacha Dennehy.
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CHAMBER SATURDAY 6 MARCH 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
LONDON CONCHORD ENSEMBLE Maximiliano Martin, clarinet Nicholas Korth, horn Maya Koch, violin Joël Waterman, viola Thomas Carroll, cello Julian Milford, piano MOZART Clarinet Trio, K498 ‘Kegelstatt’ GLINKA Trio Pathétique SCHUBERT Notturno in E flat, D897 DOHNÁNYI Sextet for clarinet, horn, piano and string trio, Op.37 The concert finishes at approximately 9.15pm
FOLK WEDNESDAY 10 MARCH 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW
GRÁDA
This concert features two of the most well-known and loved works of the chamber repertory, Mozart’s ‘Kegelstatt’ trio for clarinet, viola and piano and Schubert’s attractive adagio ‘Notturno’ for piano trio. In truly Romantic Russian vein, Glinka added a preface to the score of his Trio Pathetique, originally
composed for clarinet, bassoon and piano but heard tonight with cello, ‘I have known love only through the unhappiness it causes’. The concert concludes with the rarely performed Sextet by Hungarian composer Ernö Dohnányi. Written in 1935, the work marries pianistic brilliance with a harmonic style reminiscent of Brahms.
Nicola Joyce, vocals & bodhrán Gerry Paul, guitar, banjo & vocals Andrew Laking, bass, vocals & guitar David Doocey, fiddle, concertina & whistle Stephen Doherty, flute, whistle, melodeon, piano & bodhrán
Singer Nicola Joyce’s powerful vocals and engaging stage-presence mark her out as one of traditional music’s true emerging stars alongside an instrumental line-up bursting with talent and creativity. The group’s fourth album ‘Natural Angle’ is due for release shortly. Gráda is one of the foremost bands in Irish music today.
With their infectious modern take on Irish music, high-energy live performances and critically acclaimed albums, it’s no wonder Gráda has enjoyed a rapid rise to success.
MUSIC 22
RACHEL PODGER, GARY COOPER & FRIENDS BACH Violin Concerto in E, BWV1042 Violin Concerto in A minor, BWV1041 Concerto for harpsichord and strings in D minor, BWV1052 Concerto for violin in G minor, BWV1056 Baroque specialists Rachel Podger, violin, and Gary Cooper, harpsichord, together with four string players, perform a programme of violin concerti and a harpsichord concerto by Johann Sebastian Bach as they would have been performed at Zimmermann’s coffee-house in Leipzig.
UNIVERSITY SUNDAY 14 MARCH 7.30PM GREAT HALL, TRENT BUILDING £8 (£5 CONCESSION, £4 UON STUDENT)
UNIVERSITY SINFONIA Charlotte Daniel & Jonathan Pether, conductors DUKAS La Pèri: Fanfare SATIE Parade RAVEL Ma Mère L’Oye VAUGHAN WILLIAMS A London Symphony
As a duo they have recorded the complete Mozart Sonatas for violin and keyboard on Channel Classics to great acclaim. This concert is linked to an exciting forthcoming recording project of all the Bach Concerti for violin and keyboard.
The concert finishes at approximately 9.10pm CHRIS STOCK PHOTOGRAPHY
CHAMBER THURSDAY 11 MARCH 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £15 (£12 CONCESSION)
Ballet music from early 20th century France meets the chimes and street calls of Vaughan Williams’s London Symphony in the University Sinfonia’s spring concert. Tragedy, reverie, and the picturesque portrayal of London in its urban and pastoral glory abound in Vaughan Williams’s first purely symphonic work. In the first half of the concert, Ravel’s charming suite of children’s pieces is paired with Eric Satie’s surrealist clash of high and low art; his thoroughly entertaining ballet score to ‘Parade’. The concert finishes at approximately 9.10pm
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CHAMBER THURSDAY 18 MARCH 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
EGGNER TRIO Christoph Eggner, piano Georg Eggner, violin Florian Eggner, cello BEETHOVEN Piano Trio Op.70 No.1 ‘Ghost’ SHOSTAKOVICH Piano Trio No.1 in C minor RAVEL Piano Trio in A minor On their first visit to Lakeside the Eggner brothers captivated the audience with their musical energy and artistry. This concert programme further explores a wide emotional range. Beethoven’s Piano Trio Op.70 No.1 earned its nickname from the eerie second movement.
Shostakovich’s first piano trio written at the age of 17 was dedicated to Tanya Glivenko with whom Shostakovich was in love. There is a romantic intensity to the work but it nonetheless introduces elements of the grotesque which were to become more prominent in his compositional maturity.
Ravel’s Piano Trio was completed just as war broke out in 1914. The colouristic work draws inspiration from Malay verse forms and Basque folk music written within a highly complex musical structure.
CONTEMPORARY SATURDAY 20 MARCH 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
John Harle is one of the foremost saxophonists of his generation. His body of work stretches across genres from opera to pop, garnering both critical acclaim and commercial success. Alongside his performance career, he has been a teacher and mentor to a new generation of performers.
JOHN HARLE SAXOPHONE & STEVE LODDER PIANO
The concert finishes at approximately 9.05pm
John has been working with student saxophonists from the University of Nottingham, and will present a concert featuring works played by the students in the first half, with John and Steve Lodder performing a short recital programme in the second half. With thanks to Eric and Audrey Barnes for supporting the student workshops and concert by John Harle and Steve Lodder.
MUSIC 24 UNIVERSITY SUNDAY 21 MARCH 7.30PM GREAT HALL, TRENT BUILDING £8 (£5 CONCESSION, £4 UON STUDENT) PLEASE NOTE: 75 MINS CONCERT, NO INTERVAL
UNIVERSITY CHOIR ‘In paradiso’ Sarah Tenant-Flowers, conductor John Keys, organ Peteris VASKS Dona nobis pacem VASKS Te Deum FAURÉ Requiem
WORLD WEDNESDAY 24 MARCH 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW
CIMARRON This Colombian sevenpiece wowed audiences at WOMEX in Seville last year, with a spectacular, super-tight performance of joropo music and dance. Hailing from the vast Orinoco plains which stretch from Colombia into Venezuela, joropo is a fast traditional rhythm played on harp, bandola and cuatro accompanied by bass, cajon and maracas. Cimarrón fire up flawless virtuosity with a heartstopping sense of drama, incredible!
Fauré’s Requiem is the central work in this programme of contemplative choral music. Enduringly popular, Fauré’s setting is deliberately restrained and intimate, avoiding all operatic pretence. The first half of the concert is dedicated to the music of Peteris Vasks, one of Latvia’s most influential composers. Son of a Baptist minister, Vasks explores themes of spiritual and global importance through music of profound simplicity and lyrical beauty. Stylistically, Dona Nobis Pacem inhabits the same ethereal sound world as that of Górecki and Pärt’s choral writing, in which essentially uncomplicated musical ideas, described by Vasks as ‘simple, honest sounds’, are developed into intensely emotional climaxes. John Keys performs the powerful and uplifting Te Deum for solo organ to complete the first half.
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JAZZ FRIDAY 26 MARCH 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW
DAN BERGLUND GROUP Dan Berglund, bass Johan Lindstroem, guitar Martin Heteros, piano Magnus Persson, drums Dan Berglund became known worldwide as the bass player of EST, probably the most innovative jazz band of the last decade. After the tragic death of Esbjörn Svensson, Berglund has formed his own band and we’re delighted to be presenting them as part of their first UK tour. The new line-up of guitar, bass and drums takes up the baton from EST and Berglund’s compositions continue to be a powerful mix of jazz and electric rock.
CHAMBER SATURDAY 27 MARCH 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
RUTH PALMER VIOLIN & ALEXEI GRYNYUK PIANO BACH Partita No.3 in E, BWV1006 BEETHOVEN Violin Sonata No. 10 in G, Op.96 Nick SACKMAN Violin Sonata BRAHMS Violin Sonata No.3 in D minor, Op.108
Winner of the Young British Classical Performer award at the Classical BRITs in 2007 Ruth Palmer makes her Lakeside debut performing the premiere of Nick Sackman’s Violin Sonata. Ruth’s debut CD with the Philharmonia Orchestra was released to critical acclaim. Her past performance highlights include appearances at the Ravinia Festival in Chicago, the Munich Opera House, Wigmore Hall, and performances with the English Chamber Orchestra, the Ulster Orchestra and the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra. ‘Strident, shocking, imperious and beautiful, this was a riveting performance.’ Anna Picard, Independent on Sunday 6.45pm Pre-concert talk by Nick Sackman The concert finishes at approximately 9.15pm
FRIDAY 26 MARCH 5.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL ADMISSION FREE
MOONLIGHTERS RUSH HOUR CONCERT Why not make an evening of it and attend the Rush Hour concert by student jazz ensemble Moonlighters? See page 27.
MUSIC 26 UNIVERSITY SUNDAY 28 MARCH 7.30PM GREAT HALL, TRENT BUILDING £8 (£5 CONCESSION, £4 UON STUDENT)
UNIVERSITY WIND ORCHESTRA & MOONLIGHTERS BIG BAND ‘Global Variations’ Kieran O’Riordan, conductors Patrick Burnett Adam Mooney Tim Watkins
Join the woodwind, brass and percussion players of the University Union’s Blow Society in a fascinating journey through the musical landscapes of the world. Martin Ellerby’s Paris Sketches is a work of great beauty and power, inspired by four districts (and several composers) of the French capital. In Christopher Marshall’s extraordinary Aue!, the sounds of Samoan village life are vividly captured: the songs, hymns, and dances all filtered and transformed by the mists of the rain forest. East meets West in Claude-Michel Schonberg’s celebrated music from Miss Saigon.
To round things off, Nigel Hess’s Global Variations is a whistle-stop journey around the globe, visiting France, Spain, South Africa, Egypt, Russia, India, China, Australia and America in a little over eight minutes! The concert finishes at approximately 9.30pm
Martin ELLERBY Paris Sketches Nigel HESS Global Variations Christopher MARSHALL Aue! Claude-Michel SCHONBERG Selection from ‘Miss Saigon’ SOUSA Semper Fidelis
FOLK WEDNESDAY 31 MARCH 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW
BREABACH Calum MacCrimmon, pipes, whistles, vocals Patsy Reid, fiddle, vocals Ewan Robertson, guitar, vocals Donal Brown, pipes, flutes & whistles Breabach’s innovative Celtic style, blending double bagpipes, whistle, fiddle, song and Scottish step dance, brings to the stage flare, excitement and a diversity rarely seen from such a young group. Enviable musicianship coupled with a delightful ability to connect with their audience have gained Breabach international recognition as one of Scotland’s leading new acts. ‘A young group performing with technical assurance and a feel for traditional idioms… Their raucous, driving attack is energised and exciting!’ The Scotsman
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UNIVERSITY
LUNCHTIME CONCERTS DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL 1.15PM ADMISSION FREE Student recitals are held weekly on Tuesdays and Fridays during term time beginning Friday 29 January. For information on spring term concert artists please visit www.mussoc.org.uk or www.blowsoc.co.uk or contact the Lakeside Box Office from 2 November.
UNIVERSITY FRIDAY 5 MARCH 5.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL ADMISSION FREE
BLUE SHIFT RUSH HOUR CONCERT Blue Shift is a workshop-based student jazz group that helps jazz musicians to develop their improvisational skills. Repertoire ranges from Real book standards to popular covers. With thanks to Michael and Maureen Keywood for supporting student jazz workshops.
UNIVERSITY FRIDAY 26 MARCH 5.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL ADMISSION FREE
MOONLIGHTERS RUSH HOUR CONCERT Moonlighters Big Band is a 19-strong band run, conducted and performed by students who are passionate about jazz! From American swing to Latin Salsa, and smooth vocal numbers to funk, the repertoire is varied and promises old favourites and modern arrangements.
COMING SOON THURSDAY 29 APRIL 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £15 (£12 CONCESSION)
THE GUARNERI TRIO PRAGUE
THEATRE 28 CHRISTMAS AT LAKESIDE
Lakeside presents
Image: Copyright © Tomi Ungerer and Diogenes Verlag AG Zürich
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CHILDREN & FAMILIES 27 NOVEMBER & 1 DECEMBER 1.30PM 28 NOVEMBER & 5, 6, 12, 13, 19-24, 29-31 DECEMBER & 2 & 3 JANUARY 12.30PM & 3.30PM 2-4, 9-11, 15-17 DECEMBER 10.30AM & 1.30PM 8 DECEMBER 10.30AM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £7 LAKESIDE PRESENTS
FLAT STANLEY Based on the story by Jeff Brown Adapted for the stage by Mike Kenny Directed by Matt Aston Set Designer Lighting Designer Musical Director
Laura McEwen Ciaran Bagnall Julian Butler
Mr Lambchop Mrs Lambchop Stanley Arthur
Charlie Buckland Katie Matthews Richard Dale Ross MacLeod
Stanley Lambchop was a normal healthy boy until a notice board fell on him! Now he's only half an inch thick... Stanley makes the best of his altered state, and soon he is entering locked rooms by sliding under doors, and playing with his younger brother by turning himself into a kite. Stanley even helps catch some art thieves by posing as a painting on the wall. But one special advantage is that Flat Stanley can now visit his friends by being posted in an envelope. Join Stanley and his brother Arthur on their adventures at Christmas time.
SIGNED PERFORMANCE Wednesday 9 December 1.30pm AUDIO DESCRIBED PERFORMANCE Thursday 10 December 1.30pm With touch tour at 12.45pm
FLAT STANLEY WORKSHOPS FOR AGES 5+ & THEIR FAMILIES £5 PER PERSON BOOK IN ADVANCE ON 0115 846 7777 SUNDAY 15 & SUNDAY 22 NOVEMBER 1PM - 3.30PM VISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE
FLAT STANLEY KITE MAKING Up, up... UP went Stanley. Stanley. You’re a kite! ...and Stanley soared high above the trees. A beautiful sight against the blue sky. Come along and make your own Flat Stanley kite in this fun workshop. SUNDAY 15 & SUNDAY 22 NOVEMBER 12.30PM - 1.30PM & 2PM - 3PM PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE
FLAT STANLEY DRAMA WORKSHOP An hour of expressive fun with drama and movement, creating your own Flat Stanley adventure.
Suitable for ages 3+ and their families
EXHIBITION WALLNER GALLERY EXHIBITION WEDNESDAY 2 DECEMBER 2009 - SUNDAY 3 JANUARY 2010 FREE See Flat Stanley’s magical adventures brought to life in a vibrant exhibition of works created by children to complement the Flat Stanley Christmas show.
He may be flat, but he’s a hero!
THEATRE 30 COMEDY TUESDAY 2 FEBRUARY & WEDNESDAY 3 FEBRUARY 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW RUNNING TIME: 70 MINS, NO INTERVAL
COUNT ARTHUR STRONG ‘THE MAN BEHIND THE SMILE’ Following the smash-hit success of his BBC Radio 4 comedy series (Sony GOLD Award Winner - Best Radio Comedy 2009) and sell out tour, Count Arthur Strong, showbiz legend and raconteur, reminds us just what we’ve been missing since his last television series, ‘The Robin Hood Club’, was axed in 1960 something.
As Arthur himself says, “Wouldn’t it be wonderful if you could just turn the telly on after a hard day at the abattoir... or whatever it is you do... and there I was, smiling back at you, in my own programme again, again.” “Forever the nearly man of show business and an expert mangler of words, Count Arthur is nothing less than wonderful… One of the greatest comic creations of this century, Count Arthur is compulsory viewing.” The Mirror “…an absolutely hilarious evening in the presence of comedy nobility” Leicester Mercury
CHILDREN AND FAMILIES WEDNESDAY 17 - FRIDAY 19 FEBRUARY 10.30AM & 1.30PM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £6 RUNNING TIME: 60 MINS SUITABLE FOR 2-4 YRS AND FAMILIES
CHILDREN AND FAMILIES SATURDAY 20 FEBRUARY 10.30AM & 1.30PM SUNDAY 21 FEBRUARY 1.30PM & 3.30PM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £6 RUNNING TIME: 60 MINS SUITABLE FOR 5+ YRS AND FAMILIES
SHONA REPPE PUPPETS PRESENTS
SHONA REPPE PUPPETS PRESENTS
POTATO NEEDS A BATH
CINDERELLA
Good clean fun for the very, very young. Potato has mud on his face. Potato has dirt in his ears. Potato needs a bath (just don’t get soap in his eyes!) A gentle and light-hearted new show for 2 - 4 year olds featuring object puppetry and original music. From the company that created the award winning Cinderella and Olga Volt The Electric Fairy! “Shona Reppe… the fairy godmother of puppetry” Edinburgh Evening News
Created, designed and performed by Shona Reppe Co-created by Ian Cameron Co-Directed by Gill Robertson Back by public demand following capacity shows during Lakeside’s International Children’s Theatre and Dance Festival 2007, this is a simply brilliant show. Everyday is a bad hair day for Cinderella… The classic fairytale beautifully re-imagined by Shona Reppe Puppets in this highly visual MUNCH award-winning BUNCH production with secret WORKSHOP hatches, hidden SEE PAGE 37 drawers and a handbag full of magic!
31 DANCE TUESDAY 23 FEBRUARY 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £12 (£9 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW RUNNING TIME: 65 MINS NO INTERVAL MOTIONHOUSE PRESENTS
SCATTERED Directed by Kevin Finnan Scattered combines highly physical dance theatre and mesmerizing imagery in a unique interaction between film and live performance.
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Scattered explores our relationship with water and how it surrounds us in different forms throughout our lives: in birth water ties us to life and on a more elemental scale, in ice, floods and tides, it can sweep our lives away. Scattered delves into the majesty and savagery of water, a fundamental force in our lives as seven dancers plunge into an ocean, wrestle a raging tide and slide on an avalanche to a frozen landscape of arctic beauty. Performed on a huge curved floor which disappears skywards, Scattered uses projection technology, daring dancing plus aerial harnesses and bungees to create an extraordinary world in which the dancers move seamlessly in, on and through the image. Scattered is commissioned by Warwick Arts Centre and created with support from Playbox Theatre, Warwick.
DRAMA THURSDAY 25 & FRIDAY 26 FEBRUARY 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £12 (£9 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW RUNNING TIME: 75 MINS TURF LOVE PRESENT
BEATING BERLUSCONI! Fresh from ecstatic reviews and a huge word-of-mouth following in the NorthWest, Paul Duckworth brings this lump in your throat comedy to the rest of the UK. Despite threats from his wife and bank manager, in May 2005 middle-aged Kenny Noonan travels to Istanbul to watch Liverpool play AC Milan in the Champions’ League final. He carries the scars of thirty years as a Red - Heysel, Hillsborough, Alex Ferguson - and of living in a city which has been demonised.
Beating Berlusconi! is a story of love and friendship, of defeat and of victory. It is also based on the bizarre true story of a real Liverpool fan who ended up sitting next to Silvio Berlusconi at the Attaturk Stadium. Beating Berlusconi! is the hilarious story of one man’s attempt to rediscover his belief in himself, his club, his city and his class. ‘Writer John Graham Davies can certainly hit a punch line. This play isn’t just based on a true story. It’s based on thousands.’ Liverpool Daily Post ‘Mesmerising…hilarious scattergun scenes. Duckworth is outstanding. The gags flowed all evening.’ Liverpool Echo
THEATRE 32 CHILDREN & FAMILIES WEDNESAY 3 – SATURDAY 6 MARCH WEDNESDAY 3 MARCH 1.30PM & 6PM THURSDAY 4 & FRIDAY 5 MARCH 10.30AM & 1.30PM SATURDAY 6 MARCH 10.30AM & 1.30PM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £6 RUNNING TIME: 60 MINS APPROX SUITABLE FOR 5-7 YRS AND FAMILIES FEVERED SLEEP AND FUEL PRESENT
THE FOREST Created by Fevered Sleep and produced by Fuel Directed by David Harradine and Sam Butler A thrilling new performance combining dance, images, sound and light.
There is a place at the very heart of the forest. A place where things are not quite what they seem. People become animals, birds become music, wood becomes water, leaves become light. Everything moves (can you hear it?), everything changes (can you see it?). It’s all around you. It’s full of adventure. It’s bursting with life. It’s the forest. The company that created Brilliant and And the Rain Falls Down invites you to a surprising new performance, that will take you somewhere unlike anywhere you’ve ever been… “A luminous production, wordless and freeform that holds the children fascinated in its grasp” Four Stars, Time Out on Brilliant 2008
SCHOOLS PACKAGES SEE PAGE 40
Commissioned by Lyric, Hammersmith, developed at Sadler’s Wells & Young Vic. Supported by The Corn Exchange, Newbury through its Evolve programme. www.evolveexchange.com
DRAMA TUESDAY 9 MARCH 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £12 (£9 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW RUNNING TIME: 90-100 MINS NEW PERSPECTIVES THEATRE COMPANY PRESENTS
THOSE MAGNIFICENT MEN BY BRIAN MITCHELL & JOSEPH NIXON
Chocks Away! For the hilarious, heartstopping story of Alcock and Brown and the first ever non-stop transatlantic flight. Extra, extra! Read all about it! £10,000 prize for the first ever non-stop transatlantic flight! By any standards, it’s a classic tale of plucky British pioneers - Captain John Alcock, a dashing WW1 fighter pilot, and Lieutenant Arthur Whittam Brown, a navigational genius with a gammy leg, huddled together against the elements in the tiny cockpit of their converted Vickers Vimy biplane, made almost entirely of wood and canvas - talk about winging it! Now critically-acclaimed comedy writing duo, Brian Mitchell & Joseph Nixon, have turned the story of the race to conquer the skies over the Atlantic into a fast and furious comic tour-de-force. Be amazed at the sheer adventuring spirit of our unlikely heroes, marvel at their daredevil aerial antics, and wonder at how the whole bally thing is told with just two actors and a crate full of funny props.
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33 COMEDY SATURDAY 13 MARCH 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW RUNNING TIME: 70 MINS
RABBIT FACED STORY SOUP WRITTEN AND PERFORMED BY LAURA SOLON
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Tepid-shot publisher Diana Lewis is scrambled to find a writer to finish the book and save the company from crisis. Her obstacles include an American Super Agent, a lightly tanned boss, a call centre worker, a diversity officer, The French and a dead rabbit called Ian.
‘It’s an entertaining and unusual tale, teeming with vivid characters. Its script is densely populated with acerbic oneliners: Solon has retained her facility for articulate defamation.’ The Guardian
It’s like The Wire. But with character comedy. And EVERYTHING from The Wire taken out.
Perrier Award Winner Laura Solon (BBC 1’s Harry and Paul, Al Murray’s Multiple Personality Disorder, Radio 4’s Talking and Not Talking) returns with her brand new multi-character narrative comedy Rabbit Faced Story Soup. So…It’s all gone pear-shaped at Black Publishing. The company’s on the brink of financial collapse and star author Harriet G. Scott has gone AWOL without completing her latest blockbuster.
DANCE TUESDAY 16 MARCH 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £12 (£9 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW RUNNING TIME: 60 MINS
As with Heston Blumenthal’s legendary bacon and egg ice cream, familiar ingredients are shaken and stirred ballet with a dash of mango chutney; a trickle of Indian classical dance to liven up a slice of sweet pumpkin pie.
SHOBANA JEYASINGH DANCE COMPANY PRESENT
Six exceptional dancers add their hardwon memories of home cooking in a shifting world to create a beguiling contemporary dance work that includes a score by Orlando Gough and text by performer and writer Rani Moorthy.
JUST ADD WATER? This Winter, feast your senses on Just Add Water?; a brand new, food-inspired show. Our current love affair with all things culinary gets a unique spin from top UK choreographer Shobana Jeyasingh in her latest full-length dance piece. In a world where differences between people can cause friction, Just Add Water? reminds us that cross-cultural eating is one of the true success stories of our time. Can Jeyasingh cook up a dance recipe that will give us a formula for survival in 21st century Britain?
"An elegant and engrossing hour-long experience... you’re gripped throughout by the magnificently supple and sinuous dancing" Mail on Sunday See video clips online at www.shobanajeyasingh.co.uk for a taste of what’s to come!
THEATRE 34 COMEDY THURSDAY 18 MARCH 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW RUNNING TIME: 110 MINS INCLUDING INTERVAL
“JO CAULFIELD WON’T SHUT UP!” The minute Jo Caulfield hits the stage you know you’re in for a good time. Star of Radio 4’s critically acclaimed It’s That Jo Caulfield Again and regularly seen on Mock The Week (BBC2), Have I Got News For You (BBC1), Never Mind The Buzzcocks (BBC2), Argumental (Dave TV), Michael McIntyre’s Comedy Roadshow (BBC1) and Best of The Comedy Store (Ch5). “Sharp-witted, urban comedy that goes down a treat. Like a sociology textbook, but with jokes” The Times.
DANCE - TRIPLE BILL SATURDAY 27 MARCH 8PM £12 (£9 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW NATIONAL DANCE NETWORK PRESENTS
DANCE3 A TRIPLE BILL OF NEW WORK FROM THE NEXT GENERATION OF DANCEMAKERS Experience dance in a new dimension three fresh, bite sized performances showcasing the best up and coming professional choreographers and their collaborators. Three super talented artists let their imaginations run riot creating compelling and varied performances mixing physical brilliance, music and film. Accompanied by A Blank Canvas, a foyer installation by Heather Eddington’s State of Flux dancefilm company, blending dance, film and animation. For full details and preview clips visit: www.dance3.org Dance 3 is a new small scale touring initiative from the National Dance Network touring three sets of triple bills throughout the UK in 2010.
4M2 BY CLAIRE CUNNINGHAM & JOSE AGUDO An energetic and engaging physical theatre performance from choreographers Claire Cunningham and Jose Agudo, combining real stories, a stunning filmic backdrop and multilayered soundscape by Scanner. CABIN FEVER BY TOM DALE Lost in a world of his own, we see a character’s cabin fever and mental loops produce an exhilarating and hypnotic performance. This startlingly expressive piece of physical work becomes a metaphor for a contemporary state of mind. A MIND AS BEAUTIFUL BY DOUGLAS THORPE A blistering and brutal, sometimes achingly tender, new work by ex-Phoenix dancer Douglas Thorpe exploring the experience of schizophrenia. A Mind as Beautiful combines the trademark speed, rhythm and precision of Thorpe’s choreography with a moving spokenword narrative.
35 CHILDREN & FAMILIES SUNDAY 28 MARCH 1.30PM & 3.30PM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £6 RUNNING TIME: 50 MINS INCLUDING Q&A WITH DANCERS
TELLING TALES
BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777
A first project from East Midlands Children’s Theatre Consortium of Lakeside Arts Centre, Déda and Spark Children’s Arts Festival, Telling Tales was created by two acclaimed international choreographers of work for children and young people – Enrique Cabrera (Aracaladanza) and Hélène Blackburn (Cas Public).
‘My daughter and her friend came …and I laughed and clapped as much as them!’ Lakeside audience member
A playful introduction to dance, Telling Tales takes a fresh look at two wellloved children’s stories, alongside two new dance pieces. Look out for a mischievous version of the famous Hare and The Tortoise story; a dressing-up game involving a squabble over the biggest overcoat you’ve ever seen; and a speed version of The Golden Goose involving only 2 dancers but a cast of thousands. In the finale, Sea of Clothes, shirts and skirts take on a dancing life of their own!
IMAGE: ALAN FLETCHER
DANCE TUESDAY 30 MARCH 7PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £10 (£8 CONCESSION/NAAC MEMBER) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW MANUSHI DANCE COMPANY PRESENTS
‘TAJ MAHAL’ A LOVE STORY! Directed by Vina Ladwa Guest choreographer Kali Dass Music arranged and composed by Dmitry Fedotov The hidden stories of the greatest love affair of all time are brought to life with a modern twist through a Kathak dance drama by UK based Manushi Dance Company. Kathak is an Indian Classical dance characterised by story telling, ankle bells, ‘chakkars’ (pirouettes) and the vitality of the footwork which weaves percussive rhythms.
The Taj Mahal is an inspiring place that takes us back to the Mogul period during the 16th century. A white marble tomb built in 1631-48 in Agra, seat of the Mugal Empire as a tribute to a beautiful woman and as a monument for enduring love, by Shah Jehan for his wife Mumtaz Mahal. The Mogul period is best known for its Hindustani and Persian music influence in North India and Kathak dances were a great favourite among the kings. This production explores the timeless relationship between Shah Jehan and his wife Mumtaz Mahal, from the moment they met to the present day. Featuring: Hetain Patel, Asmita Lawrence, Praful Ladwa, Louise Clements, Shane Shambhu, Bisakha Sarker and Kalidass. Produced in partnership with Lakeside, NAAC and Manushi
IMAGE: LOUISE CLEMENTS
COMING SOON... 36 DRAMA MAY 2010 DJANOGLY THEATRE £12 (£9 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW LAKESIDE PRESENTS PREMIERE OF
BOMBER’S MOON BY WILLIAM IVORY Directed by Matt Aston From the writer of The Retirement of Tom Stevens, Bomber’s Moon is a love story. Told through the unflinching eyes of an octogenarian misanthrope, it unravels a war time miracle and a modern day tragedy, to reveal the true nature of Faith. Bomber’s Moon was presented as a rehearsed reading in June 2009 and has since been developed into a full Lakeside production.
the university of
NOTTINGHAM museum of archaeology Open to the general public, this collection covers the Palaeolithic to the post medieval period and comes primarily from the East Midlands. The wide variety of objects in the collection reflects the everyday lives of people living in this area, and includes Paleolithic, Roman and Anglo Saxon material. There is also a small display of objects from other countries including Egypt, Italy and Cyprus.
ADMISSION FREE Open: Monday to Friday, 10am-4pm 0115 951 4815 www.nottingham.ac.uk/museum unmuseum@nottingham.ac.uk The Museum is based in the Department of Archaeology. It is along Cut Through Lane opposite the Hallward Library.
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES 37 GET INVOLVED, GET CREATIVE Lakeside’s Visual Arts and Performing Arts Education teams have joined forces to create a whole new exciting world to explore! Places for all workshops should be booked in advance on 0115 846 7777.
LITTLE ONES
THURSDAY 14 JANUARY THURSDAY 11 FEBRUARY & THURSDAY 25 FEBRUARY THURSDAY 25 MARCH 10AM - 11AM PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE FOR AGES 18 MONTHS - 36 MONTHS £4 PER CHILD WITH PARENT/CARER
WEDNESDAY 17 FEBRUARY 11AM - 12NOON & 1.30PM - 2.30PM PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE FOR AGES 2 - 4 YEARS £5 CHILD WITH PARENT/CARER
TINY FINGERS TINY TOES
Welcome to the wacky world of talking vegetables: crazy stories of wild adventures where fruit & veg come to life. These hour-long workshops allow parents/carers and children to work together to make stories using veggies, googly eyes and silly voices, creating their own new vegetable adventures. For once, playing with your food is OK!
Join us at Tiny Fingers Tiny Toes, where you can explore all that moves. Jump, hop and skip into the space. Groove, wiggle and clap your hands to music. Climb, swing and crawl around. Stretch, twist and shake your body. Play, perform and dance all the way home!
POTATO NEEDS A BATH SEE PAGE 30
MUNCH BUNCH TALKING LUNCH
SATURDAY 9 JANUARY SATURDAY 20 MARCH 10AM - 11AM PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE FOR AGES 5 - 7 YEARS £30 PER TERM
LITTLE LAKESIDERS Come and join our new weekly Lakeside Youth Theatre as we explore imaginary worlds through drama and creative play. Get ready to get messy, make some noise, and have fun!
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES 38
38
FAMILIES (OPEN TO ALL) THURSDAY 31 DECEMBER 1PM - 3.30PM ANGEAR VISITORS CENTRE £8 PER PERSON
FRIDAY 19 FEBRUARY 11AM - 12.30PM VISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE £6.50
MONDAY 29 MARCH 10AM - 12.30PM ANGEAR VISITORS CENTRE £8 PER PERSON
KITCHEN ART
VEGETABLE SCULPTURES
THROUGH THE WINDOW
Open up your kitchen cupboards and discover the potential for ART! In this workshop you’ll be amazed when you see what can be done with flour and tin foil, saucepans and table cloths. And as for rubber gloves... well, join in and find out in this messy making session for all the family.
Love fruit & veg, but feel they lack punch on the plate? Then why not come along and make your own vegetable sculptures from Mr Potato Head to cucumber cars, banana dogs to tomato familes.
Windows provide us with openings to new horizons and magical possibilities. Like Wendy in Peter Pan you can step away from the everyday and take a trip through the windows of your imagination in this painting workshop with artist Liz Sparks.
Twist, prod and poke away! Find a new way to enjoy your five a day!!!
CHILDREN WEDNESDAY 30 DECEMBER 1PM - 3.30PM ANGEAR VISITORS CENTRE FOR AGES 8-12 YEARS £8
THURSDAY 18 FEBRUARY 10AM - 12NOON & 1.30PM - 3.30PM VISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE FOR AGES 8+ £8 PER PERSON
FRIDAY 19 FEBRUARY 10AM - 12.30PM VISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE FOR AGES 10 + £8
DOODLING WITH OBJECTS
HOORAY - IT’S ANIME
WILD AND WONDERFUL
Come along and make up a cartoon story with us which we will all illustrate together in the popular Anime style - and take it home afterwards! This session is guided by children’s book illustrator, Martin Wright and all materials are provided.
In this fashion and jewellery workshop with Sam Poyser, nature is the inspiration. Twigs, ferns, ice, moss, thorns, ash, dew, slate and feathers are just a few starting points! Beading, wiring, weaving and stitching are the making techniques that will be explored.
Artist Fay Nicolson leads a ‘hands on’ workshop that takes its inspiration from the exhibition Quiet Revolution. Imitating the artists in this show, participants will combine and transform everyday objects and materials into unusual and unique art works, then arrange them to create a temporary exhibition.
MONDAY 29 MARCH 1PM - 3.30PM ANGEAR VISITORS CENTRE FOR AGES 8-11 YEARS £8
WACKY WINDOWS Alongside artist Liz Sparks, take ideas from the painters’ palettes in the Without from Within exhibition and decorate the floor-to-ceiling windows in the Visitor Centre with a kaleidoscope of colours. Painting, colouring and sticking on a flamboyant and grand scale!
39
GET INVOLVED, GET CREATIVE Places for all workshops should be booked in advance on 0115 846 7777.
ADULTS (18 YEARS AND OVER) TUESDAY 23 FEBRUARY TUESDAY 23 MARCH 6PM - 9PM VISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE £80/£65 CONCESSION
IMAGINING LANDSCAPES To coincide with the Without from Within exhibition, Nottingham based landscape painter Nick Hedderly will run a series of five evening classes to give practical insight into the processes of producing a painting. Using examples of his own working practices alongside those of other artists, Nick will encourage students to develop an awareness of their own particular vision and gain confidence to convey this through the medium of paint.
SUNDAY 21 MARCH 10AM - 4PM VISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE £30/£25 CONCESSION
SUNDAY 21 FEBRUARY 10AM - 4PM VISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE £30/£25 CONCESSION
PAINTING LIGHT
WHITTLED SPOONS IN WOVEN SOCKS
Painter Toby Jennings invites you to join a practical workshop exploring ways of representing exteriors from the interiors of buildings through tone, form and colour. Using the exhibition Without from Within as a starting point, Toby will lead participants through the painting processes he employs in his own work, with reference to those in the show.
Vanessa Larmond has a passion for basketry, a love for the handmade and the processes, time and persistence needed to master a skill. Working only with simple hand tools and materials, she keeps the environmental impact of her work as low as possible. In this workshop participants will use traditional basketry techniques, reclaimed and found wood and organically grown, plant-dyed cotton to produce delicate woven structures which can be worn.
THE TWILIGHT ZONE FOR TEACHERS At the end of a long day, come to Lakeside to relax in our big sofas, see some art, drink coffee and share creative ideas. Join Lakeside’s Education Staff for an informative guide to what Lakeside can do to complement your work across the curriculum. VANESSA LARMOND
PRIMARY TEACHERS Tuesday 26 January 4.30-6pm (refreshments 4-4.30pm)
SECONDARY TEACHERS Wednesday 27 January 4.30-6pm (refreshments 4-4.30pm)
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BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777
art LAKESIDE ART investigator DO YOU WANT TO BE AN ART INVESTIGATOR?
The Art Investigator experience is intended to celebrate the natural curiosity of children, encouraging them to make the most of the stimulating exhibitions at Lakeside, and express their personal responses to the work on show. The Art Investigator activity bags may be borrowed in the Djanogly Art Gallery by 7 to 12 year olds and used with adult supervision while looking at an exhibition. To help children familiarise themselves with the exhibition, there is an etch-a-sketch, a magnifying glass, some rubber stamps, paper, scissors and pencils in each bag, as well as an activity sheet with questions to encourage children to enquire about the art. Once the bags have been used and returned to the gallery counter, every Art Investigator may claim their special stickers and badge.
SCHOOLS PACKAGES
FEVERED SLEEP
LYT Lakesideyouththeatre needs you!
GALLERY ART GROUP (GAG) For ages 11-16, GAG is designed to introduce young people to a variety of art skills from painting and drawing to film and photography based on our gallery exhibitions. Saturday mornings from 10am to 12 noon during school term times. The cost is ÂŁ45 for the term.
LITTLE GAG For ages 8-10, Little GAG provides a week by week fun introduction to painting, drawing and sculpture. Saturday afternoons from 1.30pm to 3pm during school term times. The cost is ÂŁ35 for the term. Bookings for GAG and Little GAG open on Saturday 21 November. Contact the box office on 0115 846 7777.
School packages are available: Please contact Rachel Feneley for more details on 0115 8467180 or Rachel.Feneley@nottingham.ac.uk. Please check out our website for the teachers resource pack. See page 32 for performance details.
Do you want to learn new things, develop new ideas and be creative? Then why not join LYT. You will work alongside professional artists to explore all aspects of theatre, from acting to designing sets and looking at lighting and sound. For more information or to book call the Box Office on 0115 846 7777.
Eating at Lakeside Lakeside is a great place for lunch, dinner or drinks. Aqua, by the lake and CafĂŠ L near the Djanogly Art Gallery are open for morning coffee, lunch and afternoon tea. Both serving a selection of freshly prepared hot meals as well as speciality coffees, flavoured teas, wines and beers in a relaxed and friendly atmosphere. Aqua is also open for pre-show suppers on performance evenings. Booking is advised on 0115 846 7179. You can also book through the Box Office when booking tickets for performances or concerts. CafĂŠ L 0115 951 3101 Mon-Fri 9am-4.30pm Sat 11am-4.30pm Sun/bank hols 12noon-3.30pm Aqua 0115 846 7179 Mon-Sat 10am-5pm (until 11pm on performance eves) Sun 11am-5pm Bank hols 12noon - 4pm
Chinese New Year celebrations SUNDAY 14 FEBRUARY, 5.30PM ONWARDS Wrap up warmly and bring the family to visit the Zodiac Animal-decorated Pyramids and see Lion dancing in the park before a fireworks celebration across the lake at 6.30pm. Full details of other Chinese New Year activities will be available from mid-December on-line and in a separate brochure.
www.lakesidearts.org.uk
INFORMATION 46 LAKESIDE ARTS CENTRE UNIVERSITY PARK NOTTINGHAM NG7 2RD BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777 BOOK ONLINE: WWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UK
BOX OFFICE OPENING HOURS PERFORMANCE NIGHTS Monday to Saturday 10am until half an hour after start of the performance NON-PERFORMANCE NIGHTS Monday to Saturday 10am - 5pm Sunday 12pm - 4pm Payment can be made by cash, cheque (with valid guarantee card), debit or credit card. Cheques should be made payable to The University of Nottingham. The following cards are accepted Delta, Visa, Maestro, Mastercard and Solo. OPENING HOURS Djanogly Art Gallery Monday - Saturday 11am - 5pm Sun/Bank Holidays 12noon - 4pm Café L Monday - Friday 9am - 4.30pm Sat 11am - 4.30pm Sun/Bank Holidays 12noon - 3.30pm Weston Gallery Monday - Friday 11am - 4pm Sat/Sun/Bank Holidays 12noon - 4pm Wallner Gallery and Aqua Monday - Saturday 10am - 5pm (until 11pm on performance evenings) Sun 11am - 5pm Bank Holidays 12noon - 4pm
ACCESS FOR ALL Lakeside is fully accessible to people with a disability. There is level access, toilets for the disabled, designated car parking across all the venues and wheelchair spaces in both the Djanogly Recital Hall and Djanogly Theatre. Where possible please book wheelchair spaces in advance. There is a Sennheiser Infrared enhanced hearing system in Djanogly Theatre and Performing Arts Workshop Space (where possible headsets should be booked in advance) and an induction loop in Djanogly Recital Hall, Box Office, Djanogly Art Gallery Desk, Cafe L and Aqua. ASSISTANCE DOGS Assistance dogs are welcome in all areas of the building. CONCESSIONS Available to full-time students, in possession of a valid NUS card with photo, state pensioners, registered disabled and their carers, unemployed and children under 16. Please bring proof of concessionary status when buying tickets. RESERVATIONS Reservations will be held for a maximum of three working days. On the day of a performance reservations are held until 30 minutes before the start of a show.
STUDENT STANDBY TICKETS Limited numbers of £5 tickets are available for students and under 18s for most performances. Available from 5pm on the day of the performance, subject to status and availability. GROUP DISCOUNTS School and college groups receive one free ticket for a teacher / carer for every nine tickets purchased. All other groups can buy nine tickets and get the tenth one free. (Applies to the cheapest ticket.) To receive a group booking tickets MUST be booked in advance at the same time. Discounts do not apply to workshops. LATECOMERS Latecomers may only be admitted during a suitable break in the performance and at the Duty Manager’s discretion. RETURNS Unfortunately no refunds are available for unused tickets. However if an event sells out we will endeavour to sell on spare tickets if requested. ALL INFORMATION IS CORRECT AT TIME OF GOING TO PRINT. LAKESIDE ARTS CENTRE RESERVES THE RIGHT TO MAKE ALTERATIONS TO THE PROGRAMME AS DEEMED NECESSARY.
47 MAIN VISITOR CAR PARK
CUT THROUGH LANE
EAST DRIVE
EAST DRIVE
P
BUS STOP
SCIENCE ROAD CAR PARK
DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL CAR PARK
After 6pm
DJANOGLY ART GALLERY
SOUTH ENTRANCE D H LAWRENCE PAVILION DJANOGLY THEATRE WESTON GALLERY WALLNER GALLERY AQUA
ANGEAR VISITORS CENTRE CAFÉ L
UNIVERSITY BOULEVARD
CITY CENTRE
AD Y RO DERB A52 AD Y RO DERB A52
HOW TO GET HERE Lakeside Arts Centre is located at the South Entrance to the University of Nottingham campus, just off the A6005, University Boulevard. If approaching by the M1, leave the motorway at junction 25 and join the A52 to Nottingham. Turn right at the third roundabout (Priory), from there the University is signposted. BUSES Regular bus services operate between the City Centre and the University South Entrance: Trent Barton from Broadmarsh Bus Station: Indigo (to Long Eaton/Derby) every 6-8 minutes during the day and slightly less frequently in the evening; 18 (to Stapleford) every 20 minutes during the day and hourly in the evening. NCT 13/14 (from Market Square to Beeston/Chilwell) every fifteen minutes during the day and less frequently in the evening; 34 (City Centre/University Park Loop) every ten minutes. Term time only, Monday - Friday daytimes only. For times and details please call Nottingham City Transport 0115 950 6070 or www.nctx.co.uk, Trent Barton on 01773 712265 www.trentbarton.co.uk or Traveline 0871 200 22 33
TO M1
ABBEY BRIDGE
GREAT HALL W OO DS ID ER D
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(in Trent Building)
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RD LEVA BOU Y IT ERS NIV 05 U A60
CAR PARKING EVENING Visitors may use any of the University parking areas, which are free in the evening and weekends. The most convenient of these can be found on Science Road. DAYTIME Limited free daytime parking is available. This can get busy, so allow extra time. When entering University Park from the south entrance on University Boulevard the Lakeside car park is on the left hand side. Additional pay and display parking is on Science Road, which is first right after the south entrance.
A52 CLIFTON BVD
DISABLED PARKING There are designated spaces located close to Lakeside’s venues. If you are visiting the Djanogly Art Gallery or Recital Hall enter University Park from the south entrance on University Boulevard, turn first right into Science Road, and then first right again. For the Djanogly Theatre or other venues located inside the DH Lawrence Pavilion there are 2 spaces in the main Lakeside car park, and an additional 9 spaces next to the lake - these can be accessed by driving past the main Lakeside car park (to your left), around past the gatehouse, first left off East Drive along the north approach to the DH Lawrence Pavilion.
Lakeside is The University of Nottingham’s public arts centre, comprising...
CHRISTMAS OPENING TIMES AT LAKESIDE
DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL DJANOGLY ART GALLERY DJANOGLY THEATRE WALLNER GALLERY WESTON GALLERY
FLAT STANLEY
BOX OFFICE
AQUA
DJANOGLY
CAFE L
ART GALLERY
WESTON GALLERY
XMAS EVE
12.30 & 3.30pm
10am-4pm
11.30-4pm
12-4pm
12-3.30pm
12-4pm
XMAS DAY
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
BOXING DAY
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
DEC 27
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
DEC 28
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
DEC 29
12.30 & 3.30pm
12-4pm
12-3.30pm
12-4pm
DEC 30
12.30 & 3.30pm
11.30-4pm
11.30-4pm
12-4pm
12-3.30pm
12-4pm
DEC 31
12.30 & 3.30pm
11.30-4pm
11.30-4pm
12-4pm
12-3.30pm
12-4pm
JAN 1
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
closed
JAN 2
12.30 & 3.30pm
11.30-4pm
11.30-4pm
12-4pm
12-3.30pm
12-4pm
JAN 3
12.30 & 3.30pm
11.30-4pm
11.30-4pm
12-4pm
12-3.30pm
12-4pm
11.30-4pm
11.30-4pm
THIS BROCHURE IS AVAILABLE IN LARGE PRINT. PLEASE CALL 0115 846 7777
DESIGNED BY TOM PARTRIDGE
LAKESIDE ARTS CENTRE UNIVERSITY PARK NOTTINGHAM NG7 2RD BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777 BOOK ONLINE: WWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UK