ON
LAKESIDE THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM’S PUBLIC ARTS CENTRE AND MUSEUM SEPT - NOV 2010
beautiful things for you and your home...
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DIARY 02
BOX OFFICE 0115 846 7777
PAGE SEPTEMBER Thursday 9 September
EXHIBITIONS: Meet the Artist - Yelena Popova
6 - 7pm
Thursday 9 September
DRAMA: Decky Does a Bronco
8pm
9 25
Friday 10 September
DRAMA: Decky Does a Bronco
8pm
25
Friday 10 September
EXHIBITIONS: Lessons from The Past
opens
11
Friday 10 September
EXHIBITIONS: Lecture - Dust on The Mirror (followed by Private View)
6.30 - 7.30pm
4
Saturday 11 September
DRAMA: Decky Does a Bronco
8pm
25
Saturday 11 September
EXHIBITIONS: Dust on the Mirror
opens
4 5
Saturday 11 September
EXHIBITIONS: Artists' Talk - Charwai Tsai & Donna Ong
12.30 - 1.30pm
Saturday 11 September
EXHIBITIONS: Yelena Popova - Unnamed
opens
9
Saturday 18 September
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Little Lakesiders
starts
39
Sunday 19 September
DRAMA: One Man Lord of The Rings
8pm
26
Thursday 23 September
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Tiny Fingers, Tiny Toes
starts
39
Thursday 23 September
DANCE: Shift
8pm
26
Friday 24 September
MUSIC: Fiddlers' Bid
8pm
12
Monday 27 September
EXHIBITIONS: Lunchtime Talk - Lessons from The Past
1 - 2pm
11
Tuesday 28 September
DANCE: New Art Club - This is Now
8pm
27
Wednesday 29 September
MUSIC: The Magnets
8pm
12
Thursday 30 September
MUSIC: Stephen Hough
7.30pm
13
Thursday 30 September
COMEDY: Jarred Christmas
8pm
27
OCTOBER Friday 1 October
EXHIBITIONS: Craft - Imagined Objects of Desire
opens
10
Friday 1 October
DRAMA: Double Bill - The Post Show Party Show & Under the Covers
8pm
28
Saturday 2 October
MUSIC: Sinfonia Viva and Colin Currie
7.30pm
14
Sunday 3 October
CHILDREN & FAMILIES: White
1.30pm & 3.30pm
28
Tuesday 5 October
DANCE: The Featherstonehaughs- Edits
8pm
29
Wednesday 6 October
MUSIC: Hassan Erraji
8pm
14
Saturday 9 October
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: The Big Draw
1.30 - 4.30pm
39
Saturday 9 October
MUSIC: Pre-concert Talk by Philip Weller
6.45pm
15
Saturday 9 October
MUSIC: Brentano String Quartet
7.30pm
15 29
Sunday 10 October
CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Mini Mission: The Jingle Dress
12.30pm & 3pm
Monday 11 October
EXHIBITIONS: Lunchtime Talk - Lessons from The Past
1 - 2pm
11
Wednesday 13 October
MUSIC: Opera North
8pm
15 5
Thursday 14 October
EXHIBITIONS: Artists' Talk - SĂŽan Bowen
6 - 7pm
Thursday 14 October
MUSIC: Pre-concert Talk by Mark Audus
6.45pm
16
Thursday 14 October
MUSIC: Mark Padmore & Simon Lepper
7.30pm
16
Saturday 16 October
MUSIC: Trevor Pinnock
7.30pm
16
Saturday 16 October
DANCE: Youth Shift
8pm
30
Sunday 17 October
CHILDREN & FAMILIES: James Campbell's Comedy and Songs for Kids
3pm
30
Thursday 21 October
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Tiny Fingers, Tiny Toes
ends
39
Thursday 21 October
EXHIBITIONS: Artists' Talk - Christopher Cook
6 - 7pm
5
Saturday 23 October
MUSIC: Pre-concert Talk by Philip Weller
6.45pm
17
Saturday 23 October
MUSIC: Waldstein Ensemble
7.30pm
17
Saturday 23 October
CHILDREN & FAMILIES: The Story Traders of Sichuan
7pm
31
Sunday 24 October
MUSIC: University Philharmonia
7.30pm
17
Monday 25 October
MUSICAL: Dolly
8pm
31
03
Front cover image: Amanda Simmons (Lustre 2010 exhibitor)
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PAGE Tuesday 26 October
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Poetry Doctor
10am - 12noon
39
Tuesday 26 October
MUSICAL: Dolly
8pm
31
Wednesday 27 October
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: What a Performance
10am - 12noon
40
Wednesday 27 October
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Beastie Graffiti
1.30 - 4pm
40
Wednesday 27 October
MUSIC: Solveig Slettahjell
8pm
18
Thursday 28 October
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Paper Play
1.30 - 4pm
40
Thursday 28 October
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Sock Puppet Making & Puppeteering Workshop
10am - 12.30pm
40
Friday 29 October
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Comedy Capers
10am - 12noon
40
Friday 29 October
DANCE: Jeremy Wade - I Offer Myself to Thee
8pm
32
Saturday 30 October
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Wire Sculpture
10am - 4pm
40
Sunday 31 October
EXHIBITIONS: Dust on the Mirror
closes
4
Sunday 31 October
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Tiny Tales
11am-12pm & 1.30 - 2.30pm
39
Sunday 31 October
CHILDREN & FAMILIES: The Night Pirates
12.30pm & 3pm
32
Monday 1 November
CRAFT EXHIBITION: Claire Johnston
opens
9
Wednesday 3 November
MUSIC: Icebreaker
8pm
18
Friday 5 November
DRAMA: Tiny Volcanoes
8pm
33
Saturday 6 November
COMEDY: The Colour of Nonsense
8pm
33
Sunday 7 November
EXHIBITIONS: Yelena Popova - Unnamed
closes
9
Sunday 7 November
CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Handa's Surprise
11.30am, 12.30pm, 2.30pm & 3.30pm 34
Tuesday 9 November
MUSIC: Aly Bain, Ale Möller & Bruce Molsky
8pm
Thursday 11 November
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Tiny Fingers, Tiny Toes
starts
39
Thursday 11 November
MUSIC: Pre-concert Talk with the Schubert Ensemble
6.45pm
19
NOVEMBER
19
Thursday 11 November
MUSIC: The Schubert Ensemble
7.30pm
19
Saturday 13 November
CRAFT: Lustre Contemporary Craft Makers' Market
10am - 5pm
6
Saturday 13 November
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Jewellery Making with Lina Peterson
2 - 4pm
40
Sunday 14 November
CRAFT: Lustre Contemporary Craft Makers' Market
10am - 5pm
6
Sunday 14 November
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES: Jewellery Making with Lina Peterson
10am - 12noon
40
Sunday 14 November
MUSIC: University Wind Orchestra
7.30pm
20
Tuesday 16 November
MUSIC: The Bad Plus
8pm
20
Wednesday 17 November
EXHIBITIONS: Lunchtime Talk - Lessons from The Past
1 - 2pm
11
Wednesday 17 November
MUSIC: Richard Durrant
8pm
21
Thursday 18 November
MUSIC: Emma Kirkby & Anthony Rooley
7.30pm
21
Thursday 18 November
DRAMA: Rupert Brooke
8pm
34
Saturday 20 November
EXHIBITIONS: Revolution on Paper - Mexican Prints 1910 - 1960
opens
8
Saturday 20 November
MUSIC: Oleg Marshev
7.30pm
22
Saturday 20 November
DANCE: Fallen
8pm
35
Sunday 21 November
CHILDREN & FAMILIES: Sunflowers and Sheds
12.30pm & 3pm
35
Tuesday 23 November
DANCE: Candoco Dance Company - Renditions
8pm
36
Wednesday 24 November
MUSIC: Lúnasa
8pm
22
Thursday 25 November
COMEDY: Andrew Lawrence
8pm
36
Friday 26 November
DRAMA: Hamlet - Prince of Denmark
7.30pm
37
Saturday 27 November
MUSIC: University Choir & Philharmonia
7.30pm
23
Saturday 27 November
DRAMA: Hamlet - Prince of Denmark
7.30pm
37
Sunday 28 November
CHILDREN & FAMILIES: The Bug and The Butterfly: A Poem on Six Legs
12.30pm & 3pm
37
ART 04 DJANOGLY ART GALLERY SATURDAY 11 SEPTEMBER – SUNDAY 31 OCTOBER ADMISSION FREE
DUST ON THE MIRROR Taking its title from the Bhagavad-Gita in which Krishna uses the metaphor of dust on the mirror to explain levels of spiritual consciousness, this exhibition brings together five artists from the eastern and western hemispheres. The works range across a wide spectrum of media including painting, drawing, photography and film, but share common sensibilities rooted in Eastern philosophy and aesthetics. Reflections on flux and mutability and the allegorical properties of dust, and a particular sensitivity to natural material and matter, are rich veins of exploration running through each of the artists’ works. Taiwanese born Charwei Tsai’s recent works consist of Buddhist mantras and poetry inscribed in ink onto the fugitive surfaces of ice, tofu, lotus leaves and mushrooms. Donna Ong (Singapore) is represented by a series of photomontage cave dioramas with obvious stylistic references to Chinese landscape painting. v
Sian Bowen (UK), influenced by her residency in Kyoto in the late 80s, has made a series of photographic prints representing folding paper tea-house models (okoshi-ezu) transposed onto lacquered surfaces and dusted with silver and gold. Susan Derges (UK) also made her first camera-less photographs whilst in Japan, and has become renowned for her images developed underwater at night using the light of the moon. Christopher Cook (UK) has for the last nine years worked with graphite - carbon ‘dust’ suspended in oil and spirit and worked directly on to aluminium sheets - to produce works that hover somewhere between painting and photography, landscape and automatic drawing. The exhibition has been curated for the Djanogly Art Gallery by Tony Godfrey, (Director of Research, Sotheby’s Institute of Art, Singapore) with Neil Walker, Visual Arts Officer, Lakeside. The exhibition will tour to the Institute of Contemporary Art Singapore.
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LECTURES/TALKS
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ARTISTS’ TALKS DJANOGLY ART GALLERY
Tony Godfrey gives the inaugural lecture prior to the preview expanding on the themes explored in Dust on the Mirror
SATURDAY 11 SEPTEMBER 12.30-1.30PM Charwei Tsai and Donna Ong THURSDAY 14 OCTOBER 6-7PM Sian Bowen v
FRIDAY 10 SEPTEMBER 6.30-7.30PM (FOLLOWED BY PRIVATE VIEW) DJANOGLY ART GALLERY LECTURE THEATRE ADMISSION FREE
THURSDAY 21 OCTOBER 6-7PM Christopher Cook All the lectures and talks are free but space is limited so please book in advance by calling the Lakeside 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.
Images from left: Star Field Shoreline, 2008, Susan Derges Sea Mantra, 2009, Charwei Tsai Etymologies, 2007, Donna Ong
ART 06 DJANOGLY ART GALLERY SARA MOORHOUSE
beautiful things for you and your home... SATURDAY 13 & SUNDAY 14 NOVEMBER 10AM - 5PM DH LAWRENCE PAVILION AND DJANOGLY ART GALLERY WEEKEND ADMISSION £5 UNDER 16s FREE
LUSTRE WORKSHOPS LINA PETERSON
SEE PAGE 40 FOR DETAILS OF MUSEUMAKER AT LUSTRE
Whether you’re revitalising your home, updating your look or seeking out that unique Christmas gift, you’ll find all the inspiration you need at Lustre, one of highest quality craft events in the UK.
Lustre also gives you a sneak preview of the freshest and most cutting edge work coming out of the region’s universities. Make a point of seeking out their work in ‘Young Meteors’.
During this special weekend at Lakeside you’ll find 55 of the country’s finest contemporary craft makers, selling everything from fine jewellery, bags and hats to sculptural vases and tableware. Each maker taking part has been specially selected by a panel of experts for the quality and uniqueness of their craft, and each will be on hand to talk to you about the ideas and techniques behind their work.
This year the event will also feature an exhibition of new work by our innovative, prize-winning jeweller Lina Peterson made in response to the University’s archaeology collection during her residency as part of museumaker. www.museumaker.com
Everything at Lustre is on sale, and interest free loans are available thanks to the Arts Council’s Own Art scheme.
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EMMA BURTON
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KITTY AND DUDE
CATHERINE HILLS
REVOLUTIONPAPER MEXIC AN PRINTS 19 10–196 0 A BRITISH MUSEUM TOUR 20 NOVEMBER 2010 – 27 FEBRUARY 2011 DJANOGLY ART GALLERY ADMISSION FREE Between 1910 and 1920, Mexico was convulsed by a socialist revolution that aimed to topple the elite ruling class and improve conditions for society at large. Walls of public buildings were covered with vast murals, and workshops made prints for mass distribution. Some of the finest of these prints were produced by the three great men of Mexican art of the period known as ‘los
tres grandes’: Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros. All the prints in the exhibition come from the British Museum’s collection which has been acquired thanks to the generosity of the Aldama Foundation, Dave and Reba Williams and The Art Fund.
WORKSHOP SATURDAY 11 DECEMBER 1PM – 4PM ANGEAR VISITORS CENTRE FREE – DROP-IN MEXICAN FIESTA FUN! Enjoy the colour of Mexico with various hands-on arts and crafts activities for all the family, combined with a visit to the exhibition.
Image: Diego Rivera, Emiliano Zapata and his Horse, 1932. Presented by The Art Fund. © 2010, Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera & Frida Kahlo Museum Trust, Mexico D.F./DACS
ART 08 DJANOGLY ART GALLERY
ART 09 WALLNER GALLERY
LAKESIDE’S SMALL-SCALE EXHIBITION SPACE DH LAWRENCE PAVILION
SATURDAY 11 SEPTEMBER – SUNDAY 7 NOVEMBER ADMISSION FREE
YELENA POPOVA UNNAMED ’Some towns don’t have names, but real people live there. These towns are not on the map but roads and even railways go there. These towns are not invisible but tourists and visitors never cross their borders.’ The construction of nuclear defense shields by different regimes in different countries harmed thousands of their own citizens. Yelena Popova, a Russian born Nottingham-based artist, reflects on the hidden history and legacy of secret towns involved in the production and deployment of atomic weapons during the Cold War. PREVIEW AND OPPORTUNITY TO MEET THE ARTIST THURSDAY 9 SEPTEMBER 6 - 7PM Please call the Box Office on 0115 846 7777 to book a place.
CRAFT SHOWCASES DJANOGLY ART GALLERY 1 NOVEMBER 2010 – 31 JANUARY 2011
CLAIRE JOHNSTON THE TOOTH FAIRY A contemporary take on the sentimental Victorian keepsake, Claire Johnston’s bold and provocative range of jewellery has been made from castings of her most cherished possessions – her daughter’s baby teeth.
MUSEUM 10
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the university of
NOTTINGHAM MUSEUM With a collection including objects from the Palaeolithic to the post-medieval period, the objects reflect the everyday lives of people in the region and includes Roman and Anglo Saxon material. Displays also include objects from Egypt, Italy and Cyprus.
IMAGINED OBJECTS OF DESIRE Inspired by collections from the museum, this exhibition of work by jewellery maker Lina Peterson is a collaboration with the Museum and Lakeside Arts Centre in a project funded by museumaker. Taking the collections as a starting point and using replicas of museum objects, Lina’s designs are influenced both by the existing details of artefacts and by those that have been lost through time and wear. By filling in the gaps, Lina has created imaginative new pieces of jewellery, which she calls hybrid objects or her Imagined Objects of Desire. The exhibition will continue until 17 December, except 12 - 14 November when the work will be displayed at Lustre.
ADMISSION FREE Open: Monday to Friday, 10am-4pm 0115 951 4815 www.nottingham.ac.uk/museum The Museum is based in the Department of Archaeology. It is along Cut Through Lane opposite the Hallward Library.
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS 11
LUNCHTIME TALKS 1PM – 2PM ADMISSION FREE DJANOGLY THEATRE A series of lunchtime talks will be held to accompany the exhibition. Places are limited so please book your tickets with the Box Office on 0115 846 7777. MONDAY 27 SEPTEMBER
WESTON GALLERY EXHIBITIONS MANUSCRIPTS AND SPECIAL COLLECTIONS FRIDAY 10 SEPTEMBER – SUNDAY 19 DECEMBER ADMISSION FREE
LESSONS FROM THE PAST: READING, WRITING AND ARITHMETIC IN THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM HISTORIC COLLECTIONS
HOW HAS THE TEACHING OF READING CHANGED OVER THE PAST 100 YEARS: AND HAS IT CHANGED FOR THE BETTER? Professor Colin Harrison describes how reading was taught in 1900, and challenges the view that while in fields such as medicine and science methods have changed significantly over the past 100 years, those used by teachers today have failed to evolve. MONDAY 11 OCTOBER
This exhibition looks at the teaching of basic education over the centuries, and the ways in which children were helped along the path to literacy. Drawing heavily on the Briggs Collection of Educational Literature, it features some of the early tools for learning the alphabet, the primers and spelling books intended for young children, and also some of the recreational reading books and games that were available. Exercise books showing progress in arithmetic, and examples of fine penmanship are also displayed. Levels of schooling for young children varied enormously, with some getting none at all, others having rudimentary schooling in free schools, or local village schools, and others learning at home. Snippets from the collections give an insight into the experience of school, focusing mostly on the 18th and 19th centuries. Poorer children were often withdrawn from school after a short time, as the economic needs of the family became pressing, and they were needed as wage-earners. Levels of literacy achieved ranged from the basic ability to read a few words or make a signature, through varying degrees of competence in reading and writing.
THE TEACHING OF READING: FADS, FANCIES AND PHONICS OVER THE CENTURIES Professor Greg Brooks looks into the historic methods of teaching reading; prepare to be thrilled or repelled by such oddities as alphabetic methods, wholesentence methods, and attempts to teach children to read silently from the outset. WEDNESDAY 17 NOVEMBER
SUITABLE FOR CHILDREN? A VERY SHORT HISTORY OF CHILDREN’S LITERATURE Parents have probably always worried about the effects stories might have on their children. This talk by Professor Christine Hall will trace how these concerns have changed over the centuries.
MUSIC 12 FOLK FRIDAY 24 SEPTEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW
The group weaves together influences from other countries and traditions to create a unique and highly energised musical landscape, recognisable as their own yet staying true to their roots.
FIDDLERS’ BID Christopher Stout, fiddle Kevin Henderson, fiddle Maurice Henderson, fiddle Andrew Gifford, fiddle Catriona McKay, keyboards, clarsach Fionan De Barra, guitar Jonathon Ritch, bass The musical tornado known as Fiddlers’ Bid is internationally respected as leading exponents of Shetland’s rich fiddle tradition. Their music is created through a distinctive bond of seven formidable musicians. The band, who self-pen many of their tunes, has taken the many varied and authentic traditions of Shetland and breathed new and dynamic life into them.
POP WEDNESDAY 29 SEPTEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £18 (£15 CONCESSION) £12 RESTRICTED VIEW
THE MAGNETS “A cappella singing straight from the Gods” Edinburgh Evening News
Six guys, six voices, no compromise… The Magnets are the UK’s top professional a cappella group. Their music fuses glorious vocal harmonies with jaw dropping beatboxing to create a sound as rich as any band with instruments... all from the mouth alone. Featured on The Scott Mills Show on Radio One and after successes at Glastonbury and the Isle of Wight Festival
in 2009 this year the band are taking their hit Edinburgh show on the road. ‘Gobsmacked!’ sees The Magnets give iconic songs an all-vocal remix, from Joy Division to the Scissor Sisters, in a show packed with musical sophistication, smart choreography, audience participation and thoroughly British charm.
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CHAMBER THURSDAY 30 SEPTEMBER 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £20 (£15 CONCESSION)
STEPHEN HOUGH PIANO BEETHOVEN Sonata in C sharp minor Op. 27 No. 2 (Moonlight) JANÁCEK Sonata 1. X. 1905 (From the Street) SCRIABIN Sonata Nos. 4 and 5 LISZT Sonata in B minor v
With a singular artistic vision that transcends musical fashions and trends, Stephen Hough is widely regarded as one of the most important and distinctive pianists of his generation. He has appeared with most of the major European and American orchestras and plays recitals regularly in concert halls around the world. He is also a guest at festivals such as Salzburg, Mostly Mozart, Aspen, Ravinia, Tanglewood, Hollywood Bowl, Edinburgh, and the BBC Proms, where he has made over 15 concerto appearances. Recent engagements include performances with the New York and London Philharmonics, the London and San Francisco Symphonies, a US tour with the Russian National Orchestra and a worldwide televised performance with the Berlin Philharmonic under Sir Simon Rattle. The concert finishes at approximately 9.20pm “The most perfect piano playing conceivable” The Guardian
MUSIC 14 CHAMBER SATURDAY 2 OCTOBER 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £15 (£12 CONCESSION)
SINFONIA VIVA WITH COLIN CURRIE MARIMBA MOZART Divertimento K136 Kurt SCHWERTSIK Now you hear me, now you don’t STRAVINSKY Apollo (version for string orchestra)
Taking the leader of the Muses as his subject matter the work achieved popularity in Europe when Stravinsky collaborated for the first time with choreographer George Ballanchine. Stravinsky made major revisions in the 1940s; the version in this programme is for string orchestra. The concert finishes at approximately 9pm
Colin Currie premiered Austrian composer’s Kurt Schwertsik’s witty and mesmerising Marimba Concerto in London in February 2009. Dazzling mallet work and effervescent energy drive an attractive work which was received with great enthusiasm by the audience at its premiere. Stravinsky’s ballet Apollo was commissioned in 1927 for a music festival at the Library of Congress.
WORLD WEDNESDAY 6 OCTOBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW
HASSAN ERRAJI The internationally acclaimed blind veteran multi-instrumentalist and singer from Marrakech and his hot new band of young jazzy Moroccan Rollers bring to life onstage a set of sensational new pieces featured on his long-awaited landmark September 2010 World Village album release Awal Mara. With Kaiser Chiefs’ producer Dave Creffield providing the attitude, the always charismatic Erraji embraces a thoroughly current and very danceable contemporary global sound, whilst these new songs of burning passion memorably re-ignite the ancient and magical fire of stately bass and derbuka-driven Berber rhythms, and move effortlessly across a glamorous mosaic of lush Arabic oud and qanun power-chords and soaring taarab-style strings.
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BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777
CHAMBER SATURDAY 9 OCTOBER 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £15 (£12 CONCESSION)
BRENTANO STRING QUARTET Mark Steinberg, violin Serena Canin, violin Misha Amory, viola Nina Lee, cello MOZART String Quartet in B flat, K589 BERG String Quartet, Op.3 BEETHOVEN String Quartet in C sharp minor, Op.131 Founded in 1992, the Brentano String Quartet has performed worldwide to great acclaim. In 1997 they received the Royal Philharmonic Award for Most Outstanding Debut in the UK. They became the first Resident String Quartet at Princeton University in 1999, a position they still hold.
The Quartet performs extensively in the USA, Europe, Japan and Australia. They are currently recording Beethoven’s late string quartets for the French label AEON.
The concert finishes at approximately 9.15pm 6.45pm Pre-concert talk by Philip Weller
“Hair raising... An ensemble of exceptional insight and communicative gifts.” The Daily Telegraph
CONTEMPORARY WEDNESDAY 13 OCTOBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW
THE GYPSY BIBLE Joe Townsend, music Alasdair Middleton, words Making a violin isn’t easy: it takes 400 years of love, murder and the devil’s whim. Weaving together tales from across Europe, this new folk opera is told through wild gypsy rhythms and a kaleidoscopic array of virtuosic playing.
Whether made from the bones of a young woman’s body or the strange alchemy of the violin-maker’s craft, the old magic and wanton science surrounding the fiddle are brought to life in gloriously dark story and song. With music by Joe Townsend and words by Alasdair Middleton (The Adventures of Pinocchio, The Enchanted Pig). Please note there will be no interval. The performance finishes at approximately 9.20pm
MUSIC 16 CHAMBER THURSDAY 14 OCTOBER 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £20 (£15 CONCESSION)
MARK PADMORE TENOR & SIMON LEPPER PIANO BEETHOVEN Mailied Neue Liebe, neues Leben Adelaide An die ferne Geliebte SCHUBERT Schwanengesang Mark Padmore and Simon Lepper return by popular demand following their recital at Lakeside last season which was undoubtedly one of the year’s highlights. Performing Schubert’s great song cycle Schwanengesang and lieder by Beethoven this promises to be another evening of glorious music-making.
EARLY SATURDAY 16 OCTOBER 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
TREVOR PINNOCK HARPSICHORD Louis COUPERIN Prelude in D minor Elisabeth JACQUET DE LA GUERRE Sarabande in D minor Chaconne in D major JS BACH Partita No.6 in E minor, BWV 830 HANDEL Chaconne and Variations in G major, HWV435 LOCKE Suite in C (Melothesia 1673) RAMEAU QUATRE Pièces de Clavecin Trevor Pinock’s recital was a highlight of Lakeside’s 2009 season, with revelatory musical insights into the range of emotions and keyboard techniques that are possible within the harpsichord repertoire. We are delighted to welcome him back with a programme that promises again to provide an evening of high musical artistry.
The concert finishes at approximately 9.10pm
“The finest, most musical British tenor around today” The Guardian The concert finishes at approximately 9.10pm 6.45pm Pre-concert talk by Mark Audus
17 CHAMBER SATURDAY 23 OCTOBER 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
WALDSTEIN ENSEMBLE Gerhard Schulz, violin Guy Ben-Ziony, violin Lilia Schulz-Bayrova, cello Noam Greenberg, piano MOZART Piano Quartet No.1 in G minor, K478 FAURE Piano Quartet No.2 in G minor, Op.45 BRAHMS Piano Quartet No.1 in G minor, Op.25 Gerhard Schulz, who was a member of the world-famous Alban Berg Quartet from 1978 formed the Waldstein Ensemble when he met Noam Greenberg, violist Guy Ben-Ziony and cellist Lilia Schulz-Bayrova at the
UNIVERSITY SUNDAY 24 OCTOBER 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £8 (£5 CONCESSION, £4 UON STUDENTS)
UNIVERSITY PHILHARMONIA Jonathan Tilbrook, conductor HAYDN Symphony No.21 in A PURCELL Suite from Dido and Aeneas PANUFNIK Autumn Music FALLA El amor brujo The University Philharmonia presents a typically diverse and enterprising programme to commence the academic year. The serenity and wit of Haydn’s Symphony No. 21 acts as foil to a selection of instrumental music from Purcell’s exquisite opera. Panufnik’s Autumn Music was composed in 1960 as a memorial to a friend, and as a meditation on the season of autumn. The programme concludes on a more exuberant note, with Falla’s suite from ‘Love, the Magician’. The concert finishes at approximately 9.20pm
BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777
International Musicians Seminar Prussia Cove. Recent engagements include concerts at the Konzerthaus Vienna as well as throughout Austria, Germany and the UK.
The concert finishes at approximately 9.30pm 6.45pm Pre-concert talk by Philip Weller
MUSIC 18 JAZZ WEDNESDAY 27 OCTOBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW
SOLVEIG SLETTAHJELL AND THE SLOW MOTION ORCHESTRA Solveig Slettahjell, vocals & piano Sjur Miljeteig, trumpet & electroncs Even Hermansen, guitar Jo Berger Myhre, bass & barython guitar Per Oddvar Johansen, drums & electronics In her native Norway, Solveig Slettahjell has for some time been considered one of their most celebrated jazz singers. Her diverse repertoire - mixing country, jazz standards, with the odd song by Prince or Tom Waits thrown in – is sung in her utterly captivating voice. Slettahjell and her Slow Motion Orchestra strip songs to their bare essentials, creating a kind of
dreamy, subtly skewed style which nods as much to gospel, soul, hymnody, folk and pop as it does to jazz and blues. “Solvieg has exceptional taste in phrasing and striking that fine balance between cool and emotion... absolutely compelling.” Peter Bacon, Birmingham Post
CONTEMPORARY WEDNESDAY 3 NOVEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW
ICEBREAKER Brian ENO Apollo: This is for all Mankind Widely regarded as Brian Eno’s best and most influential ambient album, Apollo was written for Al Reinert’s documentary on the Apollo space missions, For All Mankind. Music from the album also appeared in the films 28 Days Later, Traffic and Trainspotting. This show returns the music to its original conception, as a non-narrative counterpart to NASA footage from the Apollo programme: matching the mesmerizing beauty and tranquil mystery of the moon and Earth; the dizzying scale and humbling feat of engineering involved in taking people to the moon; and capturing the banality and the humour of the astronauts as they skitter about the moon’s surface.
Produced by Third Ear Live realisation of Apollo first commissioned and produced by the Science Museum & Sound and Music Apollo image: SSPL/NASA
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FOLK TUESDAY 9 NOVEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW
ALY BAIN ALE MÖLLER & BRUCE MOLSKY
CHAMBER THURSDAY 11 NOVEMBER 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £12 (£9 CONCESSION)
THE SCHUBERT ENSEMBLE William Howard, piano Simon Blendis, violin Douglas Paterson, viola Jane Salmon, cello SCHUBERT String Trio in B flat D471 ENESCU Piano Quartet No.1 SCHUMANN Piano Quartet in E flat, Op.47 The Schubert Ensemble is known for its inspired programming choices and in this concert they perform the rarely heard First Piano Quartet by Romanian composer and violin virtuoso George Enescu written in 1909 at the age of 28. “...they gave a performance so forthright and passionate that at times it sounded as if a chamber orchestra were playing. A hugely impressive concert” The Strad
The concert finishes at approximately 9.15pm 6.45pm Pre-concert talk by The Schubert Ensemble
A melodically and rhythmically exciting collaboration by three of the world’s leading musicians sharing their Celtic, Nordic and Appalachian cultures. Aly Bain is Scotland’s supreme traditional style fiddler. With multi-instrumentalist Ale Möller, he recently created the album Fully Rigged celebrating their shared Nordic heritage. American fiddler Bruce Molsky has for twenty years explored traditional music from an astonishingly broad range of cultures.
MUSIC 20 UNIVERSITY SUNDAY 14 NOVEMBER 7.30PM GREAT HALL, TRENT BUILDING £8 (£5 CONCESSION, £4 UON STUDENTS)
UNIVERSITY WIND ORCHESTRA UNIVERSITY BRASS ENSEMBLE Kieran O’Riordan, conductors Jamie Njoku-Goodwin Epic Melodies and Looney Tunes
JAZZ TUESDAY 16 NOVEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW
THE BAD PLUS Ethan Iverson, piano Reid Anderson, bass David King, drums
Photo: Cameron Wittig
Join the University Wind Orchestra and Brass Ensemble in an evening celebrating all aspects of the silver screen. The epic melodies of John Williams’s moving Hymn to the Fallen (from Saving Private Ryan) and Hans Zimmer’s stirring portrait of noble sacrifice in Gladiator are counterbalanced by the sublime lunacy of Raymond Scott’s Powerhouse (the music which launched a thousand cartoons) and Paul Hart’s blistering soundtrack to an imaginary cartoon, dished up with enormous wit and panache.
Danny ELFMAN Theme from ‘The Simpsons’ Raymond SCOTT Powerhouse John WILLIAMS Hymn to the Fallen Hans ZIMMER Music from ‘Gladiator’ Paul HART Cartoon
The concert finishes at approximately 9.20pm
The Bad Plus has exploded all notions of what a jazz piano trio should sound like. Drawing on sources as diverse as classical, jazz, rock, pop and beyond, they have created a singular aesthetic that forces even the most sceptical listener to rethink the commonly held notions of what differentiates one style of music from another. Their latest album, For All I Care, features music from Nirvana to Milton Babbitt, via Pink Floyd and Stravinsky.
“...a reminder that American jazz hasn’t gone to sleep. Play any of their albums and their collective sound leaps out of your speaker, steps all over your furniture and scares the bejesus out of the cat.” Observer Music Monthly
21 CONTEMPORARY WEDNESDAY 17 NOVEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £12 (£9 CONCESSION) £6 RESTRICTED VIEW
RICHARD DURRANT GUITAR
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“Extraordinary virtuosity… A simply unmissable treat.” Classic FM Magazine 2009 The concert finishes at approximately 9.50pm
‘Guitar Whisperer’ Richard Durrant is one of the UK’s foremost guitar virtuosos. His ‘Guitar Whisperer’ show is based on classical guitar repertoire, including works by Agustin Barrios, Francisco Tarrega, and Isaac Ibeniz. The programme includes Walton’s Five Bagatelles, a stunning version of Steve Reich’s Electric Counterpoint, accompanied by animated film; and a striking take on Mike Oldfield’s Tubular Bells. Graphics for ‘The Guitar Whisperer’ have been specially created by Mike Charlton (Electric Counterpoint) and Malcolm Buchanan-Dick (Tubular Bells)
EARLY THURSDAY 18 NOVEMBER 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £15 (£12 CONCESSION)
EMMA KIRKBY SOPRANO & ANTHONY ROOLEY LUTE Mutabilitie Cantos - Songs of Time and Change We are delighted to welcome back to the Djanogly Recital Hall Dame Emma Kirkby and Anthony Rooley for a varied programme of music by English composers of the Renaissance including John Dowland, Henry Purcell, John Blow, Thomas Campion, and William Lawes. “For two decades, Emma Kirkby’s clear, agile voice has epitomised the pure sound of early music. She remains one of the treasures of the music world” Toronto Globe and Mail The concert finishes at approximately 9.10pm
MUSIC 22 CHAMBER SATURDAY 20 NOVEMBER 7.30PM DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL £15 (£12 CONCESSION)
OLEG MARSHEV PIANO PROKOFIEV Sonata No.4 in C minor, Op.29 PROKOFIEV Visions Fugitive MUSSORGSKY Pictures at an Exhibition Oleg Marshev is a fifth-generation representative of Russian pianism that can be traced directly back to Liszt through his teacher at the Moscow Conservatory, Mikhail Voskresensky. He has won numerous competitions and performed at prestigious venues worldwide. Marshev’s recording of the complete works for solo piano by Prokofiev on five CDs for Danacord Records was reviewed by The Gramophone as ‘one of the most authoritative and impassioned performances on disc so far’.
FOLK WEDNESDAY 24 NOVEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW
LÚNASA
Marshev has since recorded the complete works for piano and orchestra by the great Russian Four: Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninov, Prokofiev and Shostakovich. “Marshev is a phenomenon a master of every mood… but above all at controlling sensibility of intelligence and feeling.” BBC Music Magazine The concert finishes at approximately 9.15pm
Lúnasa is one for the most sought-after bands on the international Celtic music scene. The band’s inventive arrangements, which include jazz and other improvisational styles, redefines Irish acoustic music, moving into surprising new territory. In April this year Lúnasa celebrated the release of their new album Lá Nua (Irish for ‘new day’). This highly-anticipated album came out of extensive rehearsal and recording on location in the beautiful Cooley Mountains in the northeast of Ireland.
“…the hottest Irish acoustic band on the planet.” Irish Voice “Lúnasa’s musicianship is awesome… I’d sell my soul to be able to play like that.” Mojo
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UNIVERSITY SATURDAY 27 NOVEMBER 7.30PM ALBERT HALL, NOTTINGHAM £12 (£9 CONCESSION, £5 UON STUDENTS)
UNIVERSITY CHOIR & UNIVERSITY PHILHARMONIA Kishani Jayasinghe & Jane Harrington, sopranos Sarah Tenant-Flowers & Jonathan Tilbrook, conductors SHOSTAKOVICH Symphony No.5 MOZART ‘Great’ Mass in C minor, K427 The University Philharmonia opens the concert with Shostakovich’s dramatic, moving, and deeply personal Fifth Symphony, a work which received over half an hour’s applause at its première. One of the tragedies of music history is that Mozart’s Mass in C Minor K427 (1782) was abandoned before completion. Those movements and fragments which remain are of brilliant conception, testament to a composer at the height of his imaginative powers and, free at last from the constraints imposed upon him by his former Salzburg employer Archbishop Colloredo, able to explore these within a large-scale sacred work which justifiably earns its epithet the ‘Great’ mass. The concert finishes at approximately 9.20pm
MUSIC 24 UNIVERSITY
LUNCHTIME CONCERTS DJANOGLY RECITAL HALL 1.15PM ADMISSION FREE Student recitals are held weekly on Tuesdays and Fridays during term time beginning Tuesday 28 September. For more information please visit www.mussoc.org.uk or www.blowsoc.co.uk or contact the Lakeside Box Office on 0115 846 7777 from 20 September.
COMING SOON... EARLY TUESDAY 14 DECEMBER 7.30PM SOUTHWELL MINSTER TICKETS: £8 - £22
ORCHESTRA OF THE AGE OF ENLIGHTENMENT CHOIR OF THE AGE OF ENLIGHTENMENT
John Butt, conductor Julia Doyle, soprano Meg Bragle, mezzo-soprano Nicholas Mulroy, tenor Matthew Brook, bass BACH Christmas Oratorio parts 1, 2, 3 & 6
This is a co-promotion between Orchestras Live, Nottingham Classics, Lakeside Arts Centre and Newark & Sherwood District Council. To book tickets please contact the Royal Concert Hall Box Office on 0115 989 5555
THEATRE 25 DRAMA THURSDAY 9 SATURDAY 11 SEPTEMBER 8PM HIGHFIELDS PARK - SEATED £12 (£9 CONCESSION) THURS 9 SEPTEMBER ALL TICKETS £10 SUITABLE FOR AGES 12+ RUNNING TIME: 75 MINS APPROX
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It’s summer and school’s out. Five lads act out their dreams and fears in their local playground in Scotland. Their game, known as ‘broncoing’, is fast and dangerous. Broncoing is a sign of manhood – which Decky and his friends all impatiently await. Little do they know how suddenly and abruptly it will be forced upon them this summer…
GRID IRON PRESENTS
DECKY DOES A BRONCO WRITTEN BY DOUGLAS MAXWELL DIRECTED BY BEN HARRISON ‘To bronco a swing you stand on it, worky up to the bumps, level with the bar, kick the swing over your head and jump beneath it.’ Douglas Maxwell
This Scotsman Fringe First and Stage Award winning show is a theatrical event unlike any other. Eight actors – all trained acrobats - play out this powerful and vivid tale of childhood innocence and the perilous passage into adulthood. “A precious piece of theatre that captures all the fragility of childhood”. The Guardian
Photo: Douglas Jones Pictured: Cast of Decky 2000.
PLEASE NOTE WHILST THIS PERFORMANCE IS SEATED (ON STOOLS), IT WILL TAKE PLACE OUTSIDE IN HIGHFIELDS PARK. WE RECOMMEND THAT PEOPLE WRAP UP WARMLY AND BRING A WATERPROOF JACKET!
THEATRE 26 DRAMA SUNDAY 19 SEPTEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW SUITABLE FOR AGES 12+ RUNNING TIME: 70 MINS
3,600 seconds of unbelievable kinetic entertainment. If you’ve seen the films, read the books and named your firstborn Frodo, don’t miss Ross’ zany take on the everpopular epic saga.
ONE MAN LORD OF THE RINGS WRITTEN AND PERFORMED BY CHARLES ROSS
“The films are high quality cinema and Ross is high quality entertainment… 5 stars for unbelievable talent.” Edinburgh Guide
Charles Ross, creator of the hugely successful One Man Star Wars Trilogy, performs his equally hilarious follow-up, One Man Lord of the Rings, in which he recreates the enchanting world of Middle-earth, armed with nothing more than a pair of elbow pads and his outrageous imagination. No props or costumes are required as Ross hurtles through the Tolkien trilogy - The Fellowship of The Ring, The Two Towers and The Return of The King - in just
“If you liked The Lord of the Rings trilogy, you’ll love Charlie Ross’ version.” Sir Ian McKellen
The Lord of the Rings and the characters, items, events and places therein are trademarks or registered trademarks of The Saul Zaentz Company d/b/a Tolkien Enterprises. All rights reserved.
DANCE THURSDAY 23 SEPTEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £10 (£8 CONCESSION) RUNNING TIME: 100 MINS APPROX INCLUDING INTERVAL DANCE4 PRESENTS
SHIFT Three choreographers show work from their current performance projects. Nottingham and Berlin artist Gabriele Reuter will be sharing a preview of her new work - a trio for four dancers around unlikely obstacles and invisible sets.
LOOK OUT FOR: ONE MAN STAR WARS TRILOGY at Lakeside on 17 May 2011.
ATMA use movement vocabulary from Bharata Natyam to evolve an inspirational, unpredictable, contemporary dance aesthetic. Company choreographer Mayuri Boonham shows some work from Ghatam, a piece inspired by composer Steve Reich’s Drumming. Count Two, by Dance4 Associate Artist Nicola Conibere, presents a series of familiar images within a shifting visual framework. Through replication, repetition and categorisation it presents and represents bodies and situations we might recognise with those we might imagine, in a lively process of evoking and shifting meaning. www.dance4.co.uk POST-SHOW Meet the artists in the café following the performance.
Photo: Beatrice Collier
27 DANCE/COMEDY TUESDAY 28 SEPTEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW SUITABLE FOR AGES 14+ RUNNING TIME: 60 MINS
DANCE TICKET DEAL
BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777
New Art Club, Jeremy Wade, The Featherstonehaughs, Candoco Dance Company ★ BUY TICKETS TO THREE OF THESE PERFORMANCES SAVE £5 ★ BUY TICKETS TO ALL FOUR PERFORMANCES SAVE £8 *Tickets must be purchased in one transaction
DANCE4 PRESENTS
NEW ART CLUB THIS IS NOW It’s 1983 - Madonna releases her first album, Culture Club are top of the charts with Karma Chameleon, and 13 year old future contemporary dance star Tom Roden illegally tapes the first Now That’s What I Call Music LP onto a C60 cassette. Fast-forward 26 years - Madonna is a divorcee on a mission to adopt Africa, Boy George has been in prison and Tom has teamed up with Pete Shenton to form New Art Club. Finding the cassette one
day, the two of them listen to it and a brand new show is born. Join Britain’s funniest dance duo as they deconstruct this first ever Now album and jump headlong into filthy 80’s gunk; will Tom and Pete be able to save themselves and the audience from drowning in nostalgia? www.newartclub.org www.dance4.co.uk
● PLEASE NOTE: This show contains some adult content
COMEDY THURSDAY 30 SEPTEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £12 (£9CONCESSION) £6 RESTRICTED VIEW SUITABLE FOR AGES 16+ RUNNING TIME: 110 MINS INCLUDING INTERVAL
JARRED CHRISTMAS STANDS UP One of New Zealand’s funniest exports. Following sell out shows in Edinburgh and London, a starring role in a BBC2 sitcom, winning an award, and dancing like Beyonce for pot noodle, Jarred Christmas returns to do what he does best…stand-up. Winner of Chortle Comedy Award 2010 “One of the funniest men to pick up a microphone” Tim Arthur, Comedy Editor, Time Out.
PLEASE NOTE 16+ THIS SHOW MAY CONTAIN STRONG LANGUAGE
THEATRE 28 DRAMA DOUBLE BILL FRIDAY 1 OCTOBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £12 (£9 CONCESSION) £6 RESTRICTED VIEW SUITABLE FOR AGES 16+ RUNNING TIME: 140 MINS INCLUDING INTERVAL
ZOO INDIGO PRESENT
MICHAEL PINCHBECK
UNDER THE COVERS
THE POST SHOW PARTY SHOW
In an interactive media performance Zoo Indigo virtually take their babies on tour so they can perform while you babysit. Combining autobiography and cutting edge technology, the performance duo attempt to re-enact the movie star roles they aspire to with help from two flat pack daddies, but the day-to-day-ness of their real lives keeps interrupting. Under the Covers is an intimate, tender and humorous meditation on the way in which artists juggle the work they make with the lives they choose to lead. www.zooindigo.co.uk
Award-winning writer and performance maker Michael Pinchbeck takes his parents, Tony and Vivienne, on tour to recreate the post-show party where they met in 1970 after an amateur dramatic production of The Sound of Music. Mixing text from the past and present with movement to the real-time soundtrack of The Sound of Music, The Post Show Party Show asks what is present and what is absent, what is professional and what is amateur. Selected for the British Council’s Edinburgh Showcase 2009. Supported by Dance4, Nottingham City Council and the National Lottery through Arts Council England.
“A teasing, gently witty and entertaining piece about the shifting nature of reality... there is something here in the ephemeral nature of performance and of life itself.” The Guardian www.postshowparty.blogspot.com www.michaelpinchbeck.co.uk
CHILDREN & FAMILIES SUNDAY 3 OCTOBER 1.30PM & 3.30PM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £6 SUITABLE FOR AGES 2-4 YEARS RUNNING TIME: 35 MINS CATHERINE WHEELS THEATRE COMPANY IN ASSOCIATION WITH BRUNTON THEATRE, MUSSELBURGH PRESENT
WHITE Come with us into the sparkling world of White where everything is bright and new. It gleams and dazzles and shines in the night. But someone has to keep it that way and there's a problem. All anyone can think about in this white world is red…yellow…green…and blue…
White is a playful and highly visual new show for very young children and is a perfect first time theatre experience. Catherine Wheels is an award-winning and internationally acclaimed children’s theatre company. “One of Scotland’s top theatre groups for children” The Scotsman www.catherinewheels.co.uk
29 DANCE TICKET DEAL DANCE TUESDAY 5 OCTOBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW RUNNING TIME: 60 MINS
New Art Club, Jeremy Wade, The Featherstonehaughs, Candoco Dance Company ★ SEE PAGE 27
DANCE4 PRESENTS
THE FEATHERSTONEHAUGHS EDITS This eagerly anticipated new work by Lea Anderson, one of the most important and exciting figures in British contemporary dance for over 25 years, is performed by The Featherstonehaughs, her six-strong all-male company. Edits creates a totally original live world, drawing on the peculiar elasticity of filmic time, the dramatic cutting of film editing, and the ability to heighten effect through extreme close up. Featuring costumes by three-time Oscar winner Sandy Powell and an original live score; Edits ventures into new territory. POST-SHOW DISCUSSION Join Dance4 for a discussion about the parallels between choreography and filmmaking. www.dance4.co.uk
CHILDREN & FAMILIES SUNDAY 10 OCTOBER 12.30PM & 3PM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £6 SUITABLE FOR AGES 3 – 5 YEARS & FAMILIES RUNNING TIME: 50 MINS STATE OF EMERGENCY PRODUCTIONS PRESENTS
MINI MISSION, THE JINGLE DRESS Inspired by Native American beliefs, this is the story of Rayleen whose Grandma has left her a jingle dress a traditional dress that makes a sound as you dance. At first Rayleen could not make the dress jingle at all, but with a little help from her friends she found her own special dance to make the dress jingle all day long.
Photo: Matilda Temperley
THEATRE 30 DANCE SATURDAY 16 OCTOBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £7 (£5 CONCESSION) RUNNING TIME: 90MINS APPROX
This exciting celebration of cross-cultural dialogue and performance is part of a wider creative exchange between TanzZeit and Dance4.
Dance4 provides international opportunities for young artists with support from Igniting Ambition: the East Midlands Legacy Trust UK programme www.dance4.co.uk
DANCE4 PRESENTS
YOUTH SHIFT An evening of exceptional international dance from young artists featuring Flying High Youth Dance Company (Nottingham), Tanzzeit Jugendcompany (Berlin), Dance4’s CAT - Centre for Advanced Training (East Midands) Candoco Youth Dance Company (UK). Choreography by Miguel Pereira (Portugal), Matthias Sperling (UK), Pete Shenton - New Art Club (UK), Livia Patrizi (Germany), Florian Bilbao (Germany), Natalie Ayton (UK) and Sarah Blanc (UK).
CHILDREN & FAMILIES SUNDAY 17 OCTOBER 3PM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £6 SUITABLE FOR AGES 6+ & FAMILIES RUNNING TIME: 60 MINS JAMES CAMPBELL’S
COMEDY AND SONGS 4 KIDS Last seen at Lakeside during the Wheee! Festival weekend in June 2010, James Campbell returns with his brand new stand-up comedy show mixed with funny songs about life, sausages and how superheroes go to the toilet… “He belongs on stage.” The New York Times “My seven-year-old howled with laughter and so did I.” The Daily Mail
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BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777
CHILDREN & FAMILIES SATURDAY 23 OCTOBER 7PM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £7 SUITABLE FOR AGES 6+ & FAMILIES RUNNING TIME: 90 MINS APPROX INCLUDING INTERVAL FLYING PANDAS PRESENT
THE STORY TRADERS OF SICHUAN An original new show in which a troupe of Western performers and musicians combine their skills with masters of the Sichuan Opera. With an amazing array of costumes, acrobatic routines, evocative song and exotic percussion, you’ll encounter wise old men, fiery women, greedy emperors, and fairytale lovers who turn into butterflies.
MUSICAL THEATRE / DRAMA MONDAY 25 & TUESDAY 26 OCTOBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW SUITABLE FOR ADULTS & OLDER CHILDREN RUNNING TIME: 120 MINS APPROX INCLUDING INTERVAL NEW PERSPECTIVES PRESENT
DOLLY BY ANDY BARRETT The cloning meets country and western musical! When Dolly the sheep burst onto the world stage in 1996, the first ever mammal cloned from an adult cell (and named after Dolly Parton in honour of the mammary gland from which that cell was taken!), she became, quite simply, an overnight sensation. Now the team behind the phenomenally successful The Hired Man bring you the (almost true) story of a young woman and her part in one of the most incredible and
far-reaching events of the last twenty years. Packed full of Dolly Parton classics, Dolly playfully explores the science and ethics of cloning and asks what really makes us who we are - nature, nurture, or the power of our dreams? “Wonderfully entertaining – has the makings of a West End hit” **** The Times on Those Magnificent Men
And somewhere amidst this Chineseinspired adventure will be the man who can change face - a highlight of traditional Sichuan Opera and a closely guarded secret - it really does have to be seen to be believed! Supported by the Cultural Olympiad’s Igniting Ambition scheme, this production promises to introduce audiences to one of the world’s great theatrical techniques!
SCARY BITS WARNING As with all stories where good and evil battle it out, there will be some scary bits along the way!
THEATRE 32 DANCE FRIDAY 29 OCTOBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW SUITABLE FOR AGES 16+ RUNNING TIME: 60 MINS
Photo: Anna von Kooij
PLEASE NOTE This performance contains Strobe Lighting.
DANCE4 PRESENTS
JEREMY WADE I OFFER MYSELF TO THEE
explores the magnification of sensation and invites the audience to follow him on an ecstatic psychedelic journey.
A generous gift to the audience, a tightrope walk between surrender and control, emphasizing the fragility of live performance.
POST-SHOW Improvised music performance by Jeremy Wade and his musicians.
A compelling performer, Wade gives himself over to his movement material, his style, theatrical machinery and the audience. Together with live onstage sound created by musicians Brendan Dougherty and Keith O’Brien and his own exceptional vocals, Jeremy Wade
“a sensual communion with the audience in an intoxication of light and saturating sound.” Tanz Journal 2009 www.jeremywade.de www.dance4.co.uk
DANCE TICKET DEAL New Art Club, Jeremy Wade, The Featherstonehaughs, Candoco Dance Company ★ SEE PAGE 27
CHILDREN & FAMILIES SUNDAY 31 OCTOBER 12.30PM & 3PM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £6 SUITABLE FOR AGES 3+ & FAMILIES RUNNING TIME: 45 MINS THEATRE HULLABALOO IN PARTNERSHIP WITH THE EGG
THE NIGHT PIRATES INSPIRED BY THE BOOK BY PETER HARRIS AND DEBORAH ALLWRIGHT When dark shadows come stealing down Tom’s bedroom walls he thinks it might be monsters. But Tom’s not afraid, for he’s a brave little boy. So he peeps out of the window and what should he see but PIRATES. Stranger still they’re GIRL PIRATES, stealing the front of his house! In this fantastical moonlit adventure with puppets, song and ballet-dancing pirates, Tom crosses the high seas and joins the pirates on an island adventure. The Night Pirates is presented with kind permission from Egmont Publishing. www.theatrehullabaloo.org.uk
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PLEASE NOTE DRAMA FRIDAY 5 NOVEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £12 (£9 CONCESSION) £6 RESTRICTED VIEW SUITABLE FOR AGES 15+ RUNNING TIME: 60 MINS
This performance contains very strong language
PAINES PLOUGH AND LIVERPOOL EVERYMAN AND PLAYHOUSE PRESENT
TINY VOLCANOES By Laurence Wilson Directed by James Grieve Featuring Kevin Harvey and Michael Ryan The Great British Bulldog has been usurped by snarling hybrids. The bowler hat has morphed into the hoodie. The culture of polite society is now a culture of blame and hatred as our land of hope and glory is torn into extremes. Fusing theatre, comedy, dance and tubthumping tunes, two actors play a cast of thousands in a fast-paced, hilarious and excoriating inquisition into broken Britain.
Strap yourselves in for a rollercoaster ride through the dilapidated attractions of noble old Blighty exposing the millions of tiny volcanoes bubbling up through our green and pleasant land. With hymns.
COMEDY SATURDAY 6 NOVEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £12 (£9 CONCESSION) £6 RESTRICTED VIEW SUITABLE FOR ALL AGES, PARENTAL GUIDANCE RECOMMENDED FOR THE VERY YOUNG* RUNNING TIME: 80 MINS
A hilarious cartoon journey through the shifting borderlands between sense and nonsense.
THE COLOUR OF NONSENSE
At the studios of Splash, Line & Scuro, Cutting Edge Conceptualists, things haven’t been looking too hot of late. Splash is paralyzed by indecision and all the bright young Turks are queuing up, eager to knock him off his perch. Then out of the blue comes a salivatingly mysterious million pound commission.
With Forkbeard’s famed mix of visual trickery, film and outlandish story-lines, The Colour of Nonsense is an exuberant satire on an art and theatre world always in search of the ‘New’. As mutinous drawings throw the studios into animated confusion, only Edward Lear’s “Dong with a Luminous Nose” seems able to shed any light into the chiaroscuro of chaos. “80 generous minutes of madly inventive, thoughtful fun” **** The Guardian. www.forkbeardfantasy.co.uk
*PLEASE NOTE This performance contains mild swearing.
Photo: Maisie Hill
FORKBEARD FANTASY COMIC THEATRE & FILM PRESENTS
Tiny Volcanoes has been developed with support from the Orchard Project Theatre Residency Program. www.orchardproject.com
THEATRE 34 CHILDREN & FAMILIES SUNDAY 7 NOVEMBER 11.30AM, 12.30PM, 2.30PM, 3.30PM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £6 RUNNING TIME: 30 MINS SUITABLE FOR AGES 2-5 YEARS & FAMILIES LITTLE ANGEL THEATRE COMPANY PRESENTS
HANDA’S SURPRISE
PLEASE NOTE Audience members sit on the floor around the performance area and capacity is limited to 50.
Set in the warmth and colour of a Kenyan village, this beautiful production recounts the gentle story of a young girl, Handa, taking fruits in a basket to her friend Akeyo. On her colourful journey Handa encounters various mischievous animals who steal her fruit including a monkey, an ostrich, a zebra, a giraffe, an elephant, an antelope and a parrot. Handa’s Surprise is an adaptation of the much-loved children’s book by Eileen Browne, brought to life with intricately carved rod and hand puppets. “A short sunshiny little show with a delicious citrus finish.” Time Out Critics’ Choice
DRAMA THURSDAY 18 NOVEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £12 (£9 CONCESSION) £6 RESTRICTED VIEW SUITABLE FOR AGES 12+ RUNNING TIME: 80 MINS, NO INTERVAL USEFUL DONKEY THEATRE COMPANY IN PARTNERSHIP WITH YORK THEATRE ROYAL PRESENT
RUPERT BROOKE Written by Mark Payton Directed by Juliet Forster Designed by Anna Morris Featuring Jonathan Race
POST-SHOW DISCUSSION Join director Juliet Forster in a discussion with Jonathan Race and writer Mark Payton.
Rupert Brooke is the moving story of the legendary war poet. It follows Brooke from his time at Cambridge University to his death in the Aegean Sea in 1915. The play uncovers more of the real man, more of what lies beneath the myth of a young, beautiful, fallen warrior. It reveals a far more complex and radical man, a man with a tumultuous personal life and a man not afraid to shock his audience. Featuring many of Brooke’s iconic poems, Rupert Brooke is the fascinating journey of a man who in his own words saw his life as ‘a flash between darkness’ “For some 75 minutes we are held spellbound by the portrayal of the young poet.” Doncaster Free Press
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AERIAL/DANCE/DRAMA SATURDAY 20 NOVEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £12 (£9 CONCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW SUITABLE FOR AGES 14+ RUNNING TIME: 55 MINS APPROX
Created by aerial director Vicki Amedume, animator Nic Rawlings from Paper Cinema, and mentor Mark Murphy (VTol). Upswing has established itself at the forefront of aerial interdisciplinary circus in the UK.
UPSWING PRESENT
Produced in association with Albany Theatre, Jacksons Lane, London Intermational Mime Festival and Norden Farm Centre for the Arts.
FALLEN Alone in a foreign land, caught in a place of transition, a woman turns from reality to escape to a place where dreams reunite her with all she has lost in her flight. Weaving dance, aerial, circus, shadows and animation with African spirituality and a modern narrative, Fallen creates a dynamic and poetic portrait of eternal love, overwhelming loss and the resilience of the human spirit, whilst questioning what it means to be a woman and a mother when caught in the process of change as one culture meets another.
CHILDREN & FAMILIES SUNDAY 21 NOVEMBER 12.30PM & 3PM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £6 SUITABLE FOR AGES 4+ & FAMILIES RUNNING TIME: 50 MINS APPROX M6 THEATRE
SUNFLOWERS AND SHEDS Fresh from their touring success with One Little Word, M6 return with a brand new show. On the allotments down by the railway, Frank’s peaceful routine is turned upside down by the arrival of lively Isabella and her chickens on the neighbouring plot. But through the changing seasons, the seeds of friendship grow alongside the raspberries and runner beans…
“…with terrific input from aerial experts, this is one hell of a ride.” **** Guardian (on The Wicked Lady)
THEATRE 36 Choreographer Emanuel Gat creates an intricate sextet that shows the dancers’ refined musicality and delights with its detailed and exquisite movement in this piece of ‘pure’ dance.
DANCE4 PRESENTS
The seriously playful experimentalist Wendy Houstoun completes the programme with a humorous, understated and theatrical work that plays havoc with Shakespeare’s The Tempest. A sign language interpreter joins the company for Houstoun’s piece.
CANDOCO DANCE COMPANY RENDITIONS TRIPLE BILL Three times winner of the New York Bessie Dance Award, Sarah Michelson combines a sense of grandeur with an eye for detail in a visually arresting, powerful work set to an original cinematic score by acclaimed composer Pete Drungle.
PRE-SHOW Discussion about the challenges and opportunities of an integrated dance company. www.candoco.co.uk www.dance4.co.uk
COMEDY THURSDAY 25 NOVEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £10 (£7 CONVCESSION) £5 RESTRICTED VIEW SUITABLE FOR AGES 16+ RUNNING TIME: 110 MINS INCLUDING INTERVAL
ANDREW LAWRENCE THE TOO UGLY FOR TELEVISION TOUR
‘Lawrence packs more laughs into one of his ninety second rants than most comics manage in half an hour’ The Scotsman
As seen on BBC 1’s Michael Mcintyre’s Roadshow and Channel 4’s Best of The Brighton Comedy Festival.
‘One of the funniest and brightest young talents of the UK stand-up circuit’ The Guardian
Life’s not fair and the world’s a disgusting place to live. Andrew Lawrence tries to find some consolation.
www.andrewlawrencecomedy.co.uk
PLEASE NOTE 16+ THIS SHOW MAY CONTAIN STRONG LANGUAGE
New Art Club, Jeremy Wade, The Featherstonehaughs, Candoco Dance Company ★ SEE PAGE 27
PLEASE NOTE This performance contains Strobe Lighting.
Photo: Hugo Glendinning
DANCE TUESDAY 23 NOVEMBER 8PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW SUITABLE FOR AGES 12+ RUNNING TIME: 105 MINS INCL. INTERVAL
DANCE TICKET DEAL
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BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777
DRAMA FRIDAY 26 & SATURDAY 27 NOVEMBER 7.30PM DJANOGLY THEATRE £15 (£12 CONCESSION) £9 RESTRICTED VIEW SUITABLE FOR AGES 11+ RUNNING TIME: 150 MINS INCLUDING INTERVAL ICARUS THEATRE COLLECTIVE AND HARROGATE THEATRE PRESENT
HAMLET: PRINCE OF DENMARK Does revenge justify murder? Shakespeare’s most iconic and challenging play tells the tale of young Prince Hamlet avenging his father’s death and fighting the new King who stole his throne. Do I murder the king now or wait for proof? Are women constant and worthy or flippant and unfaithful? Is life worth living? Hamlet asks these questions as he struggles to find one moral absolute in a corrupt world. To be or not to be… Brought vividly to life, blending traditional and physical theatre with an original musical score, Icarus Theatre Collective combines some of literature’s most vibrant language and characters. This brand new production portrays Shakespeare’s definitive tragedy of justice and revenge.
CHILDREN & FAMILIES SUNDAY 28 NOVEMBER 12.30PM & 3PM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £6 SUITABLE FOR AGES 4-7 YEARS & FAMILIES
THE BUG AND THE BUTTERFLY: A POEM ON SIX LEGS Inspired by the poetry of Frederico García Lorca, this is an exciting new dance and music theatre piece for children and their families.
In a world where a dew drop is the size of a swimming pool and a flower is as tall as a skyscraper, an insect falls in love with a beautiful butterfly. A heartwarming story in miniature using Spanish and English text, and exploring love, friendship, reaching for the moon and dancing leaf to leaf.
COMING SOON... 38
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CHRISTMAS AT LAKESIDE!
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EARLY BIRD DEAL BOOK YOUR TICKETS BEFORE 1 OCTOBER AND SAVE £1 PER TICKET FOR PERFORMANCES ON THE 4, 5, 11 AND 12 DECEMBER.
WORKSHOPS 4 - 30 DECEMBER 2010 4 & 5, 11 & 12, 18 & 19, 23 & 24, 28-30 DECEMBER 12.30PM & 3PM 7-10, 14-17 & 21 DECEMBER 10.30AM & 1.30PM 22 DECEMBER 6PM DJANOGLY THEATRE ALL TICKETS £7 RUNNING TIME: 50 MINS APPROX SUITABLE FOR AGES 5+ & FAMILIES TALL STORIES AND NETWORK OF STUFF BRING YOU
THEM WITH FROZEN TAILS Co-commissioned by Brighton Dome and the Roundhouse Two unlikely tales - and one impossible one... “If only some adult theatre was as witty and inventive as this.” The Times Take two funny chaps, some arctic animals and a touch of frost. Add an improbable, an impossible and a seasonal tale - one created live from audience suggestions in a hilarious act of on-thespot invention. The result? A side-splitting, utterly festive alternative to pantomime for all the family. Celebrated children’s theatre company Tall Stories are behind the international success of the stage adaptation of The Gruffalo, which continues its sell-out tour after West End and Broadway runs. The company’s unique brand of physical storytelling theatre has taken them world wide, but now they’re back at Lakeside and working alongside the fabulous Network of Stuff to delight and entertain people of all ages!
SATURDAY 11 & SUNDAY 12 DECEMBER 1.30PM & 2.30PM PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE FOR AGES 4 - 5 YEARS £5 These drama and storytelling workshops will take you on a fantastic imaginative journey, using traditional stories from around the world as inspiration. Allow your mind and body to wander into a magical world, and let the fun begin!
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES 39 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 23 SEPTEMBER – THURSDAY 21 OCTOBER & THURSDAY 11 NOVEMBER – THURSDAY 9 DECEMBER 10AM – 11AM PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE 18 – 36 MONTHS £4
TINY FINGERS TINY TOES 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!
SUNDAY 31 OCTOBER 11AM – 12NOON & 1.30 – 2.30PM 4-5 YEARS £5 PER CHILD
TINY TALES Come and join Tiny Tales where storyteller Rachel Feneley will lead the children & their grown-ups into a magical world of pirates. Follow clues to the hidden treasure, avoid Shark Island, make a message in a bottle, but don’t get captured by naughty Night Pirates!!
THE NIGHT PIRATES SEE PAGE 32
FAMILIES (OPEN TO ALL) All children must be accompanied by an adult. SATURDAY 9 OCTOBER 1.30 – 4.30PM PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE FREE – DROP IN FOR A HALF HOUR SLOT
TUESDAY 26 OCTOBER 10AM – 12NOON PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE £8
THE BIG DRAW
POETRY DOCTOR
Join artist Ruth Scott to mark the national Big Draw event for this very physical and tactile art session. You’ll be drawing on floor-to-ceiling windows, across large mirrors and in huge trays of sand, taking inspiration from the Dust on the Mirror exhibition in the Djanogly Art Gallery.
Do you make up poems or funny stories? Do you want to write more? Why not make an appointment with the poetry doctor (writer in residence Peter Rumney) and sign up for your next prescription. The session is open to those who can write and those who might need some help from a grown up.
SATURDAY 18 SEPTEMBER – SATURDAY 11 DECEMBER 10AM – 11AM PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE 5 – 7 YEARS £35 PER TERM
LITTLE LAKESIDERS Come and join our weekly Lakeside Youth Theatre for 5 – 7 year olds as we explore imaginary worlds through drama and creative play. Get ready to get messy, make some noise, and have fun!
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES 40 YOUNG PEOPLE FRIDAY 29 OCTOBER 10AM – 12NOON PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE FOR AGES 7+ £8
COMEDY CAPERS THURSDAY 28 OCTOBER 10AM – 12.30PM PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE FOR AGES 8+ £8 WEDNESDAY 27 OCTOBER 10AM – 12NOON PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE FOR AGES 10+ £8
WHAT A PERFORMANCE! If you’re feeling mischievous and fancy a bit tomfoolery then this is the workshop for you! Taking games as your starting point, let your imagination run wild in a ridiculously bonkers world where anything is possible!
SOCK PUPPET MAKING & PUPPETEERING WORKSHOP Marcus Clarke has been creating puppet characters for television through Nottingham based Hands Up Puppets for over 20 years. In this Workshop Marcus will explain what puppetry for the screen involves, followed by a practical session in which participants will make their own simple hand Puppet from a sock and create a scene or sketch for camera.
WEDNESDAY 27 OCTOBER 1.30PM – 4PM VISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE FOR AGES 11+ £8
THURSDAY 28 OCTOBER 1.30 - 4PM VISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE FOR AGES 8 – 11YEARS £8 PER PERSON
BEASTIE GRAFFITI
PAPER PLAY
Back by popular demand, Nathan Bainbridge, aka Smallkid, will lead you through the creative processes of graffiti art to create the most bizarre creature in 2-D!
Making paper is such good fun! Experiment by adding all sorts of materials to the pulp, to create your own pages for a special personal book.
ADULTS (18+ YEARS)
SATURDAY 30 OCTOBER 10AM - 4PM VISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE £30/£25 CONCESSION
WIRE SCULPTURE
This workshop is a mixture of stand up and physical storytelling with professional artist Becky Matters. Come along and laugh your head off!
SATURDAY 13 NOVEMBER 2-4PM SUNDAY 14 NOVEMBER 10AM-12PM VISUAL ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE ADULTS AND CHILDREN AGED 12+ FREE
JEWELLERY MAKING WITH LINA PETERSON Maker Lina Peterson has been commissioned to work with the University of Nottingham's museum to create intriguing new work in response to the museum’s collections, through a national project called Museumaker. Lina will be leading two workshops where participants will be working with materials including acrylic and textiles to make jewellery inspired by the museum's collection. www.linapetersen.com/ museumaker
Cathy Miles is a metalsmith who uses a unique combination of wire, found materials and text to depict common bird life. In this workshop you will be able to create your own quirky wire sculptures, using binding techniques, under the expert guidance of the artist. www.cathymiles.com
WORKSHOPS & ACTIVITIES 41 GALLERY ART GROUP (GAG)
BOX OFFICE: 0115 846 7777
art
For ages 11-16, GAG is designed to introduce young people to a variety of art skills from painting and drawing to 3-D work and photography based on our gallery exhibitions.
LAKESIDE ART investigator
The sessions run on Saturday mornings from 10am to 12 noon during school term times. The cost is £45 for the term.
Anyone aged 7 - 12 years may borrow an Art Investigator bag in the Djanogly Art Gallery to help them look at the exhibitions: for free! Bags contains an etch-asketch, art materials and activity sheet.
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 £35 for the term. Bookings for GAG and Little GAG open on Tuesday 31 August. Contact the box office on 0115 846 7777.
LYT Lakeside youth theatre needs you!
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DO YOU WANT TO BE AN ART INVESTIGATOR?
LEARNING IN THE GALLERIES The galleries at Lakeside provide an inspiring range of changing exhibitions as stimulus for educational activity. Galleries Education Officer, Ruth Lewis-Jones, is available to work with teachers and community leaders to devise tailor-made learning opportunities for visiting groups. Contact ruth.lewisjones@nottingham.ac.uk, 0115 823 2218.
WRITE HERE WRITER-IN-RESIDENCE IN THE GALLERIES 2010-11 Lakeside is delighted to be hosting a residency in the galleries with playwright and poet Peter Rumney who is well known in Nottingham schools for his inspiring work with Dragon Breath Theatre Company. As well as developing his own writing, Peter will be providing workshops for students and teachers to nurture creative approaches to literacy. To take part please contact Ruth Lewis-Jones, Galleries Education Officer. The residency is funded by Writing East Midlands as part of their Writer in Residence Programme and by the Central Educational Improvement Partnership, alongside Lakeside Arts Centre.
8 - 10 LYT IS MOVING... TO A SATURDAY MORNING 11.30AM - 12.30PM PERFORMING ARTS WORKSHOP SPACE Lakeside currently runs four youth theatre groups for children and young people aged 5 - 7 (Little Lakesiders) 8-10, 11-13 and 14-17. In these sessions we cover the broadest range of theatre skills including devising and improvising, text, mask, mime, dance and music. 8 - 10 years These weekly sessions focus on having fun and developing new skills for the younger members of our LYT Company. It acts as a training and introduction for all aspects of theatre as well as offering performance opportunities throughout the year
Lakeside is pleased to announce that theatre company Maison Foo will be leading the 5-7, 8-10 and 11-13 groups from September 2010.
Coming soon... Spirit Nottingham will soon be live with all you want to know about culture in the city. Sign up now to be one of the first to receive news of ticket deals and special offers across Nottingham’s restaurants, bars, music venues, theatres, cinemas, galleries and museums from the Arena to Broadway!
spiritnottingham.com
Coming to a performance? Book for supper at Lakeside Lakeside is a great place for lunch, dinner or drinks. Aqua, by the lake and CafĂŠ L near the Djanogly Art Gallery both serve a selection of freshly prepared hot meals as well as speciality coffees, flavoured teas, wines and beers in a relaxed and friendly atmosphere.
Eat before a Show? The only place to enjoy a pre-show supper is Aqua! On performance evenings our delicious menu service begins at 5.30pm with last orders at 7pm (for 7.30pm performances) and 7.30pm (for 8pm performances). You can now book a table at the Box Office when booking tickets for a show or you can call Aqua direct on 0115 846 7179.
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.
Brochure design: Tom Partridge www.tompartridge.co.uk Printed by: Pyramid Press www.pyramidpress.co.uk
Sideshow 2010 is a unique city-wide contemporary art event coordinated and supported by Nottingham Visual Arts. Sideshow is driven by the artists and curators currently living and working in the city. Sideshow is funded by Arts Council England, Igniting Ambitions on behalf of the Legacy Trust and Nottingham City Council.
47 MAIN VISITOR CAR PARK
CUT THROUGH LANE
EAST DRIVE
EAST DRIVE
TO MUSEUM & TRENT BUILDING
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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
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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.
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LAKESIDE THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM’S PUBLIC ARTS CENTRE AND MUSEUM SEPT - NOV 2010
NEW PERSPECTIVES PRESENT
DOLLY
WWW.LAKESIDEARTS.ORG.UK