Monthly Archive for April, 2008

Memory Project Comes to Williamson Sq. this Weekend

This will be in Williamson Square over the Bank Holiday weekend, sounds interesting…

There are some images from Edinburgh on the main page
www.o2memoryproject.com

o2 Memory Project

Over the years, physical diaries, photo albums and shoe boxes have kept our personal memories safe.

A generation from now, printed matter might not exist. We are already relying on hard drives, websites and mobile phones to store our digital memories. Our lives will be downloaded as a matter of course for future generations to examine, adore or even ignore.

Lose your phone and you lose more than your handset and your SIM card: pictures of loved ones, video clips from a happy moment and those texts you could never delete. These cherished experiences face extinction without a safe home. Bluebook from O2 is a natural step in memory gathering – free online storage for numbers, texts and photos. You can dictate your life to Bluebook, so nothing is lost.

Inspired by Bluebook, the artist Jason Bruges has created The Memory Project – a 21st century ‘cyclorama’. The structure camera-captures panoramic moments in time and stores them within its digital memory bank. Inside, visitors can explore the stored history of the installation and interact with the displayed 360 degree images.

The Memory Project tours in April 2008, collating the mass memory of London, Edinburgh and Liverpool en route. You can delve even deeper into these public memory banks at www.o2memoryproject.com from Friday 18th April 2008.

Liverpool
Sat 3rd- Mon 5th May 2008
Williamson Square
10am-10pm

World Firefighters Games, Liverpool – Volunteers Needed

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Join the Games Volunteers

The 10th World Firefighters Game will run from the 24th of August to the 2nd of September, 2008. Merseyside Fire & Rescue Service is tremendously proud to host the 10th World Firefighters Games in 2008. We are keen to build on our reputation for innovation and excellence, and to work with all of our partners and the community of Merseyside to deliver the best Games yet.

The world Firefighter Games is a biennial competition in which Firefighters and their families from all over the world compete in numerous and varied sporting events.

The participation of volunteers in the delivery of these Games is essential. It would not be feasible to hold these games without a major involvement of volunteers to provide much of the help and support required. It a fundamental requirement of the Games that there must be a lasting legacy for the people of Merseyside. One of the most important ways of delivering this is through volunteering. Consequently the recruitment of volunteers will not be confined to just sports enthusiasts but to the whole of the community with people from all marginalised groups being actively sought as volunteers. There will be a particular focus on encouraging young people from all over Merseyside to take part.

It is expected that the Games will require between 1500 and 2000 volunteers to make them a success. Volunteer roles will include helping Event Managers to set up and take down sporting equipment, meeting competitors and helping them with their kits etc, meeting and greeting the public and guiding them to their seats. We will also need volunteers to help with administration, catering, uniforms and many other tasks. No particular skills are required just the enthusiasm to get involved.

So why volunteer to help at the Games?

You will get to see some fantastic sporting events, it will be great fun and you will meet lots of different people and, of course, you will be doing a useful job for the community. You can volunteer for as much or as little as you can manage and no offer of help will be refused.

How do I register to be a WFG08 Volunteer?

You can now register to become a WFG08 Volunteer by completing the registration form on-line at www.wfg08.com/volunteer/volForm.cfm or by telephone at +44(0)870 888 1888. Once you have registered you will be contacted by a Volunteer Coordinator who will explain the process of induction and training and also discuss with you your preferred activity. Volunteer Coordinators can be very busy so please be patient and allow several weeks to be contacted

www.wfg08.com

Last Chance to See – Niki de Saint Phalle

ENDS Monday 5 May 2008

Tate Liverpool will present the first UK exhibition of Niki de Saint Phalle’s work since her death in 2002. The Franco-American painter and sculptor Niki de Saint Phalle is best known for her Fontaine Stravinsky works on display outside the Centre Pompidou. The exhibition presents a comprehensive survey of the artist’s entire career and will include key examples of all phases of her work; from her early assemblages and paintings in the 1950s, her acclaimed Shooting Paintings in the early 1960s, her religious altars and bride sculptures in the mid 1960s, the Nanas and larger sculptural works, a wide selection of graphic work, to her late works including the Skull Meditation Room, 1990.

Beautiful, flamboyant, daring, provocative and fiercely independent, Niki de Saint Phalle emerged in the 1960s as a powerful and original figure in the masculine international arts world centred around Paris. Yet despite her association with the Nouveau Réalistes, and a number of collaborations with many of the world’s leading artists and her marriage to Jean Tinguely, her work has largely been overlooked, or dismissed as merely playful. A believer in mythology and fairytales, her work is bright and colourful, demonstrating an exuberant love of life, at the same time revealing a certain darkness. This exhibition, a wide-ranging presentation of the work and exploration of her themes and concerns, will attempt to address this oversight and bring her work to a wider audience.

She began her career as an artist in the 1950s when she worked in oils and collage but also began to make small, painted sculptures. Her images were figurative, almost naïve depictions of imaginary landscapes, buildings and creatures, using a broad range of colours and covering surfaces with dense and decorative patterns.

In her Assemblages, begun in the 1950s, she created a very personal world based on found everyday objects which she embedded in plaster as a relief. However they were often littered with violent objects such as knives, scissors, nails and blades. Her darker side was also revealed in portraits of the time, such as Portrait of My Lover 1961, where the head has been substituted by a target studded with darts. This became part of a series known collectively as the Shooting Paintings (Tirs), with which she is most closely associated, and which secured her place amongst the Nouveau Réalistes, alongside artists such as Yves Klein, Daniel Spoerri and Arman in Paris in the early 1960s.

Undoubtedly influenced by American artists such as Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg who were working in Paris at the time, her Shooting Paintings explored the idea of the violent gesture in abstract art, in what can be read as a parody of the machismo of action painting. Embedding pockets filled with paint and foodstuffs within a thick layer of plaster on canvas, spectators were invited to shoot the paintings in order to make the pictures ‘bleed’. Tinguely, Spoerri, Rauschenberg and Johns all participated in the various ‘shoot-outs’ held between 1961-3. The moment of action and an emphasis on chance were as important as the finished work. She stopped making them in 1963, explaining, ‘I had become addicted to shooting, like one becomes addicted to a drug’. Niki de Saint Phalle went on to work with these artists in a number of collaborations, such as the décor for Variations II by John Cage at the American Embassy in Paris, and in 1962 with Rauschenberg, Martial Raysse, Daniel Spoerri, Per Olaf Ulveld and Ad Peterson on the Dylaby exhibition at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam.

As Niki de Saint Phalle’s work progressed, she became interested in ideas of femininity and the representation of women. She originally explored these ideas through a series of works on the theme of the Bride. This led to the Nanas, which were very large brightly-coloured sculptures of women that, due to their generous size and form, have become iconic and enduring archetypal images of maternity and femininity. In 1966 she created a 28 metre long Nana, Hon, for the Moderna Museet in Stockholm, where visitors were invited to enter the woman between her legs, inside of which they found a bar, a screening room and various viewing platforms. Niki de Saint Phalle continued to explore these themes until her death in 2002, as well as working on more monumental works which culminated in the magical Il Giardino dei Tarocchi (Tarot Garden) in Italy.

Supported by The Henry Moore Foundation
With additional support from the French Institute
Admission £5 (£4 concessions)

www.tate.org.uk/liverpool

Award for Tim Myers at Wirral Spring Art Show 08

NavelStone200.jpgPhotographer, Tim Myers, awarded prize at Wirral Spring Art and Photographic Exhibition

This ‘Navel Stone’ photograph by Tim Myers is one of the highlights of this year’s Wirral Spring Art & Photography exhibition at the Williamson Gallery in Birkenhead. Awarded a Highly Commended, ‘The Navel Stone’ is tranquil study of light and form which captivates the viewer with its geometric yet organic shapes.

Photographer Tim Myers is particularly proud of this picture. “I spent a memorable week photographing Arran which is a fantastic place, and The Navel Stone is one of my favourite images from that trip”.

As ever, the Wirral Spring Art and Photographic Exhibition attracted a wide range of subject matter and techniques, which forms an exceptional display of work. “The standard of work entered to the exhibition was very high this year; and I am very honoured that ‘The Navel Stone’ has been given this award”, says Tim.

Using traditional film cameras, Tim prides himself in producing images without using any post-processing techniques, and ‘The Navel Stone’ is no exception to this way of working. ‘The Navel Stone’ has been presented at the exhibition as a hand-printed image; offering an impressive presence due to its size and the sharpness and clarity of the print.

The exhibition runs from 26th April until Sunday 1st June, open Tuesday to Sunday, 10am to 5pm, and is open on the Bank Holiday Mondays. It is at the Williamson Gallery, Slatey Road, Birkenhead and admission is free.

Tim Myers is a local photographer who specialises in landscape photographs of the Wirral. Collections of his work, including ‘The Navel Stone’, are available to buy online at www.timmyersphotography.co.uk , and also at Dee Fine Arts in Heswall, The Stables Gallery at Brimstage and at Enigma Gallery One in Bebington.

HUB Festival 2008 – Line Up Confirmed

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Usually some good graffiti artists (and STOK as well) involved in this event.
Watch the Video below.

A record number of bands have applied to perform at the UK’s biggest free urban youth festival, organisers have revealed.

A total of 145 bands from across the country responded to a search to find the nation’s best unsigned acts to perform live at HUB 2008.

And after an intensive judging process involving industry professionals, the Liverpool Culture Company has announced the 13 acts that will perform in front of more than 20,000 people at Otterspool Park over Saturday and Sunday, May 17 and 18 2008
The event is FREE and will run from 11am-6pm on both days.

Spanning a range of musical styles – including funk, pop, indie, and rock – the bands are:

• Signified (Aigburth)
• Connecting Flight (Litherland)
• Hades Chariot (Walton)
• Metro Manila Aide (Mossley Hill)
• Gorbachov (city centre)
• The Buizniez (Kent)
• Vacancy in 305 (Garston)
• Tied Up (city centre)
• Crash Ambers Party (Crosby)
• Sensorites (Walton)
• Elevators (Leeds)
• Foeism (Wavertree)
• Killaflaw (Mossley Hill)

South Liverpool act Metro Manila Aide will be taking part in HUB for the fifth time this year. Band member Paul McBride said “It’s important to have a festival for the people of Liverpool with the backing of the city. HUB always combines music, dance and art in equal portions and when the sun comes out it’s great to rock out on the massive stage.”

Successful artists will be joining confirmed headliner Shlomo, one of the world’s finest human beatboxers, who will perform a special one hour set using only his voice on Sunday. Young Kof, Sona Family & Outthebox, Lazy Habits and BabyGravy complete the line-up.

www.hubfestival.co.uk

Win Tickets to See Tony Benn & Roy Bailey

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The annual Writing on the Wall festival opens on May 1st 2008 and thanks to the organisers, artinliverpool has 2 pairs of tickets for the Tony Benn & Roy Bailey event to give away.

The Benn & Bailey event is at the Philharmonic Hall on Monday May 19th so to be entered into the prize draw to win a pair of tickets just email the answer to the simple question below before midnight on Monday May 12th 2008.

As part of the WoW festival there are performances of The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists. These take place at Casa on May 6th and 7th.
Question: Who wrote the book, The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists (you can find a clue on the WoW website)

Email the Answer to wowcomp@artinliverpool.com and please include your name and contact number.
Correct answers will be entered into the draw to take place after midnight of May 12th.

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www.writingonthewall.org.uk

Liverpool Cityscape Complete – On Show From May 24

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So here is the finished painting. This is how Liverpool will look in a few years time – no roadworks, no cranes or scaffolding, looks great and I can see where we live.

2008 LIVERPOOL CITYSCAPE
New commission by Ben Johnson at the Walker Art Gallery

On display from 24 May to 2 November 2008 at the Walker Art Gallery.

The exhibition, Ben Johnson’s Liverpool Cityscape 2008 and the World Panorama Series, sponsored by the University of Liverpool, will form part of the city’s celebrations as European Capital of Culture.

The monumental painting, by internationally-renowned artist Ben Johnson, has been commissioned by National Museums Liverpool, with the Liverpool Culture Company and Professor Phil Redmond CBE and Mrs Alexis Redmond. The 8ft by 16ft cityscape is the largest and most complex painting ever undertaken by the artist.

When it goes on display The Liverpool Cityscape will be joined by Johnson’s other world cities series of paintings, including panoramas of Zürich, Jerusalem and Hong Kong and paintings representing Chicago and Paris. These are part of an ongoing project started in 1994 and represent the equivalent of 44 years work, as Johnson creates these paintings in a Renaissance-like studio using highly specialist assistants. This will be the first time that these works are exhibited together.

During February and March 2008 over 45,000 people came to see Ben work on the painting at the Walker Art Gallery in specially created studio.

Ben Johnson says: “I’m very excited that the painting will soon be finished and to see the Liverpool cityscape alongside other world cities I have painted, such as Jerusalem, Hong Kong and Zurich, will be thrilling.”

As well as Johnson’s work, the exhibition will include a small selection of historic views of Liverpool, demonstrating the long-standing tradition into which the new cityscape fits.

The Liverpool Cityscape has been three years in the making and takes in Liverpool’s famous skyline from a vantage point high above the River Mersey. It encompasses several thousand individual buildings and has taken Johnson and up to 11 assistants 24,000 person hours to get this far.

The left-hand boundary of the picture will include Chapel Street and Tithebarn Street, reaching back to Everton and, uniquely, visually uniting the city’s two football grounds; the right hand extreme takes in the Albert Dock up to the Anglican Cathedral and will reveal the extent of the Liverpool’s redevelopment as it enters 2008. This view comprises 170 hectares of the city, a near bird’s-eye perspective.

Johnson’s cityscapes involve a painstaking process. In making The Liverpool Cityscape he explored the city taking over 3000 reference photographs, considered alternative viewpoints, consulted with architects and historians, as well as the people of Liverpool, and absorbed the city’s distinctive atmosphere. Thousands of detailed drawings were produced before the execution of the painting in minute detail.

The painting will be a lasting legacy of Liverpool’s European Capital of Culture year and will move to a permanent home in the Museum of Liverpool when it opens in 2010/11.

www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk

Edge Hill Pavilion Opens to Public – May 3 2008

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Pavilion Platform Party
Saturday 3 May 2008 12-6pm

To celebrate the launch of the Pavilion, Metal will be hosting a fun-filled family event with film screenings from AL and AL, live music, jugglers and performers and workshops, with work on show and for sale from some of the best of Liverpool’s Artists and Makers.

METAL launches its 2008 Capital of Culture programme at the oldest passenger railway station in the world with work by two international duos:

Colombian, father and son, artist/architect team, Luis Fernando and Juan Manuel Peláez, have been working with Metal, the Liverpool Biennial and the neighbourhood of Kensington to create an outdoor public ‘pavilion’ on the station approach to Platforms 3 and 4. NEXUS, funded by Liverpool Culture Company will play host to a wide variety of cultural gatherings, performance and events throughout 2008, and will create a focus for a celebration of arts and culture for local residents, schools, organisations and visitors.

Inspired by the stations historic importance, and in particular by an area of wooden paving (Grade II* listed) dating back to 1836, the artists have created a network of posts that grow in stature as they cascade downwards towards the station – recalling the moorings for ships which suggest the idea of travel from the past. Sensitively lit at night the structure has been designed to be a beacon for the area, a visual statement of ambition and aspiration for the use of the station as a cultural resource.

Al and Al – THE LOST ARK AND THE INVISIBLE READING ROOM

Internationally renowned digital artists, Al and Al complement their concurrent solo exhibition at FACT with a site specific installation in the building where the FACT work was created. The artists have been in residency at Metal for the last 18 months using Edge Hill Station as their blue screen studio, and simultaneously contributing to the momentum and commitment to bring the station’s historic buildings back into a useful community and creative life.

THE LOST ARK AND THE INVISIBLE READING ROOM will present a series of works which use Computer Generated Image techniques, at the forefront of modern, special effect, film-making, through which Al and Al’s films investigate the mirror between fantasy and reality, and the immersion into a virtual world. The building will be transformed into a 1930’s style cinema to present the artists work, alongside work created by other invited local and UK artists, as well as local residents.

“The ultimate experience for us has been to work in the first train station in the world! We don’t think we have ever been anywhere with more extraordinary resonances! We see it as the equivalent of an artist going to work at the NASA space station in 200 years time! “ Al and Al.

For both sets of artist’s in our opening programme, Edge Hill represents a revolution in our way of experiencing the world. The world became smaller the day The Rocket left Edge Hill on its way to Manchester. Over a hundred years later Metal will once again bring crowds to the site and mark out its cultural and historical significance.

http://www.metalculture.com/News-Edge-Hill-Station