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Two Yorkshire arts organisations awarded first commissions for the London 2012 Cultural Olympiad project – Unlimited

Date:

18 Mar 2010
Region:

Yorkshire
 

Unlimited commission: Jez Colborne with Mind the Gap. Photo: Getty images

- Jez Colborne with Mind the Gap and Stumble danceCircus awarded commissions from the UK's largest programme celebrating arts, culture and sport by disabled and deaf people

- Over £400,000 committed to the first commissions from the unprecedented three-year programme to create new work for the London 2012 Cultural Olympiad

- Applications for the second of three rounds of awards now open

Yorkshire’s Jez Colborne with Mind the Gap and Stumble danceCircus have been awarded two of the 10 commissions for the first round of Unlimited, the London 2012 Cultural Olympiad project.

Unlimited, delivered in partnership between London 2012 and Arts Council England, will celebrate disability, arts, culture and sport on an unprecedented scale and is set to transform the disability arts movement in the UK. In this round over £400,000 of funding has been awarded to 10 commissions across the UK.

Irresistible by Jez Colborne with Mind the Gap will be a ‘siren symphony’. Noisy and spectacular, the live performance will combine warning sirens and choral music with projections on walls and rocks and dramatic lighting. Developed by learning disabled musician and performer Jez Colborne, with support from Mind the Gap, Irresistible will be presented in a variety of urban and rural outdoor spaces such as Bradford City Centre and Ilkley Moor.

Bipolar Ringmaster, Stumble danceCircus’s commission, will be a solo show performed by actor Eric MacLennan demonstrating the wild extremes experienced with bipolar disorder and enjoyed in circus. The piece plays with the audience’s perceptions and expectations of mental ill health and performance, blurring the lines between colourful character and delusional insanity, grand achievement or endless obsession. The piece will incorporate a short film of new circus choreography, and will be flexible in performance both for theatre or non-art settings.

Unlimited encourages collaborations and partnerships between disability arts organisations, disabled and deaf artists, producers, and mainstream organisations to celebrate the inspiration of the Olympic and Paralympic Games, and produce work like never before.

Applications for the second round of commissions are now welcomed from disabled and deaf artists or disability arts groups wishing to create high quality work to form part of high profile showcase events across the UK. Further information on the application process can be found at www.london2012.com/unlimited.

Ruth Mackenzie, Director, Cultural Olympiad said:
'These are my first commissions since I started work for the Cultural Olympiad Board and I am proud to be working on a festival which will be offering more commissioning for disabled artists than any Cultural Olympiad and festival anywhere in the world. This is a chance to change the way work by disabled artists is perceived and enjoyed round the world, and we are thrilled to have such exciting commissions to get the programme started.'

Andy Carver, Executive Director for Arts Council England, Yorkshire, added:
'We are delighted that two exciting projects in Yorkshire will get support from Unlimited Commissions as part of London 2012 celebrations. The funding will support these two artists to develop their work, strengthen their artistic practice, challenge perceptions about disability and engage audiences around Yorkshire. These two artistic commissions demonstrate that we are a region brimming with creativity and talent.'

Tessa Jowell, Minister for the Olympics, said:
'We want the London 2012 Paralympic Games to help break down the barriers disabled people can often face. The inspirational projects announced today not only showcase the true depth of artistic talent we have amongst disabled people in the UK, but also communicate disability in a creative and thought provoking way that will challenge people’s perception of disability.'

Press Contacts
London 2012
Paul Woodmansey in the London 2012 Press Office on +44 (0)203 2012 100, paul.woodmansey@london2012.com  

For further information please contact the London 2012 Press Office on +44 (0)203 2012 100 or visit the website at www.london2012.com. Find out the latest from London 2012 HQ on our blog http://blog.london2012.com or follow us on Twitter http://www.twitter.com/london2012team


Notes to Editors:

Unlimited
The project is principally funded by the National Lottery through the Olympic Lottery Distributor, and is delivered in partnership between London 2012, Arts Council England, the Scottish Arts Council, Arts Council of Wales, Arts Council of Northern Ireland and the British Council. 

Unlimited Commissions is a commissioning fund of £1.5m for new work which is believed to be the largest single investment in creative work by disabled artists. The second half of the Unlimited programme will provide support to artists to develop their talent and skills and present their work to audiences in the UK and abroad. Through Unlimited Talent there will be resources and training to foster young talent and develop skills across the sector, forging new partnerships between disability and mainstream arts organisations. Unlimited International will support collaboration between the artists in the UK and other countries, showcase new work around the world, and promote a global debate amongst young people about disability rights.

The winning commissions announced today are:

LONDON

Candoco Dance Company - Candoco Unlimited

Candoco Dance Company performed in the handover ceremonies of the 2008 Beijing Olympic and Paralympic Games – the first time disabled performers have appeared in both events. Candoco Unlimited will build on their reputation as leaders in the dance and disability field to showcase some of the leading disabled artists working in contemporary dance today. Candoco will engage two disabled choreographers to each make a large scale dance piece for disabled and non-disabled dancers, including those from Beijing and Rio de Janeiro to link the past, current and future Olympic host nations. This will result in two world-class inclusive dance pieces that will be performed at a range of festivals and events leading up to 2012. 

Graeae Theatre Company – The Garden

The Garden takes its inspiration from Blake’s poem Jerusalem and is an innovative exploration of ‘England’s green and pleasant land’. It is the first of three Graeae / Greenwich + Docklands International Festival (GDIF) co-productions aimed at building the pool of disabled sway pole & street art performers in the UK.

The work will be developed in partnership with Strange Fruit and features a deaf and disabled artistic team and a new ensemble of deaf and disabled sway pole/street art performers. The Garden will make its premiere at GDIF in June 2010. The resulting work will be developed alongside further pieces over the next three years to form a single spectacular for 2012.

NORTHERN IRELAND

Maurice Orr - The Screaming Silence of the Wind

Visual artist Maurice Orr will create four sensory installation pieces inspired by the raw, barren landscapes of his native Northern Ireland. Through sound, paint and natural materials such as fish leather, the piece will evoke a holistic feeling of place. Visitors to the exhibition will be encouraged to touch the surfaces, look at the landscapes and listen to the sounds that have inspired him.

NORTH WEST

Fittings Multimedia Arts - The Ugly Spirit

Using the fascinating lives of conjoined Siamese twins Chang and Eng Bunker as inspiration and metaphor, The Ugly Spirit will explore the conflicting notions that lie within us in a challenging and critically engaging performance piece. Developed in partnership with David Hoyle, Tanya Raabe and Garry Robson, Fittings will work with disabled and non-disabled young people from the North West to explore issues of identity. The resulting piece will tour a variety of mainstream venues and unusual settings around the country.

SCOTLAND

Janice Parker - Private Dancer

Private Dancer is an artistically ambitious large scale performance event by professional and emergent disabled dancers. Performed in and around a real sized luminous ‘house’, purpose built with a series of individual rooms, each solo dancer invites audience members to enter their private performance domain. As well as the individual pieces, the hour long performance will include disabled and non-disabled dancers performing throughout the structure encouraging audiences to walk and move around the house. Private Dancer is the result of research and development work which received funding from the Scottish Arts Council’s Disability Arts Open Fund.

Ramesh Meyyappan - Snails and Ketchup

Snails and Ketchup explores the turbulent relationships that prevail within dysfunctional families, inspired by Italo Calvino’s  ‘Baron in the Trees’. This darkly comic tale poignantly highlights that despite familial love being unconditional, it is not always possible to exist within the same environment as those we hold dear.

The plight of the family members will be revealed in a solo performance that allows Ramesh to explore several character transitions using an eclectic range of physical / visual styles including: sign mime, movement, aerial and stilt work, bold storytelling and strong characterization.

WALES

Chris Tally Evans - Personal Best: Turning Points

Personal Best will be a nationwide community storytelling project focusing on those turning points in our lives when we realise what we can become – unique. The resulting tales of hard-won battles and personal triumphs will become a life-affirming online resource and audio soundscape, which can be downloaded or broadcast in a variety of public spaces across the UK. This will ultimately lead to a touring installation and series of interactive workshops for young people exploring the theme of inspiration, role models and turning points in people’s lives.

Kaite O'Reilly with The Llanarth Group - The d Monologues :

The ‘d’ Monologues will be a dramatic collection of monologues for Deaf and disabled performers, inspired by the stories and experiences of disabled and Deaf individuals across the whole of the UK. The Llanarth Group hope to produce a body of work that will address the dearth of pieces written from a disability perspective, and parts written for disabled performers. The ‘d’ Monologues will be performed in venues in Wales and across the UK.

YORKSHIRE

Irresistible – Jez Colborne with Mind the Gap

Irresistible will be a ‘siren symphony’!  Noisy and spectacular, it will be a live performance combining warning sirens and choral music with projections on walls and rocks and dramatic lighting. Developed by learning disabled musician and performer Jez Colborne, with support from Mind the Gap, Irresistible will be presented in a variety of urban and rural outdoor spaces such as Bradford City Centre and Ilkley Moor.

Stumble danceCircus - Bipolar Ringmaster (without a Circus)

Bipolar Ringmaster will be a solo show performed by actor Eric MacLennan demonstrating the wild extremes experienced with bipolar disorder and enjoyed in circus. The piece plays with the audience’s perceptions and expectations of mental ill health and performance, blurring the lines between colourful character and delusional insanity, grand achievement or endless obsession. The piece will incorporate a short film of new circus choreography, and will be flexible in performance both for theatre or non-art settings

About Arts Council England

Arts Council England works to get great art to everyone by championing, developing and investing in artistic experiences that enrich people’s lives.
As the national development agency for the arts, it supports a range of artistic activities from theatre to music, literature to dance, photography to digital art, and carnival to crafts. It believes that great art inspires us, brings us together and teaches us about ourselves, and the world around us. In short, it makes life better.
Between 2008 and 2011, it will invest £1.3 billion of public money from government and a further £0.3 billion from the National Lottery to create these experiences for as many people as possible across the country. www.artscouncil.org.uk



For more information (media only) please contact :

Diane Horton
Arts Council England, Yorkshire
t:01924 486241
e: diane.horton@artscouncil.org.uk
 


 

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Unlimited commission: Stumble danceCircus. Photo: Getty images_1
Unlimited commission: Stumble danceCircus. Photo: Getty images_1
Unlimited commission: Stumble danceCircus. Photo: Getty images_2
Unlimited commission: Stumble danceCircus. Photo: Getty images_2
Unlimited commission: Jez Colborne with Mind the Gap. Photo: Getty Images
Unlimited commission: Jez Colborne with Mind the Gap. Photo: Getty Images