If Not This – Ben Gwilliam, Helmut Lemke, Lee Patterson, Matt Wand

As part of the Exhibition Not At This Address (1 August – 7 November), Bury Art Gallery presents an evening of new performances from four of Manchester’s most active Sound Artists working today. If not this is a survey of works that explores sound in performance, crossing the terrain where music and sound often meet inside and outside of Contemporary Art.

Ben Gwilliam performs ‘molto semplice e cantabile’ a new work for ice records and turntables on the relationship between opus 111 and listening descriptions. Helmut Lemke will perform a durational piece specifically for the gallery that utilises live sound and amplification. Lee Patterson will present a new work containing pre-recorded and improvised elements, where the recordings used are sourced from wire fences in Birtle and within bodies of water in the Bury Metropolitan area. Matt Wand will probably perform ‘I owe it to the girls’.

Bury Art Gallery
Friday 4 September

19.00-22.00 FREE
Refreshments

Language Moment

In the ancient Olympics poetry was a key part of the celebration of athletic achievement. The 21st Century Olympiad has become a symbol of developing global friendship and so needs again to celebrate the importance of languages in world dialogue. The idea of “The Language Moment” is to create an international gathering of the world’s most innovative artists who use language – from web artists to poets, sound artists to sculptors. The event will include performances, exhibitions, films, readings, sound and media installations, internet projects, broadcasts, public art commissions, publications, schools and community events. It aims to create a moment in which language itself becomes the vehicle for celebration.

I have 7 weeks to map out what this will involve. This event is the opportunity for poets and artists who work with language to carry forward the ideas of the Text Festival to a new level of global profile. I will be inviting many many people to participate and I am particularly open to proposals for projects you would like to see in the event – but you have to be quick.

Via Tony Trehy

Link

The Other Room 10 – aftermath

Sean Bonney and Frances Kruk gave us a magnificent evening on 5th August.  Tony Trehy‘s photograph of Sean and Frances above.

Richard Barrett has posted more photographs here.

Matt Dalby has reviewed the evening  and you can read it here

Alex Davies recorded the first half and you can listen to that here.

Thanks to all for these resources and thank you again to Sean, Frances and everyone who came along.

Diverse Deeds

Peter Philpott’s renowned Sundays at the Oto reading series has been reborn as Diverse Deeds. This from Peter via the Brit-Irish poets list:

“I am pleased to announce that the poetry and music reading and performance series Sundays at the Oto will be reborn from autumn onwards as Diverse Deeds, held still at Cafe Oto (18-22 Ashwin Street, Dalston, London E8 3DL), but on evenings, mainly it is hoped Thursday or Wednesday, approximately once a month. The first event will have as poets John James and Sean Bonney, on September 24th. Music is yet to be arranged, but will be an element.

The programme for the rest of the year is now being set up. The specific dates will need to be negotiated with Cafe Oto, and balanced against other events in London, but the event is not tied to a repeated day in the month. If anyone from outside London, indeed from outside UK, who might wish to read or perform, suggests dates when they will be In London, I can see what can be arranged. Similarly I would be interested in considering any suggestions by List Members as to performers (poetry read or performed, music, multimedia etc), especially where poets and musicians are working together.

A MySpace page is being set up, and a Facebook group. Details will be given on http://www.asifyourlife.blogspot.com. It is planned to increase the level of publicity from that of Sundays at the O, to attract not just the cognoscenti (who I hope will carry on flocking to sunny Dalston), but a wide range of interested people.”

Link

Corridor8/Iain Sinclair

corridor8

“Join us in Manchester on 16 July as we launch Corridor8 with an exclusive talk by the British author, essayist and psychogeographer, Iain Sinclair.

To accompany the launch, Sinclair has conducted a walk through Manchester — a meandering, poetic journey designed to shed new light on a city at once ancient and contemporary. Taking a route from Urbis to the edge of the city, Sinclair saw ghosts and alchemists, geographers and ‘discreet medics’, a road that turned into ‘a river of human traffic’ and pockets of green where wildlife flourished in a way it never could in the ‘toxic run-off from Olympic piracy’ in London.

On 16 July, Sinclair relives this walk in a talk given at its starting point: Urbis. This is an opportunity to meet one of Britain’s leading psychogeographers, and to find out why he has been tempted to write about the North of England for the first time. This part of the launch is strictly limited to 100 places and is now almost sold out.”

Link

Halsey and Monk at Ledbury

4.15pm – 5.15pm, 10 July. Burgage Hall. £8

 

“Alan Halsey will talk about his latest work, the Lives of the Poets, which he has been working on for the past eight years. As the typical literary biography gets heavier and denser, Halsey’s 191 lives take the opposite approach: each Life is a poem distilled in a few highly-concentrated lines. The famous (Chaucer, Wyatt, Milton, Pope) appear alongside the lesser known and many forgotten poets, including a large number of women, are saluted. Geraldine Monk is an electrifying performer of her poetry, which has appeared in many anthologies and maps the places she has lived with a visceral intensity, as if places possess her. This will be an event full of discoveries and contrasts.”

Link

Antifreeze 2009

Contents May Vary are hosting ANTIFREEZE Manchester’s very first art car boot fair as part of Trade City. ANTIFREEZE is an exhibition about the high-end art market delivered within the format of low-end trade. It is the grass-roots answer to hugely commercial art fairs allowing independent and non-commercial practitioners to explore ideas of value, exchange and independence with artists and artist-led organisations responding to the physical, social, economical, geographical and literal situation.

Saturday 4th July 2009. 12-7pm. Free entry.
MAP

CHIPS Building, Upper Kirby Street, off Old Mill Street, New Islington, Manchester, M4 6EB

Link

Treading water

TREADING WATER – a perambulatory poem in Otterspool Park, Liverpool: July 12 2009 1pm

 This poem-performance has been commissioned by Gaia Project and Living at the Edge for HIGH TIDE – an Environment Agency-funded project which is bringing together ten UK based multi-media artists to interpret and explore the theme high tide, in collaboration with Dr Jason Kirby (Liverpool John Moores University) and Prof Philip Woodworth adviser to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory, Liverpool).

 Treading Water will explore the prehistory, geology, human and natural history of Otterspool Park in order to imagine distant times, images and stories. Staged as a series of posts throughout the park, the piece will unfold as a poem sequence accompanied by dramatic and visual interventions.

 Otterspool’s history, like Liverpool , has been shaped by water. Its stream was formed by melting glaciers 18,000 years ago which carved a path through red sandstone: the remains of ancient sand dunes. Known as Otirpul in medieval times it was originally a tidal creek, which may have been a Viking landing stage in the tenth century, and was famed for the quality of its fishing and abundance of otters. Later on the creek was used to drive watermills and until the 1930s an old fisherman’s cottage still stood on the banks of the Mersey. The astronomer Jeremiah Horrocks (1618-1641) was born and died here in the now demolished Jericho Lodge. He was a major figure in early British Astronomy and the first person to correctly predict and observe the transit of Venus across the Sun. He later began making the first ever tidal measurements to assist his study of the moon’s orbit.

 The poem will attempt to come to terms with Horrocks’ achievements and consider their relevance to our contemporary view of nature. Creating this imaginative space will crucially enable a confrontation with the future of the park, and, by extension, the future of Liverpool and beyond in the context of climate change.

 Check out the High Tide wiki at:

 http://high-tide.wetpaint.com/

 Otterspool Park on Google Maps:

http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?hl=en&q=otterspool%20park%20liverpool&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wl

Next Openned

The next Openned night takes place at 7.15pm on Thursday 2nd July. Tina Darragh, James Davies, Harry Godwin, P. Inman, Rebecca Rosier and Steve Willey will be reading. Openned nights are held at The Foundry in London, UK. Admission is always free.

Link

Art Yarn

Salford, Lancashire, United Kingdom

Based in Salford, “ArtYarn is a collaborative fibre arts project coordinated by visual artists Rachael Elwell and Sarah Hardacre. ArtYarn aim to use traditional knitting and crochet techniques in contemporary visual arts projects. And aspire to promote the diversity and versatility of knitting and crochet as a medium. Interested in the artistic, social and historical contexts of knitting and crochet, ArtYarn are focused on the tactility of hand processes. Enjoying the repetitive and often obsessive nature of this work, ArtYarn view knitting and crochet as an opportunity for individual creative expression and at the same time explore the medium as a way to make art accessible through participatory making and collaborative exchange.”

Link

LUCIO CAPECE

The Salford Concert series continues…

WEDNESDAY 10th JUNE at the most Sofa-centric venue in town: ISLINGTON MILL, James street, Salford, (for the sat-nav savvy: M3 5HW)
doors opening: 8.00pm, your financial outlay: a mere £5.

Link

The Other Room 8 – debrief

Thank you to everyone who made The Other Room 8 on 3rd June such a success: to Matt Dalby, Alex Davies and Allen Fisher for three stunning performances; to The Old Abbey Inn for hosting us and to everyone who came along.

Footage of the evening will appear on the site shortly. Some thoughts about the night are collected in the History section of the site. Click here to jump straight there.