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Life after The Life of the Mind

The danger after the success of The Life of the Mind exhibition was always that the Epstein Archive would quietly slip back into obscurity in the basement of the gallery. Not so. We are now at the start of the next exciting installment of the gallery’s relationship with Bob and Roberta Smith. We were always aware of the need for a legacy for the New Ways of Curating project and the Archive Gallery on Floor 1 of the gallery is the best place to cement the outcomes of the project into the fabric of the building.

So, what next? Bob and Roberta Smith’s Epstein Archive Gallery is now closed for the summer and will open again in mid-September, completely transformed. The new archive gallery will be the antithesis of the White Cube, extremely colourful and rammed to the gills with material from the archive, art, film and interactives. The room itself will be transformed into an artwork as Bob will be painting directly onto the walls. The gallery’s technicians are making new display cases for the space and Bob has chosen a colour scheme inspired by the 1951 Festival of Britain. The FoB was a huge exhibition, much like a World’s Fair, designed to celebrate everything good about Britain and also raise the nation’s morale as wartime restrictions, such as rationing, continued into a new decade. An anniversary exhibition of FoB is currently on at the Southbank Centre – I’d really recommend it if you’re in London.

This week saw the gutting of the old room, removing all of Bob’s works – though a large chunk of it will be included in the new room. All of the paint has had to be specially mixed as 1950s colours are obviously not the public’s first choice for their living rooms – their loss.  The room will be painted next week ready for Bob to paint directly onto the walls.

While the gallery is closed, you can still look into it, so have a look next time you’re there – you never know, there may be an artist at work! I will be updating the blog at each stage of the process, so check back to see how we’re getting on.

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Caldmore Village Festival 2011

A multicultural festival right in the heart of Walsall’s community.

The first Caldmore Village Festival was held on 29th-31st May 2010 to an incredibly positive local response. The 10,000 people who attended over the three days of the festival experienced a colourful multicultural kaliedescope of music and dance performances, Asian sports events and carnival and music workshops.

This year’s Festival promises to be even bigger and better. On the 22nd of May we are holding a sports Mela on Walsall Rugby Club which will include such traditional Asian sports as Kibaddi, Stone Lifting and Beeni (arm wrestling) along with some of the more traditional British field and pub events as tug-of-war and darts. The following weekend (28th to the 30th of May) the bank holiday, we have three days of performance and participatory arts taking place on the playing field of Caldmore Primary School. The Saturday will kick off with the Caldmore Village Festival 6-a-side football challenge, along with the Caldmore Primary school’s fate. Attention will then shift to the spectacular main stage with its stunning sound system which will play host to an array of stunning multicultural acts, from Bollywood to Bhangra, from Memphis blues to jumping jive. Coupled with these three days of amazing music and dance, there will be a range of arts workshops for all ages on the main field culminating in the carnival procession on the Monday afternoon. The Festival will be topped off on Monday Evening by some of the country’s finest Asian music acts.

Festival Background
Caldmore is a multicultural area on the edge of Walsall town Centre. For many years it has been the natural home of Walsall’s artists and artisans from many cultures around the world, but it is also one of the most economically deprived neighbourhoods in Walsall.

The Festival committee has involved a wide number of community groups in planning for the festival and local groups are pledging to organise a range of community cultural events leading up to the festival weekend and during the weekend itself. Additional projects have included regular community clean ups, combined music and food events called ‘ A Taste of Caldmore’ and the group has just taken over responsibility for a community garden in the heart of Caldmore.
Want to get involved?

If you are able to volunteer during the festival this year, we would love to hear from you. We still need people who can help out with stewarding on the days of the festival, so if you have a few hours to spare on the days of the festival please get in touch, its great fun to be part of the team.

Contact:
Glen Buglass. Email: buglassg@walsall.gov.uk. Phone: 01922 653114

Join our facebook!

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Caldmore-Village-Festival/219826418030611

Our blog http://caldmorevillagefestival.wordpress.com

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Transition – Photography exhibition by Gemma Thorpe

Featuring the old and new Manor Hospital in Walsall
17 May – 18 June 2011

In 2010 journalistic photographer Gemma Thorpe began to document the changing face of Walsall Manor Hospital as it entered the final phases of its epic redevelopment. The outcome of this photographic exploration is a series of detailed prints that capture the essence and character of the spaces. Gemma’s focus ‘wasn’t so much on architecture and construction but on the people that use the hospital, and the relationship they have with the buildings’. After the exhibition at the gallery, the photos will then be moved for permanent display within the new hospital building.

Although this project was based on a new building for the hospital, for me the focus wasn’t so much on architecture and construction but on the people that use the hospital, and the relationship they have with the buildings. There is a real sense of community at Walsall Manor Hospital; around 3500 people work there every day. As staff member Geoff Hateley said, “It’s like a small town, or like a big wheel, with each department as a cog to turn it”.

I was particularly interested in how people added character, made their mark on the old buildings; the details of murals that had been painted years ago, how patients had peeled away parts of a frosted privacy screen in order to see the new construction going on below. Then, once departments started to move out, I could see where people had been; faded notice boards that had once been full of health advice leaflets, marks where a carpet had been worn down. Although the building was worn, it was full of life; many people working in the East Wing and Sister Dora Outpatients spoke fondly about the buildings and were sad to see them go.

It was a challenge to go from photographing in a building full of character and history, to the new building, which is full of light and space, but felt so big and anonymous at times. I began to highlight the freshness of the architecture and the ways people were interacting with these new spaces. During my last couple of weeks at the hospital I began to notice a real sense of pride developing for the new building, how people were bringing life to it. It’s interesting to think that one day this building too will be layered with memories.

Gemma Thorpe, May 2011

Following the exhibition at The New Art Gallery Walsall, the photographs will be on permanent display within the new hospital building on Pleck Road.

Photo courtesy of Gemma Thorpe.

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The Garret Garman Appreciation Society Birthday Picnic

Saturday 14 May 2011
12pm – 4pm

Kathleen Garman is easily describable as the patron saint of Art in Walsall. Thanks to the donation of the Garman Ryan Collection in collaboration with Sally Ryan, she forged a solid link between the town and contemporary art that still endures, and which guarantees the place of art in the area. This May would have seen her 110th birthday.

The Garret Garman Appreciation Society (G.G.A.S.) in honour of Kathleen, are planning the ultimate flickermob to celebrate this event – as The Garret is a collective of artists based in and around Walsall many of our first experiences of contemporary art were in either the E.M. Flint Gallery or The New Art Gallery Walsall. So, we plan to celebrate the life and largesse of the woman who made this collection possible in a fitting manner, by re-creating one of her legendary picnics. Every aspect will be used to pay homage to this Grand Dame of the Arts – from costume to the hamper contents!

We’ll be assembling on the gallery’s terrace at 12 noon and indulging in a variety of artistic and picnicking practices. Then at 3pm we’ll be cutting a birthday cake, toasting Kathleen, and reading out birthday messages. As part of our celebrations we would like to invite you to send Kathleen (or any other special person in your life) a birthday telegram which will not only be read out at the flickernic but displayed online and preserved in a book made by the members of the garret. We also want you to share your first memories of art with us, whether at a gallery, on the street or at a performance, and you can do this in a number of ways:

Post a comment on the GGAS Birthday Telegrams page: http://the-garret.org/birthday-telegrams
Email your message to telegram@the-garret.org
Post your message to the G.G.A.S. Facebook Event wall: https://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/event.php?eid=155610497836092

This event has been inspired by the Epstein Archive and the ongoing Bob and Roberta Smith residency, and we intend to use this opportunity to discuss this legendary Lady and the impact she has had on all our lives, and also to draw attention to this extraordinary resource.

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LIGHT

Fri 8 April – Thu 30 Jun
Birmingham Institute of Art and Design
Walsall Manor Hospital, Family Health and Diagnostics Levels 1 and 2

The spring and summer exhibition season shows a diverse collection of photographic art work exploring the theme of Light. Students from the BA (Hons) Visual Communication course at Birmingham Institute of Art and Design have developed their work specifically for exhibition at Walsall Manor Hospital.

All the artists featured in the exhibitions, situated in the corridors on Levels 1 and 2 of the hospital’s new Family Health and Diagnostics centre, have taken inspiration from a personal exploration of light. With studies ranging from natural objects, illumination, observation, portraiture and perception.

Light kicks off a series of quarterly exhibitions planned for Walsall Manor Hospital. The gallery spaces aim to provide artists with temporary exhibition opportunities whilst at the same time working to enhance the environment for staff, patients and visitors. Artists will be offering the opportunity to purchase the work on display with 20% of sales being donated to the hospital’s charitable trust.

Light will be on display at the Manor Hospital from the Friday 8 April to Thursday 30 June 2011. For further information please contact Kerry Hodgkiss on 01922 721172 (x6344).

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not losing yr marbles walsall has found a home

just a quick postscript to say that my soundscape for walsall not losing yr marbles walsall is finally available to listen to / download. please go to

http://soundcloud.com/burnsean/not-losing-yr-marbles-walsall

to do all this

all the best

sean burn

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Mark Titchner Exhibition

8 July – 11 September 2011

Mark Titchner works in a wide range of media including sculpture, installations, banners, posters, video and performance. He frequently explores the ways in which communication engenders belief and the ways in which our minds can be subtly manipulated. Text commonly features within his work and he draws from a wide range of sources including song lyrics, advertising, utopian statements and political manifestos.

This new exhibition will include newly commissioned work as well as other key sculptures and installations.

The exhibition is presented as part of the Home of Metal festival curated and produced by Capsule which will involve related exhibitions and activities across Birmingham and the Black Country. Many venues including Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery, Wolverhampton Art Gallery and Walsall Leather Museum will be participating.

For further information about the festival, please visit www.homeofmetal.com

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footwear and psychiatry

bobby baker has her wonderful film of how to live playing in the gallery as part of life of the mind. her descriptions of psychiatric, psychological and psycho-analytical footwear is stunning, subversive and accurate. i have my own footwear story. i got rejected by the crisis team one time because i had designer shoes. i got to read my notes much later on and then managed to destroy all my notes in protest at reading this. i read that they had agreed i was in crisis but then evaluated my footwear which tipped me over to not-crisis. my ‘designer’ shoes had been bought for a tenner down leeds market two years previously and were knackered by this point, so …

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CHANCE TO TAKE PART IN A NEW DANCE FILM PROJECT IN WALSALL

Sampad south asian arts is looking for dance lovers across the Black County to take part in an exciting new digital dance project.

Coming to The New Art Gallery Walsall on Sunday 27 March, the project sampad dance dub, will see the gallery filled with over 100 people who will be filmed dancing to a lively track.

The short film, created in just one take, will be available on YouTube and shown at various screenings and public events in the West Midlands.

sampad is looking for participants from the local area aged 12 and over, of any ability and any dance style. You can join in as an individual or a group (max 5 per group), and need to be available from 11am-3pm on the day.

Piali Ray, director of sampad said: ‘We’re really excited to be bringing sampad dance dub to Walsall – this is a brand new project, so you have the chance to be part of something that has never been done before!

‘The idea for the film is inspired by the popular ‘Lip-dub’ films on YouTube, where people line a building and mime to a popular song. We’re applying this to dance, to get lots of people moving and trying something different. In three and half minutes we want to create a mosaic of movement, vibrancy and colours around the gallery, with lots of different people and different styles.

‘So whether you’re into Bollywood, salsa or street dance, or have never danced before, if you would like to have a go, we want to hear from you!’

To apply for a place in sampad dance dub, send your name(s) and age(s) to Kavita Walia at kavita@sampad.org.uk, by Monday 7 March.

sampad dance dub is part of Arts Nation West Midlands.

Arts Nation is a national initiative funded by Arts Council England, looking at innovative ways of engaging arts audiences. Projects will be taking place across the country between October 2010 and September 2011 and will focus on developing best practice for arts organisations looking to provide a first step into the arts for audiences. Case studies and legacy materials will be collated and shared with the sector via the Arts Council England website (www.artscouncil.org.uk).

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casting out the nuts

a former mayor of walsall – according to local history – had a tradition of casting nuts out at passers-by in an act of benefaction. i thought what a great tradition to continue. i’d like to cast out nuts at passers-by. no doubt i’d be failed by health and safety tho. yu might just need a hard-hat when walking past me in walsall

instead however come and see cracking up. a durational performance by sean burn. this is where i will repeatedly crack open walnuts using only my left hand and offer the nut flesh up to audiences. this is intended as a small but cumulative and defiant tribute to those not making it thru the mental health system.