Portals for Mortals exhibited over the weekend of August 20th and 21st as part of the Park Tales festival at Thorpe Meadows, Peterborough. The installation was received with enthusiasm by participants despite gusty conditions and the occasional heavy shower.
Category Archives: Nene Park
Callout to Peterborough Musicians
Calling Peterborough music makers. Do you want to have some musical fun?!
I’m inviting Peterborough-based musicians, music makers and wannabe musos of ALL kinds to help devise and record a series of weird and wonderful fanfares.
There are four sessions available, with a maximum of 12 participants for each session:
- 9/7/2016, 10am – 12pm
- 9/7/2016, 12pm – 2pm
- 23/7/2016, 12pm – 2pm
- 23/7/2016, 2pm – 4pm
To see registery pages for all sessions, click here.
What is a fanfare? A short musical passage that makes us think of celebration, probably dramatic and possibly quite loud. Ta-daah!
Why does it need to be weird and wonderful? It doesn’t, that’s just a way of saying that any instrument and musical style can be used to create a fanfare, at least that’s what the project hopes to prove!
What’s it all for? The final recordings will be used as part of an interactive art takeover of a high-profile sculpture in Peterborough, details to be announced very soon.
Do I need to be a virtuoso? Musical talent is optional but certainly appreciated! More important is imagination and willingness to try something out with other music makers.
What kinds of instruments are suitable? Literally anything that you can bring down to the studio and plug in or that can be mic’d up, including your voice.
What do I do next? If you are interested in coming along to a local recording studio and helping to create a unique fanfare on either the 9th or 23rd of July 2016, simply register yourself for one of the recording sessions currently available. First come, first served, so what are you waiting for?
Nene Park Commission
I’m pleased to announce that I have been commissioned to create an artistic intervention at the Nene Valley Sculpture Park in August of this year. The Nene Valley Park itself is a lovely area of water, woods and fields that plays host to a variety of activities including dog walking, fishing, rowing, running, cycling and sailing to name but a few, let alone being a great space to simply wander round.
The sculptures themselves occupy Thorpe Meadows, an area close to the city of Peterborough, accesed simply by following the river Nene upstream. The majority of the pieces were originally purchased by the Peterborough Development Corporation which then set up the Peterborough Sculpture Trust in 1988 to manage the collection, incidentally which includes a Gormly and a Caro. More sculptures were commissioned by the Trust in the following years and many were relocated from outlying towns to the Nene Valley Park where they now stand, mostly in Thorpe Meadows.
Although they have their basic needs catered for (!) the sculptures are in need of a little TLC. Signage is generally overgrown. Some nearly floated off in a recent flood. One or two are in need of repair. One has been rather unsympathetically ‘re-plinthed’. Sadly, another was stolen. Many people who regularly pass by the surviving exhibits are not particularly aware of them and do not feel that they have much relevance to themselves. This is evidentally a situation so problematic that is has been turned over to a bunch of half-crazed artists to have a go at solving! Or at least that’s my take…
As part of a strategy to reinvigorate the sculpture park and re-engage the attention of the people of Peterborough towards this quite extensive collection, Vivacity, the not-so-long-ago outspun Entertainment, Culture and Leisure capability of Peterborough City Council, has awarded a series of arts commissions to be (mostly) realised at a weekend event it is organising to take place 20th/21st of August. The ‘Myths and Mini Beasts’ family friendly weekend will certainly help to pull in local families of the area.
But I think each of the five commissioned artists probably hopes to develop a more artistically interesting outcome and somehow create a more profound connection between the people of Peterborough and their semi-forgotton sculpture collection.
The other artists are:
Rich White, Lyndall Phelps, Kevin Green of Store Projects and Scottee.
Watch this space!