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[ecrea] Imagining Possibilities, 1st March 2013
Fri Feb 01 18:32:48 GMT 2013
Creative Futures Institute, School of Creative and Cultural Industries,
University of the West of Scotland, Paisley Campus, High Street, Paisley
PA1 2BE
Friday 1st March 2013
9.30am – 5.00pm
A conference exploring the findings of Remaking Society, an Arts and
Humanities Research Council (AHRC) Connected Communities ‘Pilot
Demonstrator’ project.
Participation in cultural activity is an essential ingredient in making
healthy communities. The Remaking Society project explores how
neighbourhoods experiencing multiple deprivation, in particular, might
harness engagement in creative activity to build capacity for social
change. The project takes a broad view of wellbeing as a social
construct: that is, more than an individual’s state of physical and
mental health connected with income and wealth, and with life
satisfaction, wellbeing is “related to our sense of social
connectedness, inclusion and participation, existential security and
safety, political citizenship, self-development and actualization, and
opportunities for education, recreation and creative expression.” [1]
The Remaking Society project is made up an interdisciplinary team of
researchers, partnering with experienced community arts organisations,
working in four contrasting contexts of deprivation, alongside the arts
and health programme of NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, Cadispa Trust,
and www.poverty.ac.uk.
It aims to:
* Demonstrate how participation in cultural production in locations
where people are experiencing increasing economic hardship can catalyse
the creation of community and wellbeing.
* Explore the ways in which, through creative engagement with arts
and media processes, participants can re-vision collective futures
* Compare the different working principles and theories of
community arts practice in the demonstration site organisations
* Test methodologies for evaluating cultural practice as an
integral component of socioeconomic regeneration.
* Provide a set of narrative insights, through cultural production,
into the lived experience of poverty and social exclusion; broadening
the range of evidence contributing to the UK national Poverty and Social
Exclusion (PSE) Study (www.poverty.ac.uk).
This conference will explore those aspects of the project which
complexify current understandings of the ‘social impacts’ of the arts:
* providing a grounded analysis of histories of practice and
specific creative processes
* exploring different ways of activating arts and cultural
practices as community assets (i.e. arts not simply ‘brought in’ from
outside to impact communities
* showing arts working within multi-agency arrangements;
* exploring conflicts over the rationales for arts project design
and evaluation by different organisations (government, NGO, corporate,
commissioning, funding, etc.
* questioning key concepts of power, participation, representation
and agency in participatory arts and media practices
Although cultural policy debates are entrenched, the situation on the
ground is dynamic, and tends to be driven by urgent pragmatism rather
than ideological purism. Moving beyond a reliance on arguments about
‘instrumental’ versus ‘intrinsic’ benefits of arts participation, the
project explores the role of creative participation in acting as a
catalyst for social change, exploring the proposition that “there is a
fundamental connection to be explored between creativity and health as a
pathologically optimistic expression of survival.[2]” Whilst concepts of
‘community’ and ‘participation’ with arts and media practice remain
contingent, contested and partial, under some circumstances they may
also retain the potential to articulate alternative values and visions
to the dominant socio-economic order.
Connected Communities
Connected Communities is a RCUK cross-Council programme designed to help
us understand the changing nature of communities in their historical and
cultural contexts and the role of communities in sustaining and
enhancing our quality of life. The programme seeks not only to connect
research on communities, but to connect communities with research,
bringing together community-engaged research across a number of core
themes, including community health and wellbeing, community creativity,
prosperity and regeneration, community values and participation,
sustainable community environments, places and spaces, and community
cultures, diversity, cohesion, exclusion, and conflict.
What will participants in the conference gain?
* learning from examples of interesting work elsewhere
* heightened awareness of the key issues and challenges facing the
field of participatory arts
* access to resources/expertise/networks
* broadening perspectives on the histories, values and politics of
participatory arts and media practices
* some ways to think beyond entrenched positions, views, and
criticisms of participatory/community arts practices
Programme Outline
Sharing findings - with examples from each of the projects:
· Theatre Modo working in Fraserburgh: the Maelstrom Project
· Odd Numbers project (NADFLY/Baxendale/Love Milton) in Milton,
North Glasgow
· Bradford Community Broadcasting, Bradford
· Swingbridge Media, North Tyneside
Keynote Speakers
Rahila Gupta, Southall Black Sisters: Imagining 'Communities'
François Matarasso: Community arts: histories, values, futures
Workshops:
Learning/training/mentoring/skills exchange for the field (Creative
Scotland/Paul Hamlyn Foundation 'Artworks' project/Mary Dowson/Graham
Jeffery)
2 The value of this work to individuals and communities (Tom
Wakeford/BCB)
Cultural participation and relationship to health and wellbeing
(Kerrie Schaefer/Theatre Modo/NHSGGC)
Myth, magic and regeneration (Neill Patton and Nicola Atkinson)
Relationships to policy (Graham Jeffery)
Creation of alternatives (Tom Wakeford/Kerrie Schaefer)
Who should attend?
Researchers, practitioners, policymakers, commissioners, evaluators,
activists, curators, artists, citizens – people with an interest in the
roles of the arts and media in community development and regeneration.
We welcome proposals for additional workshops, relevant to the
conference theme, of 1 hour 15 minutes. Please email
(graham.jeffery /at/ uws.ac.uk) with details of your proposal, no later than
Friday 15th February.
Registration details
An online system for registering for the conference will shortly be
available. In the meantime please email (Gillian.Dyer /at/ uws.ac.uk) to
reserve a place. The cost of the day, which includes lunch/refreshments,
is £50 (£40 for voluntary sector/students/unwaged participants).
The Remaking Society research team is made up of
Nicola Atkinson NADFLY/Love Milton
Martin Danziger Theatre Modo
Mary Dowson Bradford Community Broadcasting
Lee Ivett Baxendale/Love Milton
Graham Jeffery Reader in Music and Performance, University of the
West of Scotland
Hugh Kelly Swingbridge Media, North Tyneside
Neill Patton Fieldworker and Researcher, The Cadispa Trust
Kerrie Schaefer Senior Lecturer in Drama, University of Exeter
Tom Wakeford Senior Research Fellow, School of Health in Social
Science University of Edinburgh
****
Graham Jeffery
Reader: Music and Performance
Chair: Art, Music and Performance Subject Development Group
School of Creative and Cultural Industries
University of the West of Scotland
Paisley Campus
High Street
Paisley
PA1 2BE
generalpraxis.blogspot.com
www.uws.ac.uk/cci
twitter.com/grahamjeffery
twitter.com/UWScreative
skype: generalpraxis
(+44) (0)141 848 3000(work)
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