Sam Watson
Chris Dorsett
Tim Brennan
Will Marshall
Will Strong
Adam Phillips
Richard Forster
Domestic Violence
Gabriella Arrigoni
David Butler
Chris Yeats
Paul Stone
Emma Keating
A talk on collaborative practices and professional development in contemporary art. Artists, curators, lecturers and practitioners across Tyne & Wear gather together for discussing mechanisms of group work and their importance. Curated by Gabriella Arrigoni.
A talk on collaborative practices and professional development in contemporary art
curated by Gabriella Arrigoni
Participants: Tim Brennan (artist and Head of Department, Arts & Design, University of Sunderland), David Butler (Coordinator of LifeWorkArt – Newcastle University, and Co-Director of Intersections), Chris Dorsett (artist and Reader in Art School Practices, Northumbria University), Richard Forster (artist), Emma Keating (senior consultant, Grit & Pearl), Will Marshall (artist, The NewBridge Project), Adam Phillips (artist and curator, CIRCA), Will Strong (artist, The NewBridge Project, Paul Stone (Vane), Sam Watson (artist and curator, CIRCA), Christopher Yeats (Vane).
Moderator: David Butler
Noise performance by Domestic Violence
Admission is free but booking is required. Please contact Vane on 0191 261 8281 or email events@vane.org.uk to book a place.
Artists, curators, lecturers and practitioners across Tyne & Wear gather together for discussing mechanisms of group work in the arts and their importance especially for artists at the beginning of career.
Into The Gravy originates as a follow-up to a research conducted by curator Gabriella Arrigoni for Newcastle University and focused on the condition of emerging artists. Bringing Tyne & Wear as a case study, the essay investigates the transition between Fine Art education and the professional environment, describing the regional art community as a sort of open but circumscribed ecosystem.
The event is intended as an opportunity to present and discuss the main findings of this research, but also as a platform to develop a further debate on some of its crucial subjects. Artists, curators, creative practitioners and the audience are invited to question and rethink roles and models of art education, as well as on self-organising, diy approach in collaborative practices within the art world.
Gabriella Arrigoni is an art historian, journalist and independent curator. Her writings have been published in several magazines and catalogues both in Italy and abroad. Since 2006 she collaborates with UnDo.net as editor and she curated exhibitions in several not-for-profit spaces. She founded the curatorial platform Harpa Projects in 2009, together with Michela Gulia, and she is part of Nopasswd festival 2011 curatorial team. She currently lives and works in Newcastle upon Tyne.
at 6.30pm / performance at 8pm
Refreshment will be provided
Special thanks to: The Co-operative
Vane
Kings House
Forth Banks
Newcastle Upon Tyne, NE1 3PA