Showing posts with label ullapool. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ullapool. Show all posts

10 Nov 2012

Conference report: Arts and identity at 'Changin' Scotland'

'Changin' Scotland – The Role of the Arts, Culture and Identity in Scotland' looked at how artists and others can influence public policy.

By: Richard Taylor

http://new.a-n.co.uk/news/single/visual-arts-role-in-scotlands-social-transformation

Introduced by writer and commentator Gerry Hassan and Highlands and Islands MSP Jean Urquhart, 'Changin' Scotland – The Role of the Arts, Culture and Identity in Scotland' took a 'Yes' campaign slant on how Scottish cultural identity could help educate public opinion on Scotland’s independence referendum in 2014.

The conference was organised by artists and facilitators AHM (Sam Ainsley, David Harding and Sandy Moffat), who in 2011 produced the State of Play – Art and Culture in Scotland Today symposia. In their opening session, and in light of having attended the open public meeting at Glasgow's Tramway on October 31 which addressed the need for change at funding body Creative Scotland, AHM asked: "How do artists and those involved in the arts change public policy?"

Further sessions followed over a full day on the Saturday, with a screening of 'Brigadoon' in the evening, and two morning sessions on the Sunday. Representatives of Scotland’s cultural sector presented their ideas, followed by open discussion facilitated by AHM. The role of cultural action as a stimulus for social transformation and political change was discussed in terms of national institutions, such as the Royal Scottish Academy, the role of Creative Scotland, and events in recent Scottish arts history such as 'Windfall 91', a seminal artist-led exhibition in Glasgow involving Scottish and European artists. All sessions were visually recorded through drawing by artist Emily Wilkinson.

www.mindfulmaps.com

There was strong support for Scottish independence throughout the three days. Artists such as Jim Mooney and Roderick Buchanan, art historians, politicians, poets and literary figures such as Janet Paisley and Alan Bissett, as well as former representatives of what was the Scottish Arts Council, including Sam Ainsley and Lindsay Gordon, put forward arguments that harkened to late '70s Scottish nationalism and its influence in the arts in the '80s and '90s. Creative Scotland was also scrutinised on its dismantling of the specialist voice of artists at board level.

Speakers from the visual arts sector included Malcolm Maclean, former CEO of Proiseact nan Ealan (the Gaelic Arts Agency); Will Maclean (RSA), former Senior Research Fellow and tutor at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design; Craig Richardson, Professor of Fine Art, Northumbria University; novelist, journalist and filmmaker Ewan Morrision; and Tom Normand from School of Art History, St Andrews University.

A strong argument came from Malcolm Maclean’s Saturday morning session 'Out of the Invisible: The role of the visual-arts in re-imagining Gaelic Scotland'. In presenting historical events that dealt with the promotion of Gaelic language through visual art, Maclean put forward ideas on how artists can project change through media coverage and a public voice.
He commented: "The blank canvas of giving artists full license to realise their ideas whilst working with the Gaelic language – Proiseact nan Ealan’s foremost ethos – in turn allows an effective politicisation of ideas… a slow-burner effect of instilling social and political movement." Foundation funding was this year withdrawn from Proiseact nan Ealan by Creative Scotland.

The importance of history
Craig Richardson’s Saturday afternoon talk, ‘Scottish Art since 1960’ discussed historical definitions of Scottish contemporary art in light of post-modernism, Thatcherism and devolution – all reference points that were brought together in the conference to promote 2014’s independence vote, and to politicise the creative act.

Anchoring social change to artists' responses, Richardson stated: "An insurance policy for Scottish artists is the knowledge of their recent art history, a record of which has been difficult to trace in a British sense… to look at the topology of Scottish visual art since 1960 unearths either exclusion or inclusion – a predicament the artists’ national confidence will face in upcoming political shifts."

Ewan Morrison’s later talk, 'The role of great art and art education in social transformation', questioned whether social change is indeed possible through the work of artists. He instead suggested that such tasks should be left to politicians. He said: "Artists feel the need to symptomatically respond to politics, yet successful practitioners have responded instead with entrepreneurship in order to survive."

With many artists now avoiding the art market to pursue alternative ways to make a living, context-specific work is realisable, as are socially engaged projects that look to the community. Yet this type of work is clearly dependent on funding.

Much focus was brought back to Creative Scotland’s role. It was characterised as a product of decisions made by governmental shifts ignorant of Scotland’s international cultural standing and overly focused on activity in the central belt (Edinburgh and Glasgow). The overiding message of Changin' Scotland was that the change brought about by being an independent nation would allow for inclusivity, rather than exclusivity.

'Changin’ Scotland – The Role of the Arts, Culture and Identity in Scotland' took place 2-4 November, in Ullapool, Scotland.

6 Nov 2012

'Changin' Scotland - photos from the event

'Changin’ Scotland – The Role of the Arts, Culture and Identity in Scotland' took place 2-4 November, in Ullapool, Scotland.




Ullapool



Alan Riach



David Harding and Malcolm Maclean



David Harding





Dr Tom Normand



Sam Ainsley, Craig Richardson and Ewan Morrison




Sandy Moffat




Will Maclean, Malcolm Maclean and David Harding

Will Maclean

2 Nov 2012

Changing Scotland conference programme

CHANGING SCOTLAND 

          NOVEMBER 2nd-4th 2012

OUR TENTH YEAR! OUR TWENTIETH WEEKEND!

        The Role of the Arts, Culture and Identity in Scotland

Friday November 2nd
Welcome 8.15pm  
Gerry Hassan and Jean Urquhart 

8.30pm
Gerry Hassan, Sandy Moffat and Anthony Barnett
Gerry Hassan poses questions to artist Sandy Moffat and Anthony Barnett, first director of Charter 88 and founder of Open Democracy 

Saturday November 3rd
10.15-11.30am 
Saturday and Sunday Welcome:
Sam Ainsley, David Harding and Sandy Moffat
Artists, curators, campaigners and facilitators. 

Alan Riach Prof. of Scottish Literature, University of Glasgow.
The story of Scottish Literature and the story of teaching literature.

11.45-1.00pm  
Janet Paisley, Writer, poet and playwright
New initiatives for the support and promotion of the Scots language.

Alan Bissett Author and playwright
Anger as a legitimate response to political and historical injustice.

Lunch 1.00-2.15pm

2.15-3.30pm      
Malcolm Maclean, former Chief Executive Officer, Proiseact nan Ealan 
Out of the Invisible: The role of the visual arts in re-imagining Gaelic Scotland.

Will Maclean  Artist and Hon Fellow of the UHI University of the Highlands
Some Notes on Land Works : The Land Raiders Memorial Cairns on Lewis

3.45-5.00pm  
Craig Richardson, Prof. of Fine Art, Northumbria University
Scottish Art since 1960 

Ewan Morrison, Novelist, filmmaker and journalist.
The role of great art and art education in social transformation?

Saturday Evening 8.30pm        
Classic Films of Modern Scotland selected and introduced by Allan Hunter, Co-director, Glasgow Film Festival

Sunday November 4th
10.30-11.45am   
Dr. Tom Normand, School of Art History, University of St. Andrews
The past and the future of Scottish art institutions.

11.45-1.00pm 
Doug Eadie, writer and Eddie Dick, movie producer
Wee Country - Big Screen - Wee Screen: An illustrated dialogue

1 May 2012

AHM organise 'The Arts in a New Scotland' at the Ceilidh Place, Ullapool

AHM are organising one of the discussion weekends that have taken place twice a year over several years at the Ceilidh Place in Ullapool. The event is entitled The Arts in a New Scotland and it will cover as much of the arts as possible including Literature, Film and Television, Visual Art, Gaellic Arts, Theatre, the national arts institutions. It will take place from 2 to 4 November 2012. MORE DETAILS LATER.

28 Sept 2011

Changin Scotland : A weekend of politics, culture and ideas …. And fun!

Friday November 4th-Sunday November 6th
The Ceilidh Place, Ullapool

Friday November 4th
8.15pm Welcome
Gerry Hassan and Jean Urquhart

The Future of Scotland: The Union and Independence
Elaine C. Smith, actress and campaigner and Alan Cochrane, Daily Telegraph

10.00pm Live Music in the Bar from Babelfish

Saturday November 5th
10.15-11.30am Why did the SNP win?
David Torrance, author, ‘Salmond: Against All Odds’ and Ewan Crawford, former SNP Adviser

11.45-1.00pm A Decade of the Scottish Parliament and its Future
Robert Brown, former Lib Dem MSP and minister

1.00-2.15pm Lunch

2.15-3.30pm Being Second Generation Irish in Modern Scotland
Phil Mac Giolla Bhain, journalist and campaigner, author of ‘A Rebel Journalist’

3.45-5.00pm After ‘The Scheme’ and ‘NEDS’: How Do We Portray Poverty?
Nick Higgins, filmmaker with Morag Gillespie, Glasgow Caledonian University and Peter Mackie Burns, filmmaker

8.30-10.00pm Classic Films of Modern Scotland
Allan Hunter, Co-director of Glasgow Film Festival introduces the second in his series of recent Scottish films

Sunday November 6th
10.30-11.30am The Rise and Fall of the Scottish Left: Life After Tommy Sheridan
Gregor Gall, author, ‘Tommy Sheridan: A Political Biography’

11.30-1.00pm The State of the Scottish Media
Douglas Fraser, BBC Scotland, Kirk Torrance, SNP social media adviser and Joyce Macmillan, freelance journalism

Places are limited! So book early to avoid disappointment!
A weekend ticket £60 Individual sessions £8

To book tickets please phone: The Ceilidh Place Reception 01854-612103
Accomodation available from £25 per person per nite