Showing posts with label Dearne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dearne. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 January 2010

A Month of Arts Events

THE RIVERS' MOVEMENT
presents a month of arts events at
EMERGENCE POD 1
BARNSLEY
YORKSHIRE

The award-winning Rivers' Movement aims to create awareness of climate change by means of art, poetry, science, and technology. Members of the public are warmly invited to a Showcasing Exhibition which will take at the Emergence Pod 1 on Mayday Green, opposite the market place, on 5 February 2010 and will run until 26 February (closed Sundays and Mondays). Workshops and public art events will also be held throughout February.

The Rivers Movement is a collaborative project involving Yorkshire people who have twinned with people from Gujarat in India. Together they explore common experiences involving the impact local rivers and climate change has on their lives. The exhibition currently focuses on the rivers Dearne, Aire and Calder.

The month long exhibition consists of works by twelve painters and photographers and two installation artists. All have taken their subject matter from the problems we face as we try keep our climate and environment in balance. We hope that more people will join us in workshop activities and become members of the either the Dearne Project Group or the Aire & Calder Group. Twelve of the original artists and photographers are featured in a new book which will be launched at the final exhibition on 26 February.

More about the exhibition:

The Giant Dearne Figures

The established Northern carnival organiser, Jean Compton, will work alongside Barnsley people to create at least one large statue. The figures will represent the Spirit of the River Dearne.

Coat of Collaboration Installation

Mother Nature is shouldering the effects of climate change and needs our help to ensure that we pass on a brighter legacy for future generations. We are already seeing the benefits and disruption of our actions. This is being depicted in the textiles of a 'Coat of Collaboration' that Mother Nature wears in the installation being produced by creative engineer Yvonne Denton. This creative work is made to challenge the lack of harmony in our environment.

Silence - An Interactive Video Installation

Lee Gascoyne having discovered a graffitied wall by the river behind Barnsley Asda has depicted it in an oil painting. In remembrance of his time in India Lee links Barnsley to the Hindu Festival of Holi as he destroys the image by throwing coloured powders at it and then dramatically floods it with water to bring the painting back to its original form. All the time he is documenting the process through a video installation. His collaborator Reinhold Behringer has devised a programme especially written for the occasion which allows onlookers to become part of the process.

Illustrating the Dearne

A book celebrating the River Dearne has been produced by adult writers and by school children. This is an opportunity for people to find a poem and use it to create an illustration.

India - Drawing from the 'Picture Frame'

Several of the contributors have images of India. The earliest were taken by Loretta Cusworth's father in 1944 and the most recent by Chhaya Upadhyay of her primary school class on a visit in January to the River Narmada. Jane Weatherby and Reinhold Behringer also have collections of pictures taken in Gujarat in 2008. These will be shown on an electronic 'picture frame' and will be used to encourage people to create larger images.

Painting and Drawing

Most days there will be a professional painter working in the gallery. If you have your own materials you are welcome to join them or simply sit and watch.

Mono Printing

Two established artists using techniques developed by Alexander Cozens (D.1746) will use modern variations of his method to show how the accidents which result from the process of printing one-off images can stimulate creative artwork.

Cyanotype Printing

Cyanotype is a printing technique which relies on sunlight to mark silk. Ideal for creating beautiful scarves. Since the sun can be indifferent to the needs of Barnsley Artist in February, we will teach the technique with the use of a light box and make Dearne Environment Flags.

The Carbon Rolls-Tools of Explanation

Using the important diagram on carbon use in the developed world (which shows the 'consumption stack' in Kwh per day per person found in David McKay's Sustainability Without the Hot Air) we will consider how we can express this complex database by making it less baffling and therefore easier to understand.

The 73 Pictures in 24 Hours Attempt

Brian Lewis celebrates Old Age by taking on the task of creating 73 artworks in a day. 'This time I am taking on the agenda suggested by the Carbon Roll and painting about sustainability, climate and the environment.'

The 24 Hour Moot

A moot is a gathering and at this 24 hour event, artists* from different artforms are coming together to produce work which focuses on the environment, climate change and sustainability. Brian Lewis, aged 73, is producing 73 paintings and drawings, Rob Hindle, aged 46, will create 46 poems. Reinhold Behringer, also 46, will create a 46 bar piece of music using a computer controlled synthesiser and samplers. Helen Mesezaros, aged 42 (an established teacher who laughs a lot) will be compiling 42 letters of complaint. Falguna Bharateeya in Gujarat, India will also be collecting and collating a body of work and transmitting it over to us in Yorkshire at this time. More and more contributors are coming forward wishing to participate in this event. The remaining body of artists will be working on less deadline orientated works throughout the day.

This workshop is open to the general public from 10am to 4 pm. Everybody is welcome and we look forward to seeing you there. We all make a difference...


*Rob Hindle has written poetry and short stories for 20 years. In 2006 he won a national competition run by Templar Poetry for a sequence of poems of place, taking as its subject the Sheffield Flood of 1864 and a new book is coming out this summer. Brian Lewis has paintings in public and private collections but is better known for his writing on community development. He won the national Raymond Williams prize in 1997 for a book about a woman's prison and has exhibited in the major public galleries in Yorkshire and Humber. Reinhold Behringer is a composer and also Professor of Creative Technology at Leeds Metropolitan University. Helen Mesezaos is an established teacher who laughs a lot. Falguna Bharateeya lives in India and is lecturer in literature and education in Gujarat.

Exhibiting Contributors

Lorreta Cusworth, Porl Medlock, Jane Weatherby, Reinhold Behringer, Runima Kakoty, Stephen Court, Brian Lewis, Bob Clayden, Stina Harris, Liz Salter, Rosie Gilligan, Rachel Knowles, Lee Gascoigne and Yvonne Denton.

Wednesday, 13 January 2010

Dearne Project - Exhibition on 5.February 2010



The Dearne Project.

This is a collaborative project involving Yorkshire people and those from Gujarat in India, exploring common experiences of the influences of local rivers on their lives.

The Dearne project is a charitable organization and we aim to bring the problem of climate change to the general public and also re-engage them with their local heritage.

We are holding an exhibition in Barnsley, commencing 5th February 2010 and have the
Children of Silkstone Primary school joining us.

Our project with them has been in writing poetry, painting and drawing. The children have become our 'Climate Ambassadors' and will bring about definite changes in our communities re awareness of conservation and climate change.

Our Future¸ and that of planet Earth, is in the hands of such children.

The children have designed our poster through competition, and we are to display their work at the exhibition.

We are also involved with John Davidson of Groundwork. www.groundwork-stan.org.uk. He is also an active Rotary member in Cheltenham where he runs a similar project.

We hope you will enjoy the work done by the contributors of the book in the knowledge that your purchase helps to support this organization.

Runima Kakoty
Chair
The Dearne Project

Wednesday, 9 December 2009

Visit at Silkstone Primary School

On Monday the 7th December , the day of the first UN Climate Change summit in Copenhagen, The Dearne Project group, Artists Roger Head, Runima Kakoty and Loretta Cusworth took teachers and 33 children from the Silkstone Primary School to the Dearne Valley Park off Pontefract Road Barnsley.
Everyone gathered information for use in writing prose and poetry, drawing and painting in order to produce a poster advertising the opening of the first of the Dearne Projects exhibitions in February 2010.

The exhibition will run for 2 weeks and will be interactive for those visiting the Pod in Barnsley town centre.

This project exists to bring awareness to the community about climate change and the link to the Rivers project which is worldwide. The group are using art and poetry to create this interest in the general public.

Anyone wishing to join the project will be welcome.





Wednesday, 11 November 2009

The Dearne Project - Update

Loretta Cusworth sent me this:

The Dearne Project is working with Silkstone Primary School.
The children will design the poster for the exhibition event in February 2010 and hold a school's exhibition also.
A river walk will be held on 7-12-09 with the children from the school.
many thanks

LORETTA
SECRETARY Dearne Project.

Wednesday, 4 November 2009

Dearne Project: Working with Silkstone Primary School

The Dearne Project is now working with Silkstone Primary School.
The children will design the poster for the exhibition event in February 2010 and hold a school's exhibition also.
A river walk will be held on 7-12-09 with the children from the school.

LORETTA
SECRETARY Dearne Project.

Saturday, 25 July 2009

Runima Kakoty: River Dearne



Image by Runima Kakoty


Himalayan Balsam and Sycamore tresses.
Traces of litter and water marks
reach for the boughs of trees.
Rippling water flows through tranquility .
Wheels abandoned to water.
Reflections of rain clouds
marshmallows on a blue background.
Hues of cadmine,
orange iron ore,
colour the soil of the river bank.

River Dearne,
Mother to Barnsley,
your serenity and half hidden wonder
fill me with amazement!!

Dearne Workshop




On Saturday, a group of participants in the Rivers Project met in Barnsley at the Black Monk Inn Pub for a workshop. First we walked briefly along the river (I still have my doubts if that ditch can be called a river...)., then we met at Runima Kakoty's house where we discussed ongoing projects. One of the activities there was to define a A-Z for the Wiki that is currently in development: it has been set up last week, and the pages are being filled with content. Anyone who is interested in participating and editing the Wiki, please let me know.

Sunday, 19 July 2009

The River Dearne Project

(received this from Brian and post it here)

River Dearne Project

Helped by a grant from The Barnsley TUC Training Trust, three Indian visitors came over from Gujarat and took part in the first two rivers Projects. We collected a lot of material which is currently being processed. I found this piece, written in one of the eight Minute sessions so interesting that I thought I would send it on to you to look at and to put onto the Blog. we think that it is by Mitali Baxi but it might be by Kiran Joshi.


In Indian scripture water is perceived as the root element of life, it is from water that life emerged. In Sanskrit we find ‘Jal Iti Jivanam’ – ‘water is life’.

The river is an ever conscious realiy. She is ever sensitive to her past, her present and her future – it is there at a time. She glows in a total harmony with her surfacing ripples and her inner vibrations. The river is indeed a journey from surviving to existing through de-becoming. The river is an integrative principle of life representing the lively traits of human existence.

‘When we touch Narmada in Gujarat, the Dearne in UK is touched too.’

Most of the cultures on this globe were formed around the rivers. Hence, river becomes a natural ‘Guru’ (teacher) to lead out all that is grand in our heritage. Today we mean to make conscious efforts to restore the primordial educative force of river for in this process is the the peace and well being of human kind.

The ‘Rivers Project’ rises to this sublime force and becomes a precursor of natural education aiming at unity and bliss of mankind.



THE THIRD DEARNE MORNING WORKSHOP WILL START AND THE MILL OF THE BLACK MONKS, CUNDY CROSS, BARNSLEY 10-30am ON SATURDAY 25 MARCH.
In the afternoon we are going back to Runima Kakoty's house for a joint workshop.

Artists, writers, creative technologist and scientists are all welcome.

Brian Lewis