Sky Arts announces first commissions for Art 50 Brexit project

Thursday 26 October 2017

Sky Arts announces a diverse range of exciting new artworks examining what it means to be British in the post-Brexit world as part of its landmark Art 50 project.

 

The works include a ‘state of the nation’ poem by the acclaimed Simon Armitage; a song book created by choirs around the country; a comic film of different British dogs ‘talking’ about British culture; AI robots who will quiz people on what it means to be British; and renowned playwright John Godber has written and will star in a play featuring a Brexiteer and a Remainer as they take a tandem bike ride across Europe . Full details on all commissions below.

 

Art 50, which launched in March 2017 to coincide with the triggering of Article 50, is inviting artists from all disciplines to submit ideas on the theme of what it means to be British. Over 500 applications for the first round of commissions were received and applications for the second round are now open. 50 projects will be commissioned in total.

 

Guest judges for the first commissioning round included musician Roger Daltrey, former deputy mayor for education and culture Munira Mirza, dance artist Kenneth Tharp CBE and broadcast journalist Vick Hope.


Art 50 is a two-year initiative funded by Sky Arts in partnership with three major UK cultural organisations: the BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, the Barbican, and Sage Gateshead. A selection of the commissioned works will be displayed at all three venues on 23-24 February 2019, as Britain prepares to leave the EU. Storyvault Films will be making programmes about the progress of the projects to be shown on Sky Arts.  

Applications for the second round of commissions are now open at www.skyartsart50.tv. The closing date is 12 January 2018.  Art 50 is particularly interested in receiving visual arts submissions and has also announced a schools project. For details, go to skyartsart50.tv.  

Full details of commissioned works below.

 

Phil Edgar Jones, Director of Sky Arts and Chair of Art 50, says: The cultural voice of Britain is as mixed as its people and Art 50 is amplifying that loud and clear as we prepare ourselves to exit Europe. In this first round of commissions, the soul of our nation is undergoing a creative make-over up and down the country; with Wales, Birmingham, Manchester, Glasgow and Yorkshire as just a few examples of where we can expect to see and hear what it means to be British in a post-Brexit world. We are also thrilled to be working with our partners - the Barbican, Sage Gateshead, and BALTIC, whose public programme of events will feature a selection of the 50 projects being commissioned in total for this ambitious landmark project.” 

 

Roger Daltrey, musician and guest judge, says: “This country has been divided by the Brexit vote, but now we need to move on. I’m not a member of any political party; I think that art should remain free of party political judgement. For me, Art 50 is a way to bring together artists, filmmakers, dancers, musicians and unite us again. It's fully inclusive - I like that. Within the project there are older, established artists alongside the young and up-and-coming, reflecting the best of diverse British culture using poetry, music and comedy. Of course, as I know well, if there's one art form with an ability to unite people it’s music. It’s proven that when choirs sing, their heartbeats all go to the same rhythm – just as this project reflects the diversity of what being British means, hopefully we will all come together as one.”

The first round of commissions for ART 50 includes:

A new play from renowned playwright John Godber, whose Scary Bikers features a Yorkshire couple from opposing sides of the Brexit tracks setting off on a tandem ride through Europe. Scary Bikers opens at the Theatre Royal Wakefield on 8 February 2018 and will star Godber himself, alongside actress Jane Thornton.

DanceXChange, with one of the UK’s most acclaimed contemporary dance artists, Gary Clarke, will present Art 50/50, a new work based on the thoughts and feelings of the inhabitants of Birmingham – a city that was practically split 50/50 in the referendum. Art 50/50 will be researched with a small preview at Birmingham’s International Dance Festival in June 2018 and a full performance will be premiered at a site-specific location in the city during autumn 2018.

A film in which poet and playwright Simon Armitage explores post-Brexit British identity is a meditation on the relationship between Britain and Europe. As the dial on an old Bakelite radio moves from city to city - Brussels, Prague, Lyon - we tune into a film that combines sights and sounds associated with each nation with sections of the poem providing a corresponding narration. The question is, what happens when we turn to Britain on the dial?  What do we see: dark satanic mills, the white cliffs of Dover baring their teeth at the continent? What do we hear: Jerusalem? Grime? Static? 

Mad Dogs & Englishmen from Gadzooks is a light-hearted animated film in which dog breeds representing different UK regions are voiced over with unscripted conversations of people talking about British culture.

Royal College of Art teacher Libby Heaney will train artificially intelligent robots to chat to and quiz people online to gain an insight into what it means to be British. 


The Barbican will present new pieces created by acclaimed UK theatre-makers Told by an Idiot, who will tackle the lack of diversity on the British stage by devising a new theatre piece with a group of 12 performers, six of whom have a disability; and New York-based duo Split Britches, who will take inspiration from the 1964 film Dr Strangelove and its iconic War Room, inviting members of the audience to join them in debating how to look forward in a rapidly changing world. The Barbican will also see the Los Angeles Philharmonic and world-renowned conductor Gustavo Dudamel arrive for an International Associate residency, also delivering a Youth Manifesto - an open rehearsal with 150 musicians from the National Youth Orchestra and from around the UK, plus a book inspired by the thoughts of 40 young people from Britain, alongside 10 young people from America, on nurturing music for future generations.

A British Songbook by composer Alex Groves and theatre director Rebecca Hanbury connects choirs of all types - Gospel, NHS, Fishermen’s, and more - with a new songbook inspired by testimonials from disparate communities from around the UK.  

Glasgow’s Citizens Theatre will deliver Urban Oratorio - five performances of live music, song and spoken word about what it means to be Scottish and British, based on local workshops with the long-term unemployed, ex-offenders, people in recovery or with mental health issues, retirees, refugees and students.

 

Photo-journalist Phil Hatcher Moore’s photographic portrait of Welsh hill sheep farming will be displayed on roadsides and footpaths to highlight the harsh reality of rural life.

 

Small Town Politics, an online sitcom co-directed by 28-year-old Gulliver Moore is inspired by his younger brother, who spent one year as the Mayor of Frome, Somerset, when he was just 21 years old. 

Stock, a short film by 25-year-old Naqqash Khalid from Manchester, is a dark tale about immigrant anxieties where a young man finds himself voiceless when accused of crimes he didn’t commit. 

New British identity symbols and fictional consumer brands for millennials will be created by visual think-tank Common Vision.

 

Martha Barnett will deliver a darkly comic play told from a Northern Irish Loyalist point of view, a group who often feel British in Northern Ireland but outsiders in England.

 

Speaking about the initial applications the judges commented:

 

Kenneth Tharp CBE, says: “For those whose notion of 'Britishness' still resides in bowler hats, red double-decker buses, cricket greens and pea-soup fog, it's so important to see a new generation of home-grown artists redefining and giving voice to the Britain of today, in all its rich and complex diversity. The range, quality and imagination of the initial ideas submitted to Art 50, across multiple disciplines, were truly inspiring and a testament to a creative spirit that is alive and well in Britain in 2017... that said I'm still a great fan of double-decker buses! “

 

Vick Hope, radio and TV presenter, says: “There are some fantastic pieces from the world of dance, which I can’t wait to see come to fruition, and it was particularly awesome to discover some emerging visual artists from around the country whose work wouldn’t have otherwise been brought to my attention. Get set for lots of colour and creativity from the works going through to the next round!”

 

Munira Mirza, former deputy mayor for culture and education in London (2008-2016), says: "The projects funded by Art 50 reflect something of the humour, creativity and eccentricity for which Britain is known around the world. From community choirs to talking dogs, performance poets to filmmakers, this project uncovers the many different voices that make up the country today and brings people from all kinds of backgrounds together."  


For more information:

 

Roz Arratoon / Ellie Scott                                 

Margaret_

+44 (0) 207 739 8203

Roz@margaretlondon.com / ellie@margaretlondon.com

http://www.margaretlondon.com/

 

About Sky Arts


Sky Arts is the UK’s only dedicated channel for the arts. It offers something for everyone, whatever their passion, with entertaining programmes showcasing the best of classical and popular music, theatre, opera, dance and the visual arts, as well as original drama and comedy. Sky Arts is broadcast 24 hours a day and has over 1,000 hours available on catch-up TV, including flagship programmes such as Portrait Artist of The Year, Landscape Artist of the Year and The South Bank Show.

The channel is committed to supporting the arts by investing in the best talent, both on and off screen, as well as through exclusive partnerships with major UK and European cultural institutions, including National Theatre Live, Tate and The British Library.

Sky is Europe's leading entertainment company, serving 22.5 million customers across seven countries - UK, Ireland, Germany, Austria, Italy, Spain and Switzerland. The company has annual revenues of £12.9 billion and is Europe’s leading investor in television content with annual programming spend of over £6 billion. Sky has over 31,000 employees and is listed as one of The Times Top 50 employers for women. Sky is listed on the London Stock Exchange (SKY). 

About the Barbican 

A world-class arts and learning organisation, the Barbican pushes the boundaries of all major art forms including dance, film, music, theatre and visual arts. Its creative learning programme further underpins everything it does. Over 1.1 million people attend events annually, hundreds of artists and performers are featured, and more than 300 staff work onsite. The architecturally renowned centre opened in 1982 and comprises the Barbican Hall, the Barbican Theatre, The Pit, Cinemas One, Two and Three, Barbican Art Gallery, a second gallery The Curve, foyers and public spaces, a library, Lakeside Terrace, a glasshouse conservatory , conference facilities and three restaurants. The City of London Corporation is the founder and principal funder of the Barbican Centre. 

 

About BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art

 

BALTIC is a major international centre for contemporary art situated on the south bank of the River Tyne in Gateshead, England and has welcomed over seven million visitors since opening to the public in July 2002.

 

BALTIC presents a distinctive and ambitious programme of exhibitions and events, and is a world leader in the presentation and commissioning of contemporary visual art.


Housed in a landmark ex-industrial building, BALTIC consists of 2,600 square metres of art space, making it the UK’s largest dedicated contemporary art institution. BALTIC has gained an international reputation for its commissioning of cutting-edge temporary exhibitions. It has presented the work of over 396 artists from 54 countries in 197 exhibitions to date.
balticmill.com

 

About Sage Gateshead

 

Sage Gateshead is an international home for music and musical discovery located in the North East of England. Its local, national and international concert programme runs all year round and incorporates all kinds of music.

 

It is home to Royal Northern Sinfonia and the Folkworks programme as well as providing a much broader performance programme. Sage Gateshead offers an extensive Join In and Make Music programme that enables everyone of every age or ability to become involved in music both at the venue itself and around the region.

 

About Storyvault Films

 

Storyvault Films is an independent TV production company making a wide range of high-quality factual and factual-entertainment programmes for all the major TV channels in the UK and international distribution.  Formed in 2009, the company brings together a group of award-winning producers and directors, alongside highly experienced production management and expertise in casting and live and pre-recorded programming.

 

Our current and recent credits include three series of “Portrait Artist of the Year” and two series of “Landscape Artist of the year” for Sky Arts. Also for Sky Arts we produced eight series of The Book Show with Mariella Frostrup, as well as live coverage of Antony Gormley’s “One and Other” (The Fourth Plinth) “Objects of Desire” and a range of other single documentaries.   Our recent shows for BBC include “My Mediterranean with Adrian Chiles”, “Melvyn Bragg: from Wigton to Westminster”, and a number of “Imagines”, featuring Colm Toibin, Judith Kerr, Howard Jacobson and Marlon James.  We currently have a feature-length documentary in development for the big-screen, and are co-producing new shows for ITV and BBC2.   Most of our productions are available for international distribution.