UZ EVENTS UZ ARTS

Moving Out Festival 2015

UZ Arts in association with Colomboscope presented

“Moving Out”

Art and Performance : in the jungle : on the beach : at sea : in the villages : in the city : in the clubs : on the street

Narigama: Hikkaduwa: Colombo

Sri Lanka, 2015

Performances and installations created in residency at the Sura Medura Residency Centre Hikkaduwa.

Moving Out Sri Lanka concluded its 10 day programme with performances by Scotland’s Alex Rigg, Germany’s Frank Bolter, the Italian comic Adrian Schvarzstein, the Danish dancer Kitt Johnson, a film by Elisabeth Wildling from Austria and a spectacular display of traditional dance from the students and lecturers of the University of Visual and Performing Arts Colombo – the projects artistic partners. The programme had as promised presented performances on the beach, the streets, the village, the markets, the jungle, the clubs and at sea. It reached thousands of the public from every walk of life from rural fishing villagers to city urbanists and bemused and delighted in equal measure. The delight of the artists in collaborating together, once they had developed their own work, was evident in impromptu guerrilla performances and the comic film created – soon to be released on Vimeo.

The programme was created by UZ Arts and developed through residencies at the Sura Medura Centre in Hikkaduwa, Sri Lanka with funds from Insitu, the Goethe Institute, the British Council and local business sponsors. The programme was further enhanced through the participation of fishing families in Dondaduwa, surfers and fishermen, Hikkaduwa and Colombo and the addition of Texan virtuoso guitarist Rodney Brannigan, Jurate Syrvite from Lithuania, Roger Ely from England, DJ Sunara and the performers of UVPA Colombo. In all there were 78 performers and over 154 participants.

“I would say it has provided an intense, uneasy, alarming, charming, edgy, humbling, annoying, astonishing, provoking, friendly, dangerous, challenging, contrasting, confusing and edifying experience and not at all easy. The work that I have made as a result is helping me to move in a new direction with my thinking and I am keen to continue the process.” – Alex Rigg, Scotland

“It was a pleasure for me to find several magic moments working with my colleagues, working with artists, whose main expressions and languages is being in the present. What I found are fresh aspects of real-time, which influenced my thinking, and changed already my approaches of my ongoing work.” – Elisabeth Wildling, Austria

“The residency in Sura Medura house was perfect, the room and all the space available was exactly what we needed. A great variation of experiences and tastes was the result of sharing our creativity and imagination and to adapt ourselves to any possible situation.” – Adrian Schvarzstein, Italy

“First and foremost it was a very very fruitful experience. The work in the village and the whole encounter with the beautiful people there was extremely giving both on an artistic as well as on a personal level. Artistically I was challenged by the cultural barrier, both in terms of understanding of that art can be, the lack of a ‘modernism’ in terms of art, as well as just the basic difference between Danish and Sri Lankan reality. It forced me to approach the project completely differently. I think more culture specific than ever and I was very happy with the result.” – Kitt Johnson, Denmark

“Thank you for this unforgettable dream in Hikkaduwa and Colombo. Joining the artists’ group was fantastic.” – Frank Bolter, Germany

“The Sura Medura residency programme provides unique experiences for adventurous artists that can have a profound positive impact upon their practise. The Moving Out Sri Lanka Festival also showed how they work created can respond to and be of value to the artistic and wider community.” – Neil Butler, Artistic Director UZ Arts

For further information about the Sura Medura International Residency centre in Sri Lanka, please visit our dedicated website here.

Moving Out Symposium
Friday 30th October 2015, 9am – 5pm
Beacon Arts Centre, Greenock

The Moving Out Symposium was an exploration into the exciting range of art taking place outside conventional venues across Europe, the UK and Scotland.

Delegates and Speakers undertook to consider and discuss:
What is the significance of publically engaged art?
What significance does it have for our evolving cities and towns? 
What are the issues for artists, producers and programmers making, commissioning and presenting work outside conventional venues?
What is being made and who is making it? 

Moving Out was a unique opportunity to meet artists, producers, festival directors, presenters and cultural planners from across Scotland and Europe for a day of presentations, workshops, discussion and networking. It was funded by the INSITU network and Creative Scotland in partnership with The Beacon Arts Centre. 

Who was it for? Artists, presenters, producers and cultural planners 

Artist Opportunity: There were limited places for Scottish based artists who are creating live work outside conventional venues to present their work to the symposium. Details for application available via opportunities page

Programme
Chair: Peter Boyden
Neil Butler: Introducing Moving Out
Pierre Sauvgeot: A European Perspective
Mikey Martins: Current trends in the UK
Matt Baker: Moving Out – A Scottish Perspective
Chris Fremantle: Practicing Equality; art, participation and the city (using a super hospital as a lens)
Making it: Presentations by INSITU artists from the Galoshans Festival, and from across Scotland giving us an opportunity to understand the breadth of work being created. 

In the afternoon we held breakout workshops to explore various elements pertaining to the wider context of Art in Public Space. 

Art and Regeneration: What kinds of impact can art in public space delver?
Facilitated by Chris Fremantle (Researcher and Producer), Rikki Payne (Creative Producer, Inverclyde Place Partnership), and Rob Morrison (Taktal)

Producing in Public Space: How does publicly engaged work get made?
Facilitated by Werner Schrempf (Director, La Strada Festival), Neil Butler (Director, UZ Arts) and Alan Richardson (Director, Conflux)

Site Specific and Site Sensitive: How does art engage with a sense of place?
Facilitated by Pierre Sauvageot (Director Lieux publics), Matt Baker (Founder, The Stove Network), Mat Clemets(Orkestra del Sol), James Moore (Project Leader, Scenekunst Ostfold)

We offered tickets on two tiers, with the option to purchase early bird tickets available until September. 

Type 1 forIndividual and Project Funded Organisations and Type 2 for Councils and Regularly Funded Organisations.

Prices included all sessions, lunch, tea and coffee. 

Bursaries – We wanted to make Moving Out accessible to all. We worked alongside Articulation, Scotland’s advocacy and support organisation for physical performance to offer a limited number of bursaries to artists. UZ also awarded a small selection of bursaries to those travelling from out with Scotland.