CBAT
CBAT News

Thursday, September 28, 2006

East meets West on streets of Cardiff

Image: Marjetica Potrč is an artist and architect based in Ljubljana, Slovenia, (pictured left is Prishtina House, 2006, Installation view at Portikus

Temporary public art installations by artists from Eastern Europe and Wales will transform interior and external spaces in Cardiff in a series of events echoing Constant Nieuwenhuys’ situationist theory as part of the Urban Legacies II: Another New Babylon conference to be held in the city from October 5-6.

To provide a wider European context, experiences from the emerging and new European states will be an important part of the conference and Marjetica Potrč from Slovenia and artist/architect Veronica Valk from Tallinn, Estonia, will exhibit especially commissioned artworks alongside work by Welsh artist, Anthony Shapland.

The artist’s projects will range from an urban farm in Cardiff Bay to an installation in the impressive former banking hall of the Nat West bank in Bute Street. The artworks will be used as a means of exploring the role of temporary artistic works and creative practice in the regeneration of modern post industrial cities.

Born in Tallinn, architect and artist Veronika Valk has made an impact on the Estonian cultural landscape. As one half of the in-demand architecture and events duo ZiZi & YoYo, she has won commissions for public and private buildings, interiors and landscapes. Veronika will also speak at the conference as part of the New Europe: New Cities session which will focus on the current developments in art and architecture in Estonia.

In her work, she investigates spatial issues and the aspirations of buildings, spaces and cities to the people inhabiting and using them. Since 1998, she has won around 30 awards in architectural competitions. Veronika’s completed projects include Suure-Jaani High School Sports Centre (with Kavakava Architects), the urban renewal of Rakvere city centre (with Kosmos office), and a memorial to the composer Eduard Tubin, in collaboration with sculptor Aili Vahtrapuu.

Frankfurt/Main 2006) whose work has been featured in exhibitions throughout Europe and the Americas. Venues for her solo shows have included the Guggenheim Museum in New York and the Künstlerhaus Bethanien in Berlin.

Her work is the product of wide-ranging research into communities across the world, taking the form of sculptural, photographic or online projects that explore temporary solutions for permanent problems such as overcrowding, poverty and pollution.

For Urban Legacies II, Marjetica will be constructing an urban farm made up of a vertical garden where people will be able to pass through and purchase fresh vegetables grown right there in Cardiff Bay. Consisting of a simple steel structure, which extends along vertical planes, allowing the ground floor to remain an open public space, the Urban Farm has been designed to bring together the best of two worlds, urban and rural.

The art of Anthony Shapland documents moments of transition in daily city life that are usually overlooked or thought invisible. Through their capture and editing on film, these mundane, everyday events – the lighting of a street lamp, the daytime sleep of night shift workers, drunken encounters after a nightclub has shut – assume an unexpected character and significance. In his explorations of the city at sunset and sunrise, he reveals the private uses to which public spaces are put.

Anthony is also the co-founder of g39, an artist-run network and gallery in Cardiff. Of his series of short films to be projected in the city centre, he says, “If the New Babylon is a place to play, a flexible place where rules no longer apply and we can be even more creative, then it is the city at night that most demonstrates this capacity for play.”

Other keynote speakers at the conference include Reinier de Graaf, partner in Rem Koolhaas’ controversial architectural practice OMA, as well as Lebanese architect Bernard Khoury, Filip de Boeck, anthropologist, University of Leuven and Tom van Gestel, Creative Director, SKOR, The Netherlands.

Urban Legacies II: Another Babylon aims to bring some of the world’s leading artists and architects to Cardiff to explore opportunities for greater collaborative opportunities between artistic practice and the real world of architecture in delivering successful urban regeneration projects the world over.

ENDS

For further information please contact Rhodri Ellis Owen, Cambrensis Communications on 029 20 257075.

More information on the conference can be found on the dedicated website www.urbanlegacies.co.uk

Editor’s Notes

Marjetica Potrč

The Slovenian artist Marjetica Potrč originally trained as an architect. She is known for her 'case studies' of improvised buildings all over the world. Using analytical drawings and self-constructed buildings, Potrč shows how local inhabitants come up with and realise solutions that sometimes function better than the plans originating from the urban developer's drawing board. Potrč's projects are intended to suggest concrete possibilities for improving the relation between the individual and society. Her projects have strong social, political and economic dimensions.

For Urban Legacies, Potrč has built an Urban Farm, an elevated living structure where the walls and roof are used to grow a variety of seasonal vegetables, herbs and flowers, tended to by the in-house gardener. This produce is then available to buy downstairs from a market stand built into the structure.

Veronika Valk

Born in Tallinn, architect and artist Veronika Valk has made an impact on the Estonian cultural landscape that belies her youth. A one half of the in-demand architecture and events duo ZiZi & YoYo, she has won commissions for public and private buildings, interiors and landscapes. In her work, she investigates spatial issues and the aspirations of buildings, spaces and cities to the people inhabiting and using them.

For Urban Legacies, Valk will be installing a temporary inflatable hotel into the former Nat West Bank in Cardiff Bay. Built from basic materials and inflated by simple desk fans, this ‘Black Box Hotel’ will also host discussion, a 3D cinema, video art, performances and experimental work by artists from Wales and Estonia. 12 guests will be accommodated every night over the conference in a unique hotel experience.

Anthony Shapland

The art of Anthony Shapland documents moments of transition in daily city life that are usually overlooked or thought invisible. Through their capture and editing on film, these mundane, everyday events – the lighting of a street lamp, the daytime sleep of night shift workers, drunken encounters after a nightclub has shut – assume an unexpected character and significance. In his explorations of the city at sunset and sunrise, he reveals the private uses to which public spaces are put.

Shapland has been documenting Cardiff’s nightlife during the small hours over the summer. For Urban Legacies, Shapland has edited this footage into mini-dramas, complete with subtitles of the drunken conversations, laughs and abuse. These will be shown at various locations 12 hours later than the time they were originally filmed, giving a brutal, humourous and often crude insight into how city spaces are inhabited throughout a 24hr period.

Friday, September 01, 2006

New book explores STAR power

STAR: a psycho-topography of place by artist Jennie Savage will be published in October to coincide with the Urban Legacies II conference in Cardiff and marks the conclusion of Jennie Savage’s 3-year exploration into the STAR (Splott, Tremorfa, Adamsdown and Roath) area of Cardiff. This project began with the notion of a radio broadcast created through the process of collaboration with those living within the neighbourhood and other artists.

The STAR Radio broadcast event took place for one week in October 2005 and transmitted documentaries, sound projects, live programmes and music across the suburban districts of STAR in Cardiff.

This new publication contextualises the project and the radio programmes made by a combination of 17 commissioned artists and the general public, creating a collection of information that transcends its locality, projecting a new ‘virtual map’ of a non-specific location.

All the radio programmes have been archived by the artist within a number of categories and form the heart of the book in CD-Rom and DVD formats.

STAR: a psycho-topography of place contains images and texts on 17 artists commissioned to respond to STAR within the medium of their own practice, creating programmes both through and without collaboration, broadcast within the locality. In addition, the book includes essays by: Claire Doherty, Dr Tom Hall and Dr Brett Lashua, Matthew Yeomans, Andre Stitt and Wiard Sterk.

One of the most interesting artists currently creating time-based and participatory interventions into modern life, Savage’s process based work responds to people, places and time, uncovering layers of activity and history often with surprising results. Location is key to her work, re-defining layers and creating reflections that allow those who’ve participated to view their own contributions within a particular context. The artist is always central to her work, seeking to represent the commonality of post-industrial landscapes.

Jennie Savage said, “STAR Radio was a project that explored the specifity of a one-mile geographic area. By exploring this area in all of its multiplicity, the project sought to create a relationship between the micro and the macro; in looking very closely at the specifics of a place, one discovers all places, all peoples and in fact, all the world, here. This was the premise of STAR Radio.”

ENDS

For further details, please contact Zoe King at CBAT on 029 2048 8772 / zoe.king@cbat.co.uk

The publication will launch at CBAT’s forthcoming Urban Legacies II Conference 5, 6 October 2006 where the book will be available to purchase at a discounted rate.

Published by CBAT:The Arts & Regeneration Agency, STAR: a psycho-topography of place is available to purchase directly from the company at £12.99 plus of £3 P&P. Pre-orders are now available with a cheque made out to CBAT, addressed to 123 Bute Street, Cardiff CF10 5AE.

Editor’s Notes:

  1. STAR Radio and STAR a psycho-topography of place were commissioned and produced by CBAT The Arts & Regeneration Agency
  2. Funding for the project and publication gratefully received by the following: European Union
    Objective 2, Arts Council of Wales, Cardiff County Council, PROJECT – engaging artists in the built environment, Cardiff Community Housing Association and Tesco Stores.
  3. The following have contributed essays to the publication:
    • Claire Doherty, Senior Research Fellow at the University of West England, Bristol and Situations a research and commissioning programme which investigates the significance of place and context in contemporary art.
    • Dr Tom Hall, Lecturer and Dr Brett Lashua, Research Associate, Cardiff University, School of Social Sciences.
    • Matthew Yeomans, author of Oil: Anatomy of an Industry, founder of online consultancy Custom Communication and freelance writer for Time and Wired.
    • Andre Stitt, widely considered one of Europe’s foremost Performance artists.
    • Wiard Sterk, Director, CBAT The Arts & Regeneration Agency
  4. STAR Radio commissioned artists were: Stefhan Caddick, Anya Lewin and Michael Lawson-Smith, Anthony Shapland, Marcia Farquhar with J.Maizlish, James Tyson, Dominic Thomas, Mike Cousin, Simon Whitehead, Sara Fletcher, Teresa Dillon, Simon Aeppli, Helen Clifford, Lloyd Robson, The Duo Collective, The International Owl Project, Gordon Dalton, Mark Gubb and Bedwyr Williams, Ella Gibbs
  5. STAR a psycho-topography of place will launch on 4 October as part of CBAT’s Urban Legacies II: Another New Babylon conference that takes Constant Nieuwenhuys’ Situationist theory as the starting point for exploring how temporary, informal and unplanned interventions by artists and creative practitioners are contributing to urban regeneration. The conference will be held at St David’s Hotel, Cardiff, 5,6 October 2006.
  6. STAR a psycho-topography of place is designed by Sweet creative. All photography by Adam Williams and Jennie Savage
  7. For further information visit the following websites:
    www.starradio.org.uk
    www.jenniesavage.co.uk
    www.cbat.co.uk
    www.urbanlegacies.co.uk

What makes a city anyway?

What have the Congo and Cardiff got in common? Although thousands of miles apart, one man, eminent Belgian anthropologist Filip De Boeck, links these two parts of the world as he shares his experiences of how people interact with their urban environment, however rudimentary and informal, as is the case in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s capital, Kinshasa, to a UK audience as part of the Urban Legacies II: Another New Babylon? conference on October 4th at the St David’s Hotel and Spa in Cardiff Bay.

Renowned the world over for his studies of private and public spaces in an urban context in Africa, and in particular in Kinshasa, Filip De Boeck brings with him his experiences of how people with a cultural perception which is very different from our traditional western attitudes to architecture and the built environment, classify urbanity.

The city of Kinshasa has a population of 6 million yet urban planning as we know it ceased after independence in the 1960s, when the population was less than 500,000, and subsequent civil war and economic collapse. Nevertheless, the city works on a number of different levels despite the huge population growth and an inefficient and often absent infrastructure.

As the programme director of the Africa Research Centre and Chair of the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Professor Filip De Boeck is actively involved in teaching, promoting, coordinating and supervising research in and on Africa.

In his most recent book Tales of the Invisible City, a joint book project with photographer Marie-Françoise Plissar, De Boeck outlines how an almost invisible infrastructure exists focussed on personalisation (marking private space and image building), which is yet very real for those who live in it. This book is the basis for a travelling exhibition which is currently on show in Johannesburg in South Africa.

Filip De Boeck, says, “When you look at what we westerners view as a traditional city, take Cardiff for example, we tend to focus on physical buildings as a focus for the workings of a city and it people. Imagine removing the main shopping centres, the Castle or City Hall, as is the case in Kinshasa and what you get is a fascinating place where human movement and even speech become forms of building a city.

“The breakdown of infrastructure in itself creates opportunities for networking. I call this the ‘Possibilities of the Impossible’, in the sense that what is happening in Kinshasa is far from an ideal environment for anybody to live in, yet the majority continue to live full and varied lives.

“In short, for us living in the West we accept physical buildings as having an important form and function but it may be worth thinking of how we would adapt if our traditional perceptions were removed. Would we still be able to call ourselves citizens and would be able to positively interact with each other and adapt to exist? “

Since 1987 Filip has conducted extensive field research in both rural and urban communities in D.R. Congo (ex-Zaire). His current theoretical interests include local subjectivities of crisis, postcolonial memory, youth and the politics of culture, and the transformation of private and public space in the urban context in Africa.

Following its successful introduction two years ago, the second Urban Legacies Conference will carry on exploring artistic and creative ways to regenerate ignored and hidden urban spaces. In this year's Conference a number of professionals with a variety of approaches to this challenge meet again to debate the role of art, architecture and cultural expression in shaping the public realm and effecting positive change, focusing on the revival of contemporary post-industrial cities from an international perspective.

Urban Legacies II will further investigate themes, which emerged from the first Conference in May 2004 that, together with commissioned artist's projects under the title "Ain’t no Love in the Heart of the City", explored the developing role of artists in the regeneration of neglected city areas and the increased application of cross disciplinary architectural, artistic and urban planning practices.

More information on the Urban Legacies II is available online on www.urbanlegacies.co.uk.

ENDS

For further information please contact Wiard Sterk at CBAT, on 029 2048 8772 or Rhodri Ellis Owen at Cambrensis PR on 029 20 257075

URBAN REGENERATION UNDER FIRE

July 2006 saw the newly completed Bank of Beirut in Chtaura, Lebanon, coming under fire as a result of the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah. This building was one designed by the internationally acclaimed Lebanese architect Bernard Khoury, a keynote speaker at the Urban Legacies II: Another New Babylon conference to be held in Cardiff’s St David’s Hotel and Spa from 5-6th October.

The Bank of Beirut was a symbol of the new spirit of economic and social regeneration witnessed in the Lebanese capital over the last decade and the damage inflicted on the building and other swathes of southern Beirut will have an obvious impact on future regeneration plans in what was often called the ‘Paris of the East’.

The impact of unexpected external forces on urban regeneration and the important role played by artists and architects in helping Beirut rise again from the ashes will feature heavily in Bernard’s presentation to the conference.

Bernard Khoury studied architecture at the Rhode Island school of Design and received a Masters in Architectural studies from Harvard University and in 2004 he was awarded the Architecture + Award. Bernard has since lectured and exhibited his work in prestigious academic institutions in Europe and the U.S including a solo show of his work given by the International Forum for Contemporary Architecture at the Aedes gallery in Berlin (2003).

Khoury started an independent practice in 1993 and his office has since developed an international reputation and a significant diverse portfolio of projects both locally and abroad.

Urban Legacies II will further investigate themes, which emerged from the first Conference in May 2004 that, together with commissioned artist's projects under the title "Ain’t no Love in the Heart of the City", explored the developing role of artists in the regeneration of neglected city areas and the increased application of cross disciplinary architectural, artistic and urban planning practices. Other speakers at the conference include Reinier de Graaf, Filip de Boeck and Tom van Gestel.

More information on the Urban Legacies II is available online on www.urbanlegacies.co.uk.

ENDS

For further information please contact Wiard Sterk at CBAT, on 029 2048 8772 or Rhodri Ellis Owen at Cambrensis PR on 029 20 257075