New Art Gallery Walsall have got the next instalment of Martin Parr’s Black Country Stories project on show for a couple of months from today.
The project was commissioned by Multistory. Martin was in Sandwell in 2010, he did Walsall last year and this year and next he’ll be in Wolverhampton and Dudley.
He’s also been doing some filming, including this from Teddy Gray’s Sweet Factory:
Established in 1826, Teddy Gray’s has always been a family owned and run business. Five generations have worked and contributed towards the business of keeping the traditional, hand-made methods of sweet making alive.
Tomorrow, I’ll be at The Public for the showcase event of the DCD Programme. In case you’d not heard of it:
Arts Council England West Midlands’ Digital Content Development (DCD) Programme is a three year programme of investment which aims to catalyse the creation and creative use of digital content platforms for arts organisations across the West Midlands region
The website went up recently and the map on the homepage shows some of the projects, along with how much money they received. Further information is due on the website at some point, but if you look at the page source then you can glean a little more. On the basis that you probably don’t want to ruin your eyes, here’s what I found:
- Birmingham Repertory Theatre – Towards the development of an online multi-user playwriting resource (£27,884)
- Pesky People – Development of a multiplatform approach to venue access information (£25,000)
- Leamington Spa Art Gallery & Museum – PostCart: creative digital access of art gallery and museum collections (£24,750)
- Library of Birmingham – Development of an Alternate Reality Game for young people (£23,750)
- Talking Birds Theatre Company – Development of The Difference Engine – a multiplatform real time access tool. Some mention of it here (£1,500 + £20,860)
- The Play House – Develop an online resource to match the company’s participatory ethos (£22,349)
- Eastside Projects and Birmingham City University – Piloting a 3D online art gallery (£22,000)
- The MAC – Playground: exploring the use of digital technologies in a new-built art centre (£20,500)
- Royal Shakespeare Company – Creation of a new digital arena for the creativity of the RSC. Pretty sure this was Such Tweet Sorrow (£20,000)
- Audiences Central – To develop a web platform and plug-in for cross regional arts marketing (£18,000)
- B Arts – Development of a new form of arts centre/collaboration (£17,380)
- Rhubarb Rhubarb – To create an online evaluation tool (£17,000)
- Shropshire County Council – Citizen Journalism (£15,612)
- Rideout – To explore the production of creative digital content engaging youth crime statistics (£15,000)
- Radio To Go – A collaboration with the British Library to pilot an online music archive. Called The Pilot Project (£13,750)
- Rosie Kay Dance Company – To create an online version of the touring production, 5 Soldiers (£12,500)
- Indigo Ltd – The development of a pilot online platform exploring new forms of crowd-source fundraising in the arts (launching soon and called Angel Shares) (£11,750)
- Wolverhampton Arts & Museums / Black Country Museums – Research and Development of a collaborative online resource for the Black Country Museums (£10,550)
- Black Country Touring – Exploration of enhancing a site specific, theatrical experience through live streaming (£10,348)
- Multistory – To create a new media platform for celebrating local stories as part of place-making (£10,235)
- Fierce Festival – Towards a Viral Online research game (£8,253)
- Birmingham Opera – Exploring new models of ownership and sales of published works (£6,737)
- Borderlines Film Festival Ltd – Experimenting with mScapes technologies (£5,600)
- Orchestra of the Swan – Research and development towards a strategic plan (£5,000)
- Capsule – To support digitally enhanced new marketing and distribution opportunities (£4,880)
- Welsh National Opera – research and development of phase one of iMaestro. To allow Welsh National Opera to research digital copyright law and the possibility of exploiting full-length opera samples under the Creative Commons license (info about that here) (£4,600)
- Ikon Gallery – Towards the development of a social media project (£3,500)
- The Other Way Works – Professional development around Augmented Reality and Transmedia (£2,575)
- Ex Cathedra – Market development, engaging an online music aggregator (£1,323)
- Dance Consortium – Exploring social media in relation to contemporary dance marketing (£1,000)
- MADE – To explore the use of digital platforms in placing making (£1,000)
As well as these projects, the programme supported a range of other activities including workshops, innovation labs and other events.
I’ve heard of one or two of these projects, but the vast majority are new to me so it’ll be interesting to hear a little more. I should probably also add that I’m involved in the Rosie Kay Dance Company project – that’ll launch next week so I’ll blab a bit more about it then.

Multistory in association with The Public present Martin Parr’s unique look at life in the Black Country. After spending a year documenting modern day society and culture, The Public are preparing to unveil this collection of over 750 photographs.
Parr’s process of documenting and recording is fuelled by his passion and a curiosity, taking inspiration from his surroundings. His intimate approach, photographing his subjects in their own environment, gives him space to explore their lives and values in ways that often involve inadvertent humour.
Running alongside this will be an exhibition of photographs by students and staff of Sandwell College Photography Department. ‘Show Me A Secret’ will explore and display their own interpretations of Black Country life following Martin Parr’s mentoring.
Both exhibitions run from Thursday 11 November 2010 to Sunday 23 January 2011; opening daily, 10am – 6pm, and have free entry.

Home By Six is a new project from Multistory:
Whatever it is about your journey, if you can tell it in six words we want to hear it.
Stories will be featured in an exhibition called ‘Home by Six’ which will take place at Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery in the Community Gallery from 21 November 2009 to 7th February 2010. The Community Gallery is an exciting new space dedicated to exhibitions created in collaboration with communities.
There’s a few ways to get involved in this one:
- Text ‘homebysix’ plus your story, name and town to 60300 (calls charged at your operator’s standard network rate)
- Email: send your story, name and town to yourstory@homebysix.co.uk
- Twitter: use the hashtag #homebysix
- Online: write your story at the Home By Six website
Of all the things on last night I only made it to two out of five. I missed out on the opening of Ryoji Ikeda’s exhibition at Ikon Eastside (which I might go and catch at lunchtime today), Jordan McKenzie’s ‘Day Into Night’ at Vivid and Colour’s night at The Victoria featuring World of Fox’s album launch.
Still, I did make it along to the Arts & Business Awards. The special guest was Patrick Stewart (who walked, not teleported on stage – disappointing) and the winners were:
- Community Award – EC-Arts & National Express Coach
- Cultural Branding Award – Stan’s Cafe & AE Harris (Birmingham) Ltd
- Museum, Libraries and Archives Award – Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust & Inchscape Motors Shrewsbury
- People Development Award – Holte Visual & Performing Arts College, St Francis Primary School & Signet Trading Ltd
- Sustained Partnership Award – Sinfonia ViVA & Rolls Royce plc
- Young People Award – County Youth Arts & Balfour Beatty Capital
- Business Volunteer of the Year Award – Colin Wells from Prologic plc & Multistory (also winner of the Champion of Champions Award)
Congrats to all of them.
After that I wandered down to the Sunflower Lounge for Gallery of Owl’s ‘All You Can Eat Zine’ which was fantastic – billed as ‘a night of Zines, comics, small press, music and performance’. It provided all of that as well as a palpable sense of
I didn’t stay for that long, but long enough to catch Richard Peel‘s entertaining performance of Dracula, have a chat with Claire from ATTA grrl a buy a couple of zines (ATTA grrl and Girls Who Draw, since you asked). There was a good turnout, a great atmosphere and the excitement of knowing there’s loads of interesting stuff going on around the city.
Here’s what I picked up:

And check out the hand stamp too – easily the best one I’ve had in a while:

I meant to write this up a while back and was reminded by Polarbear appearing on Radio 3′s The Verb (click here to listen again, he’s on at 11mins) the other night.
I’ve gone on a bit about how good I think Polarbear (Steve Camden to his mum) is and a few weeks back I went to see his show ‘If I Cover My Nose You Can’t See Me’ at the REP (who joint-commissioned it with others). In short (and I’d be prepared to go on at length if you really want) it was brilliant.
After the show everyone was ushered up to the REP’s mezzanine where musical partner Afrosaxon was manning the decks and graphic designer Goonism was sketching characters from the show. We also had a reading from one of Polarbear’s inspirations – a fantastic lady whose name, I’m ashamed to say, I didn’t get.

The photo below might need a bit of explaining. Polarbear works with the West Brom-based Multistory on arts projects with kids, doing all sorts including making these masks (his black eye is make-up from the show, by the way).

Anyway, it was great and if/when he comes back it’d be well worth checking his show out. For that matter, I reckon spoken word in general is a hugely underrated artform. I know there are a few things about but if you know of/organise anything of that ilk around Birmingham then feel free to hit the comments below with detais of your next event.
All photos by Lee Allen of Front Row Photos.

Beyond Bricks is:
a programme of temporary creative activities that provides opportunities for artists and residents to work together to respond to the social, economic and environmental changes taking place in Lozells and East Handsworth. The programme celebrates the culture and pride of local community, its heritage and its future
and:
is currently looking for artists and arts organisations to deliver a series of temporary art works, in any discipline, to be delivered between November 2008 and May 2009
This is a collaboration between Urban Living and Arts Council WM but is being delivered by the Sandwell-based Multistory.
There’s info about how to get involved (as an artist or otherwise) on the Beyond Bricks website.