DIY: 2019 – Fox Irving & Eva Peskin: Step One! Sharing
A two-day workshop on the art of sharing in collaborative encounters for artists in the North West and beyond.
Deadline for applications: 2pm, Thursday 4 July
This DIY is supported by Tate Liverpool
Project summary
From childhood, sharing is one of the most foundational human skills we are tasked with learning, and yet social conditioning, power hierarchies, and [tender human feelings] make it difficult to share generously and with ease. Step One! Sharing invites artists, creatives and cultural producers to participate in a 2-day workshop to cultivate ways to share that can be applied in a range of creative and collaborative practices.
Each day of this two-day workshop will invite participating artists / producers practice different modes of sharing, developing a group dynamic and shared vocabulary in order to create a collaborative art work. Workshop participants will explore how to create conditions for the trust, vulnerability, listening, and collective action required for honest and open sharing through a series of collaborative exercises. The group will create a public offering to share a reflection of the process as a culmination of the workshop.
Over many years Tate Liverpool has embedded within the programme an examination of different modes of collaborative practice. Through the Collaborative Arts Partnership Programme, this workshop participates in Tate Liverpool’s ongoing support for artists in their professional development in this field.
How to apply
Please submit a proposal for a creative offering that you would want to make in honour of someone who taught you an important lesson about sharing. Offerings can be textual, performed, poetic, edible, speculative, etc., but they must be able to be shared in person for 8 people in no more than 5 minutes.
Proposals of no more than 250 words must include:
Name and location you call home
Nature of art practice
You do not need to address these directly, but may consider these questions to guide you: What media or forms do you use? What big questions motivate you? For what audiences do you make work? Who inspires you? Why do you make art or call yourself an artist?
Description of creative offering
May include images / sketches / diagrams
We would particularly like to hear from people of colour, disabled, neurodiverse, unemployed and low income applicants, and people who have been discouraged from pursuing art based on class, race, gender, ability, etc.
Preference will be given to artists based in the North West, but applications are open to anyone with connections to the region. Lunch will be provided on both workshop days, and each participant will receive a £100 stipend to use as they wish. Participants are asked to contribute to a potluck on Saturday. Contributions may be in the form of food or beverage, but they may also be stories, decorative flourishes, mealtime rituals, etc.
Dates, times and location
Dates: 27 – 28 July 2019, 11am – 5pm
Location: Liverpool, Tate Liverpool
The artists
Fox Irving’s art is shaped by the liminal, precarious identity they inhabit as queer/femme/working class. They ask: what keeps people in place, what affords fluidity, and what kinds of assembly can be transformative? With a playful, D.I.Y approach informed by activist strategies and centering collaboration, Fox investigates how art can be used by marginalised communities that they are part of as a tool of empowerment. Eva Peskin’s projects are always collaborative and span many disciplines including performance, pedagogy, and social practice. In any medium, her work illuminates questions of value, care, understanding, and power: Where are we and what has happened here? How do we know what we know? What motivates and sustains our care as we make the world we want to live in, together?
Fox and Eva began an artistic collaboration in 2018, inspired by their mutual investments in practices of care, intuition, and assembly. Facilitation of the workshop will be informed by Fox’s background as a mental health nurse and Eva’s background as a teacher.
For questions about this DIY, please contact the artist.
Banner image credit:
Image credit: the artists
Part of DIY: 2019
Professional development projects – BY artists FOR artists – across the UK.
DIY: 2019 – Adam Patterson: Green Screen Charivari
Parading for the right to be unfixed, letting surfaces slip and slide, transgressing horizons, bodies, identities and worlds
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Adriana Disman: The confusing space between
A residential workshop for multi-racial performance people on an island in the English Channel.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Ania Bas & Amy Pennington: Performance for shy people. Playwriting for dyslexics.
Two day experiment at performance production by shy people and performance writing by bad spellers.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Bean & Nicola Woodham: (de)coding performance
Learn to build and program wearable sensors for use in sound based live art.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Beverly Thomas: The Silence
A 4 day residential workshop for artists of Colour to explore silence and revitalize their creativity.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Cade and MacAskill: The Making of Pinocchio
A playfully theatrical DIY for trans, intersex, non-binary and genderqueer artists exploring notions of realness through the desires of a wooden puppet to be “a real boy”.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Call for Participants
Applications are now open for 24 national professional development workshops by artists, for artists
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Call for Proposals
Invitation to propose unusual and exciting artists’ workshops
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Charlie Ashwell & Es Morgan: ANDROGYNY!
A weekend of dance and discussion for anyone interested in thinking about gender through dancing.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Claire MacDonald: Curse Bless me Now
Daring to curse. Blessing when the world is ending.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Daniel Oliver: Scripting Unscriptable Performance
Writing down and getting someone else to perform performances that can not or should not be written down and given to someone else to perform.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Edythe Woolley: SWEAT: the sky leaks I leak
Un-straightening, leaking and oozing towards queer entanglement, through an embodied practice of sweating.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Jack Tan & Annie Jael Kwan: Potluck Stories
A weekend of intercultural grocery shopping, culinary adventures and sharing stories about ingredients, journeys, migration, nationality and material culture.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Jenny Gaskell: Have you tried screaming your heart out and pretending to be Cher?
Creating a connection practice based on karaoke and daydreaming and oversharing and shared chips
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Lateisha Davine Lovelace-Hanson: To The Ritual Knowledge Of Remembering
3 day immersive workshop, exploring the body, ancestral memory and the land. To liberate creative actions towards a Decolonised Future.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Liat Rosenthal & Alex Eisenberg: Shiduchs, Shabbes and Shmucks
Exploring artist responses to Jewishness and antisemitism by spending Shabbat (the Jewish day of rest) together.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Oozing Gloop: COMMUCRACY NOW
Creating a revolutionary vanguard that will develop and present a new economy of government; COMMUCRACY.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Phoebe Patey-Ferguson & FK Alexander & Andre Neely: THE CULT
Are you feeling fed up and pissed off? Are you confused and overwhelmed? Are you isolated and unfulfilled? Are you ready to welcome ART into your life? THE CULT WELCOMES YOU.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Quiplash: Unsightly Drag
Bringing visually impaired queers and drag performers together to share skills and fuck shit up.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Stacy Makishi: Proud Mary!
What’dya get when you cross: Tina Turner, Mary Wollstonecraft and The Virgin Mary? A Proud Mary! The triple-decker-mother of workshops!
Read moreDIY: 2019 – The Famous Lauren Barri Holstein: ’Attack of the 50 Foot Woman’
Reimagining Scale, Ambition and Access for Monsters in Performance, through the lens of Feminist Sci-Fi
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Tim Jeeves & Lena Simic: The Party Calls You
Between climate breakdown, austerity and Brexit, the UK is facing its greatest political crisis in decades. What place is there for artists within the UK’s political institutions?
Read moreDIY: 2019 – VORTESSA (Lady Helena Vortex and Miss Giovanna Maria Casetta): GILF Island
Pack your cases, ready to embark on a Dark Romance of the ageing self, Exploring, releasing and adoring the inner GILF
Read moreAlso
DIY: 2018 – Rhiannon Armstrong & Rachel Mars: Ugly Singing
“Ugh, that sounds weird: do it more!”
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Cade and MacAskill: The Making of Pinocchio
A playfully theatrical DIY for trans, intersex, non-binary and genderqueer artists exploring notions of realness through the desires of a wooden puppet to be “a real boy”.
Read moreDIY: 2019 – Jenny Gaskell: Have you tried screaming your heart out and pretending to be Cher?
Creating a connection practice based on karaoke and daydreaming and oversharing and shared chips
Read more