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Collaborative Arts Partnership Programme

“CAPP – supporting the development of collaborative arts across Europe”

The Collaborative Arts Partnership Programme (CAPP) is a transnational cultural programme focusing on collaborative practices, with the aim to improve and open up opportunities for artists who are working collaboratively across Europe whilst engaging new publics and audiences for collaborative practices.

LADA is a CAPP partner, working alongside Create-Ireland (coordinating lead partner), Agora Collective (Berlin), hablarenarte: (Madrid), Heart of Glass (Liverpool), Kunsthalle Osnabrück (Osnabrück), Ludwig Museum – Museum of Contemporary Art (Budapest), M-Cult (Helsinki), and Tate Liverpool (UK).

Over four years the different strands of the CAPP programme will involve national and international professional development opportunities (2015), artist residencies (2016), commissioned works, presentations and debates (2017) and a major showcase (2018).

To get all the news on CAPP activities and opportunities, sign up for the quarterly e-bulletin.

In April 2018 Heart of Glass produced Making a Meal Of It: the third iteration of their With For About conference series. Making a Meal Of It aimed to create “a different kind of conference experience” through the collective act of making a meal. The process was documented and recorded through the creation of a publication, which can be viewed and downloaded here.

In November 2018, CAPP published this video, which reflects on four years of activities.

LADA 2018 CAPP activities:

In 2018, CAPP supported artists’ commissions and projects around collaborative practices and approaches include:

Restock Rethink Reflect Four on Live Art and Privilege (2016-18): CAPP has supported four Study Room Guides and toolkits of methodologies generated through research residencies at LADA by Lois Weaver, Elena Marchevska, Kelly Green and Sibylle Peters, which explored Live Art practices and methodologies for working with the underrepresented and underprivileged constituencies of the young, the old, the displaced and the excluded. The guides and toolkits by Lois Weaver, Elena Marchevska and Sibylle Peters are available as free downloads or in print versions on request. Kelly Green’s Guide and Toolkit will be launched in 2018. More information

The Garrett Centre Commission: LADA issued an open call for proposals for a new project that would respond to the physical, cultural and social context of LADA’s new base in The Garrett Centre, in East London. The commission was offered to Sheaf+Barley to develop a collaborative project with local people creating stained glass windows for our new home.  More information

The Library of Performing Rights Commission: originally developed in 2006 for PSi:12 Performing Rights, the Library of Performing Rights (LPR) is a unique resource of materials examining the intersection between performance and Human Rights. The LPR has recently been reactivated and reimagined in collaboration with the artists/researchers Lois Weaver and Elena Marchevska, and includes a range of new activities and resources including an annual commission in partnership with the Study Room in Exile in Liverpool. The first Library of Performing Rights commission is artist Barby Asante’s collaborative project Declaration of Independence. She presented an iteration of the work at LADA in June 2018 and will present a further iteration at the Study Room in Exile in Liverpool later this year. This commission is also part of LADA’s Restock Rethink Reflect Four on Live Art and Privilege (2016-18).

Scottee 10: to mark his ten years of survival as an artist we are collaborating with Scottee on several projects. The first is Scottee: I Made Ita book full of recollections, dialogue, archive material and interruptions from Scottee and his collaborators on the ways his work engages with issues of fatness, queerness and class. The book will be launched with events in London and Manchester in September 2018. As well as this publication we will also launch The Outsiders Handbooka zine for queer, trans and questioning teenagers; and finally Scottee: From Your Retrospective will be a retrospective of his cabaret and short performance work at the Roundhouse in London in September. This project is also part of LADA’s  Restock Rethink Reflect Four on Live Art and Privilege (2016-18). More information

LADA 2017 CAPP activities:

In 2017, CAPP supported artists’ commissions and a number of public events around collaborative practices and approaches:

KAPUTT: The Academy Of Destruction: A transgenerational project that took place at Tate Exchange, London in October 2017 in a collaboration between LADA, Sibylle Peters of Theatre of Research (Germany) and Tate Early Years and Family Programme (UK). KAPUTT asked if we can see destruction in a different way if we look at it through the lens of Live Art: does Live Art help us see that destruction is not only about violence, hatred and rage, but can be a cultural strategy that is marvelous, manifold, careful and mindful? Who decides what is destruction and what is not and who has permission to destroy? KAPUTT explored these questions through a team of six children and six adult artists working as equal members. For three days they experimented, thought and acted together and shared their practices, experiences and concepts of destruction in six public sessions at Tate Exchange. More information

Kira O’Reilly: Untitled (Bodies): Edited by Harriet Curtis and Martin Hargreaves and published in Autumn 2017 as the fifth title in LADA’s Intellect Live series, Kira O’Reilly: Untitled (Bodies) is the first major survey of the interdisciplinary practices of Kira O’Reilly. O’Reilly’s work approaches the uncertain boundaries of bodies as the starting point for enquiry, and is distinctly relevant to social themes in the arts. Specifically, O’Reilly asks what kind of societies become possible in collaborations across species, organisms and bodies. Bringing together writings by thinkers from visual and performance studies, and documentation from two decades of practice, the publication navigates through and between performance, biotechnical practices, image-making, and writing. The book was launched with a series of roundtable events in Finland, Ireland and the UK in November and December 2017 in partnership with Bioart Society (Helsinki), Live Collision (Dublin), Queen Mary University (London). The events included contributions from a range of artists, scholars, scientists exploring and expanding on some of themes of Kira’s works in relation to their own transdisciplinary practices. More information

Restock Rethink Reflect Four on Live Art and Privilege (2016-18): In 2017, four Study Room Guides and toolkits of methodologies were generated from four CAPP-supported research residencies by Lois Weaver, Elena Marchevska, Kelly Green and Sibylle Peters, which explore Live Art practices and methodologies for working with the underrepresented and underprivileged constituencies of the young, the old, the displaced and the excluded. The guides and toolkits by Lois Weaver, Elena Marchevska and Sibylle Peters were launched in a public event at LADA on 19 October 2017 and are available as free downloads or in print versions on request. Kelly Green’s Guide and Toolkit will be launched in 2018. More information

Practice, Participation, Politics: A public gathering on 8 March 2017 exploring the possibilities of collaborative practices within socially engaged contexts. This was the first CAPP Staging Post event and reflected on the CAPP residencies which took place across Europe throughout 2016 and discussed wider issues in relation to collaborative ways of working, public engagement, participation, and social responsibility.

LADA 2016 CAPP activities:

In 2016, CAPP supported a range of artists’ residencies: 

Restock Rethink Reflect Four on Live Art and Privilege (2016-18). The first year of this project was research based, in the form of four residencies in LADA’s Study Room by Lois Weaver, Elena Marchevska, Kelly Green and Sibylle Peters, exploring Live Art practices and methodologies for working with the underrepresented and underprivileged constituencies of the young, the old, and the displaced and in relation to issues of class and cultural privilege.

PLAYING UP is an artwork by Sibylle Peters of Theatre of Research (Germany), exploring the potential of Live Art to bridge generations. Drawing on key Live Art themes and seminal works, PLAYING UP takes the form of a game played by adults and kids together.

LADA 2015 CAPP activities:

DIY 12, unusual artist led professional development programmes taking place across the UK between July and November 2015. CAPP supported DIY 12 projects by Zierle & Carter, Adam James, Daniel Oliver, Geraldine Pilgrim, Katie Etheridge & Simon Persighetti, Tania El Khoury & Abigail Conway, Owen Parry, Shaun Caton, and Ursula Martinez.

Between Menopause and Old Age, Alternative Beauty, a workshop for older women artists led by the acclaimed Mexican artist Rocio Boliver in November 2015, leading to a public presentation by participants for LADA’s Old Dears programme at Chelsea Theatre on 28 November 2015.

Details of CAPP Partner’s Opportunities for artists past and present, and information about the CAPP project can be found on the Collaborative Arts Partnership Programme website 

The Collaborative Arts Partnership Programme is supported by Creative Europe (Culture Sub-Programme) Support for European Co-operation Projects Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency.

 

Other projects in Collaborative Arts Partnership Programme

A transnational partnership on collaborative arts funded by Creative Europe, 2014-18

KAPUTT: The Academy of Destruction

A collaboration between LADA, Sibylle Peters of Theatre of Research and Tate Families & Early Years

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KAPUTT: The Academy of Destruction – Documentation

Kaputt was a collaboration between LADA, Sibylle Peters of Theatre of Research and Tate Families & Early Years.

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max+noa at LADA

We are delighted to be working with those ‘cunning folk’ max+noa (fka Sheaf+Barley) on a residency and a new commission

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Banner image credit:

Rocio Boliver, Between Menopause and Old Age, Alternative Beauty

Also

Activations London and Liverpool, October 2004

Launching Live: Art and Performance and The Performance Pack at Tate Modern and Tate Liverpool.

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Ongoing

Performance Magazine Online

A new online archive of Performance Magazine (1979-1992), plus new resources

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Documenting Live!

A major new publication on the representations of cultural difference in performance.

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SPILL Festival of Performance, London

A Showcase of ten of the most innovative, daring and exciting young artists from the UK and Ireland.

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Dangerous Border Crossings

A durational Live Art project referencing holding areas across the world

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Restock, Rethink, Reflect

An ongoing series of initiatives mapping and marking representations of identity politics in Live Art

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Labour Practices: Ethics of Service and Ideas of Labour in Performance

A panel on the ways artists use ideas of service and labour as creative strategies as part of At Your Service.

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