Skip to main content

DIY: 2010

Professional development projects BY artists FOR artists across the UK

DIY 7: 2010 built on the success of previous DIY initiatives and offered artists working in Live Art the chance to conceive and run professional development projects for other artists

Professional development projects BY artists FOR artists across the UK

DIY 7:2010 built on the success of previous DIY initiatives and offered artists working in Live Art the chance to conceive and run professional development projects for other artists.

 

Our Call for Participants is now closed.

Our Call for Proposals to lead a project has now closed.

Documentation from DIY 7: 2010.

More info about DIY.

 

The DIY 7 projects took many forms, from immersive workshops and urban orienteering, to choir singing and public writing. And between them covered diverse subjects of investigation including activism through exploration and analysis of local history, open discussions of art and disability, to explorations of endurance and survival.

For the fourth time DIY took place across the UK, with the support of the largest number of national DIY partners to date. Thirteen projects were held between August and September 2010; again, the largest number of projects to date.

DIY 7 benefited the artistic and professional development of the participating artists and contributed to the skills and experiences of the artists who lead the projects.

120 artists took part in the 13 unique projects. The responses from the project leaders and the participants was that DIY 7's emphasis on peer training:

• empowered artists by allowing them to manage their own professional development.
• enabled artists to develop creative approaches directly relevant to the needs of their practice.
• encouraged artists to perceive their artistic output and professional development as inter-related and mutually beneficial components of a 'complete' practice.
• facilitated networking between like minded artists.
• inspired artists to take risks and think differently.

DIY 7 again demonstrated that artists are extremely well equipped to conceive and manage complex and often demanding professional development initiatives. The role of the host organisations in DIY 7 was therefore to facilitate and advise rather than to control.

Each DIY 7 lead artist conceived their project, submitted an application detailing their idea, prepared publicity copy, managed recruitment of participants, handled all relevant participation fees, booked all necessary venues, facilitated their training day(s), and wrote an appraisal report.

Each lead artist received £1,000, which covered their fee and all direct project costs including venue hire, travel, materials and hospitality. Some artists chose to seek a small fee from participants which further contributed to their project costs.

The Live Art Development Agency and its partners financed and secured additional funding for the initiative, distributed a Call for Proposals via email, selected the lead artists through an open submission process, advised lead artists about the logistical and conceptual focus of their project, publicised the 13 projects under the DIY 7 umbrella through a Call for Participants, organised a final networking event — the ‘DIY picnic’ — for all participants, and collated this summary report.
 
DIY future:

Like previous DIY programmes, DIY 7 proved to be a very successful and cost effective initiative that demands to be continued.

Future development and refinement could include:
• Access to more tailored advice and guidance for the lead artists (if and when assistance is required).
• The inclusion of travel budgets to enable greater networking between project leaders and participating artists.
• A higher-profile evaluation of the projects, possibly through an event and/or publication that facilitates the sharing of outcomes and discussion of best practice.
• A more generous financial base that provides artists' fees commensurate with the amount of time required to initiate, manage and evaluate a project, and remuneration for the host organisations.

DIY 7 focused on professional development within the Live Art sector. It is clear that the principles and form would successfully translate to other artform practices. 

DIY 7:2010 is a Live Art Development Agency initiative developed in collaboration with Artsadmin (national), Colchester Arts Centre (East England), Duckie (national), Fierce (West Midlands), Forest Fringe (national), New Work Network (national), Nuffield Theatre & LANWest (North West), PLATFORM (national), Text Festival (North West), Whitstable Biennale (South East), Wunderbar Festival (North East) and Yorkshire Sculpture Park (Yorkshire).

Other projects in DIY: 2010

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

We are looking for a better quality image for this page or to replace it if it's missing.

Part of DIY

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

DIY

DIY

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

Read more

DIY: 2002

DIY

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

Read more

DIY: 2004

DIY

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

Read more

DIY: 2005

DIY

Professional Development BY artists FOR artists

Read more

DIY: 2007

DIY

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

Read more

DIY: 2008

DIY

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

Read more

DIY: 2009

DIY

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

Read more

DIY: 2011

DIY

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

Read more

DIY: 2012

DIY

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

Read more

DIY: 2013

DIY

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

Read more

DIY: 2014

DIY

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

Read more

DIY: 2015

DIY

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

Read more

DIY: 2016

DIY

Unusual professional development projects conceived and run BY artists FOR artists

Read more

DIY: 2017

DIY

Professional development projects by artists for artists across the UK

Read more

DIY: 2018

DIY

Professional development projects – by artists for artists – across the UK.

Read more

DIY: 2019

DIY

Professional development projects – BY artists FOR artists – across the UK.

Read more

Also

DIY: 2017 – Call for Participants

DIY

Professional development projects conceived and run by artists for artists

Read more

DIY: 2016 – Hunt & Darton ‘You’re Not Local’

DIY

Becoming local – contextualising work for a place or context in which you don’t necessarily belong

Read more

DIY: 2017 – Giovanna Maria Casetta with Helena Waters: Help The Aged

DIY

A traditional seaside weekender for ageing artists with a punk/anarchic ethos

Read more

DIY 2020 – Lydia Heath: Public realm as playground: towards a toolkit for earthly survival

DIY

This DIY project uses performance informed by science fiction, magic, ritual and idiocy to explore how our relationship to the public realm has changed and will continue to change because of COVID-19.

Read more

Donation

£