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Library of Performing Rights

Ongoing Project

The Library of Performing Rights is an ongoing collaboration between LADA, Lois Weaver, Elena Marchevska and the Study Room In Exile. Established as a unique collection of resources relating to the intersections of performance and Human rights, the Library of Performing Rights was reactivated in 2017  as a concept or approach to research and practice, rather than a distinct collection. It is available as a place of action, a place of knowledge exchange, a repository of experience, and a context that others can use to support and advance their own work both at LADA and elsewhere.

Developments of the Library of Performing Rights include:

  • the integration of LPR titles into LADA’s wider Study Room holdings, and the addition of existing Study Room holdings that engage with issues of ‘rights’ into the concept of the LPR. All related titles are now catalogued and branded as Library of Performing Rights resources
  • a guide through LPR titles in relation to their relevance to the 30 Articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
  • the creation of LPR Touring Boxes as temporary installations for festivals, organisations, artists and other public events
  • an annual LPR-themed DIY project
  • annual LPR Open Days in LADA’s Study Room and the Study Room In Exile: opportunities for debate, knowledge exchange, and the research and discussion of new materials
  • an annual commission inviting artists to respond to the LPR

Commissions

The Library of Performing Rights is an annual commission offered by LADA, in collaboration with the Study Room in Exile and London Southbank University.

The 2019 commission was The Pink Supper by Nando Messias.

The 2018 commission was Declaration of Independence by Barby Asante.

 

DIYs

DIY is LADA’s flagship professional development programme – an annual series of workshops by artists for artists. Each year, one DIY project is funded as part of the Library of Performing Rights project.

In 2019 this was The Silence by Beverley Thomas.

 

Background and context

The Library of Performing Rights (LPR) was originally created in 2006 (by Lois Weaver of Queen Mary University London in collaboration with LADA) for Performance Studies international (PSi)12: Performing Rights, as a unique resource containing publications, videos, DVDs, CD-ROMs, brochures, digital and web-based initiatives that examined the intersection between performance and human rights. Materials were submitted by artists, activists and academics from around the world.

Since PSi12, LPR has been housed in LADA’s Study Room as a distinct collection of materials, has been presented in Vienna and Glasgow as part of LADA’s Performing Rights programmes, and has been installed in Rio De Janeiro and Montreal in curatorial initiatives led by Andrew Mitchelson and Lois Weaver.

From August 2017, the LPR has been reimagined and reactivated by LADA, Lois Weaver, Elena Marchevska and the Study Room In Exile, as a concept or approach to research and practice, rather than a distinct collection. It is available as a place of action, a place of knowledge exchange, a repository of experience, and a context that others can use to support and advance their own work both at LADA and elsewhere.

Other projects in Library of Performing Rights

The Library of Performing Rights is available as a place of action, a place of knowledge exchange, a repository of experience, and a context that others can use to support and advance their own work both at LADA and elsewhere.

Library of Performing Rights: 2018 Commission Barby Asante

LADA has announced Barby Asante as the first recipient of the Library of Performing Rights commission

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Library of Performing Rights: 2019 Commission Nando Messias

Nando Messias is the second recipient of the annual Library of Performing Rights commission.

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Performing Rights

An ongoing programme of events examining the intersection between performance and Human Rights

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Banner image credit:

The Pink Supper (2019), © Holly Revell

Also

Ongoing

Performance Magazine Online

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

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British Festival of Visual Theatre 1999

Stacy Makishi’s Suicide For Beginners (a work in development).

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Ongoing

Reimagining Care

LADA’s latest project Reimagining Care focuses on contemporary discourses about care and care practices, exploring how they can contribute to transforming the art sector.

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Check In / Check Out

A programme of performances at the Great Eastern Hotel for Live Art UK.

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Ongoing

Life Lecture

An online resource by Joshua Sofaer for audiences to deliver a lecture to themselves about themselves

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Live Culture at Tate Modern

Four days of Live Art at Tate Modern.

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The Live Art Development Agency at Hackney Wicked Festival

A film programme of documentation and performance to camera for Hackney Wicked.

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LADA at Hackney WickEd 2014

a pop-up Study Room as part of the Hackney Wicked Art Festival

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Donation

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