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    Entries in Hebe Arts (24)

    Thursday
    Feb092012

    Excess All Areas - a new art exhibition celebrating our city's musical heritage

    We've been hinting at it for many months now, but we are finally ready to announce our partnership with Back to Basics and Leeds Gallery, towards an exhibition of original art that opens next Friday, 17 February 2012.

    The exhibition, which has been possible thanks to support from Marketing Leeds, draws together a collection of the iconic images used to promote just some of more than one thousand parties thrown by legendary Leeds club night Back to Basics, since it opened its doors 20 years ago. Each image was created by the club’s promoter, resident artist and “purveyor of good times”, Dave Beer, as part of an ongoing collaboration with designer Nic Gundill - a partnership that has lasted two decades.
     
    It also includes a new sound sculpture by the artist Paul Fryer (a sort of portrait of Dave Beer), which has been created especially for the exhibition. Paul is London based but lived in Leeds until 1996. After dropping out of his course at Leeds College of Art in the 1980's Paul was instrumental in creating the widely acclaimed Art-based clubs The Kit Cat Club and Vague (see Lee's earlier post). On returning to London he established his career as an artist, and has worked alongside the likes of Damien Hirst, and with international fashion brands like Fendi.
     
    From the very beginning Dave (who, like Fryer, started out at Art college) approached the flyers as a form of free art for the masses - embodying the club’s punk roots - to be shared on the bedroom walls of a generation of club kids. They also embody Dave’s deep passion for and appreciation of contemporary art but - whilst many lines could be traced between this work and that of other acts of appropriation in art (“practicing without a license” as Richard Prince once put it) - in reality, these flyers carve out their own aesthetic space. They represent instinctive acts, specific to both the sub-culture that surrounds them and to the individual who realised them. They capture a point in the club’s story and offer us a lens through which to explore our shared cultural and social history.


    HISTORY

    Basics, as it is known by regulars to the club, was started in 1991 by a group of friends seeking an antidote to the whistle blowing, white glove wearing rave culture that saw in the nineties. Following the birth of the Acid House scene in the late 80’s, a new dance music sub-culture emerged. It was forged on the dancefloors of clubs like the Hacienda in Manchester, and in the consciousness of a generation of revellers still reeling from the effects of successive Conservative governments, and affected by the black-clad ‘yuppie’ culture of the times. This was the period just after Thatcher and just before John Major’s fortuitously named Back to Basics campaign, and the introduction of a Criminal Justice and Public Order Act that focussed the authorities on a culture it characterised by the emission of “repetitive beats”. For many young people, it was a time that demanded reaction, the A6 flyer would be their platform of choice and the infamously anarchistic club at the centre of this exhibition would be one of the strongest voices.    

    In Dave’s own words:
    “It was a case of either go out and kick the fuck out of something, or channel our energy into something constructive. Although I chose a career in the music industry, there was a time when I seriously considered a different path, in art. I was inspired by the work of Jamie Reid (an artist I came to know personally, and who designed our 1st birthday flyer - making him the only other person to design a Basics flyer) and I was excited by the possibilities of plagiarising other peoples’ work, taking existing and often already iconic images and overlaying them with my ideas to make a statement about the world outside.
    I’ve always approached each flyer as a piece of art, prioritising the image and its message over the actual information about the night it was supposed to be promoting. I spent so much time refining the flyers, many were delivered late; so late in fact that the party had often already happened by the time the flyer went to print?!
    I look around at street culture today, at the work of artists like Banksy, and see a real connection between what we were doing then and what they are doing today. It’s crazy to think that there is so much of that work happening now, and not just on the streets - on greeting cards and t-shirts - it’s totally part of the mainstream, and yet back then we were the only ones doing it.” 
    Dave first met Alistair Cooke at Art college in Wakefield, where the pair studied fine art, although their vision for Basics was forged years later. Dave dropped out of college to work as a road manager for the Sisters of Mercy and Pop Will Eat Itself. Ali graduated and found himself working in a record shop; it seemed music was a chosen destination for the pair. Their plans for the club came together when they reconnected at a warehouse party and, disillusioned by tone and colour of the Acid House scene, decided to go ‘back to basics’. Along with Ralph Lawson and Martin Lever, the club’s first resident DJ’s (although Martin could only hack two weeks), they opened their club on 26 November 1991 in the Music Factory; “a seedy three storey gay club” on Lower Briggate, over looking the very bridge that gave the city its industrial heart beat. It seems fitting that this should be the inaugural venue for Back to Basics, a club whose impact has been part of the cultural and economic renaissance that led Leeds into the 21st century. It is widely accepted, for example, that Back to Basics and the nightlife culture it spawned has been a catalyst for a growing student population. It is also a fact that the club’s “no trainers” policy was the driving force behind one of the most successful fashion brands to come out of Leeds, Nicholas Deakins; just one example of how the club’s dress code changed fashion and retail at the time. The cultural and economic impact of Back to Basics on this city, and on our culture in general - the likes of Groove Armada, Basement Jaxx and Daft Punk are among those to have played their UK debut and found their feet in Basics - can not be underestimated.


    Twenty years later Back to Basics remains a pioneer and has retained its rock and roll ethos. Against all the odds, for a club that deliberately turned its back on the commercial world of the club “brand”, Back to Basics has turned 20 and is now the longest running club night of its kind, anywhere in the world. Sadly, some beloved friends have not managed the whole journey, most notably Ali Cooke and Jocelyn Higgin who lost their lives in a tragic car accident in 1993, an accident from which Dave and a former girlfriend, Jill Morris, had miraculously walked away. It is to Ali, Jocelyn and the others that this exhibition is dedicated, as well as to the family of resident DJ’s and committed (and still discerning) clubbers who continue to help Back to Basics go “two steps further than any other fucker!”
     
    Whilst some of the images have been displayed in a gallery context before, most notably at the Barbican Centre and Ultra Lounge at Selfridges & Co in London, this is the first time an exhibition dedicated to the artwork of Back to Basics has been shown. For some they will inspire shock and even disgust. For others they will inspire nostalgia and knowing laughter. As long as they inspire something it will have been worth the incredible and often challenging journey we have been through to make this exhibition possible; whoever thought that floppy disks and zip drives would last forever was sadly wrong. Thankfully we were working with Dave, a man whose “fuck forever!” mentality has earned him a place in the dance music Hall of Fame, and somehow we’ve delivered – we hope that you will come and have a look, and we hope that you will enjoy!
    Visit www.leedsgallery.com for more information, and for a full catalogue of the works on display.

    I'll leave you with one of my favourite quotes from the exhibition walls that I think sums up the ethos of Basics and this exhibition:
    “There’s people who make things happen. 
    There’s people who watch things happen.
    There’s people who say what happened.
    What happened?”
    Dave Beer, 1996
    Thursday
    Feb022012

    KIT CAT CLUB & PAUL FRYER

    Team Hebe are currently working away on a new exhibition launching in Leeds Gallery very soon, featuring some of the amazing artwork of Back to Basics. Our research and planning has led to us rediscovering some of the best memories and music from the 90's clubbing scene in Leeds.

    The Back to Basics exhibition will feature a special piece of work, created for the exhibition by Leeds expat Paul Fryer. While doing some research into Paul's work and his relationship to Leeds, we stumbled upon this gem of a video from The Kit Kat Club, which spawned the legendary Vague. To quote the video description:

    "The Kit Kat Club, filmed in 1992 on 16mm. It was assembled with a selection of tracks that the lucky members of the club might well have heard at the time. The KKC was created by Paul Fryer and Suzy Mason as an antidote to the impersonal and often malevolent night clubs that were the grotty and uninspiring norm at that time, and was brought into being by them in association with Peter Master and the late Paul Lamont. The KKC had a cigarette girl, a cage, blue cocktails and cheap champagne, a variety act most weeks, a cage for dancing in and some very glamorous and funny clientele. The club later transmogrified into the legendary Leeds mixed club vague, who's history is a little better documented. I hope you enjoy this little piece of club history, with my Best Wishes, Paul Fryer (thanks Howard Storey for finding the footage, this short was created from rushes of the Cud video Purple Love Balloon, which was filmed in the KKC and directed by Chris Madden and produced by Steve Shone.)"

    We have much more coming on Back to Basics and Paul Fryer in the next couple of weeks as the exhibition begins proper!

    Thursday
    Jan052012

    Do or DIY - a new project announcement


    We are pleased to announce that York based information as material, an artists collective that includes our very own Simon Zimmerman, have been offered a month long exhibition at one of the world's most prestigious contemporary art galleries, the Whitechapel.


    The exhibition will consolidate a year long programme undertaken by information as material as the gallery's 'Writers in Residence', and will be based on an essay, entitled Do or DIY, written by information as material as the foreword to the 2011 London Art Book Fair.

    Do or DIY uncovers a hidden history of DIY publishing that begins (in the essay, at least) with Laurence Sterne (1713-68) and ending (for now, at least) with Kathy Acker (1947-97). It concludes with call-to-action that captures the ethos of the forthcoming exhibition: "Don't wait for others to validate your ideas. Do it yourself."

    In addition the exhibition, which will open in London in spring 2012, has been selected by the crowdfunding platform wedidthis.org.uk as one of the nine projects it will promote throughout January, with a fundraising target of £1,500. You can donate as little or as much as you like, but for donations over £50 people will receive a signed copy of the accompanying publication with a printed credit (Thanks to...), and for donations over £500 the publication will be hand-printed - only three of these will ever be made.

    More to follow on the exhibition in February.

    Tuesday
    Nov082011

    All Points North 

    We hit Newcastle Upon Tyne last week to check in with the Turning Point Network team. Whilst there we took some time out to interview Julia Bell about All Points North, a project that bring together arts organisations across the North of England to profile some extraodrinary events happening throughout the autumn.

    The video of the interview is above, and a copy of the official Press Release for All Points North is below:

    This Autumn, the stars align in the contemporary art world of the North of England to produce a unique set of national and international exhibitions and events that present the whole spectrum of contemporary art practice, that tells the full story of artists’ careers from ‘emerging’ to ‘making it’ and ‘arriving’.

    All Points North (APN) is an initiative set up to profile the strength of contemporary art events and festivals happening in the North East, North West and Yorkshire and Humber regions this Autumn, alongside promoting the major contemporary art venues that surround them.

    APN is centred around six satellite festivals, exhibitions and prizes, highlighting the different stages in an artist’s working life and the internationalism and experimentalism shown by contemporary artists working today.

    The progression of an artist’s career from graduation to ‘making it’ is explored via Bloomberg New Contemporaries which offers emerging artists a platform to be thrust into the art scene and the Northern Art Prize which profiles artists based in the North at all career stages. In addition, the Turner Prize 2011 will be presented at BALTIC in association with Tate – the first time this prestigious award will take place beyond Tate.

    In contrast to these, the Abandon Normal Devices festival (AND) focuses on how contemporary artists, new, emerging and established are working experimentally across new media whilst the International Print Biennale is the UK’s only event dedicated to contemporary printmaking. Asia Triennial Manchester 11 (ATM11) is a showcase of current contemporary art from Asia and the UK and a partner of The Manchester Weekender 2011 which completes the APN event line-up, revealing the international aspect of contemporary art practice today.

    Alongside the events, APN brings to the fore some of the UK’s leading art institutions that are based in the North. These include BALTIC, mima Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, The Hepworth Wakefield, Manchester Art Gallery and the Whitworth Art Gallery, Site Gallery, Tate Liverpool and Yorkshire Sculpture Park, spaces that consistently show innovative programmes of contemporary art.

    With this spectrum of high profile national and international events and exhibitions, prizes, festivals and world-class contemporary art venues, APN alerts audiences to the excellence of the contemporary art offer in the North this Autumn, all of which are in feasible travelling distance of one another.

    The All Points North website developed by Axis (axisweb.org) will be launched alongside the project, providing detailed information on all events and venues involved in the project.

    For more information please visit www.allpointsnorth.info

    Thursday
    Nov032011

    Calling all film makers - the 2.8 Days Later film challenge is on!

    Poster by Jay Cover (www.jaycover.co.uk) of Nous Vous (www.nousvous.eu)

    Every single member of the Hebe team is mad about the movies. Our combined film collection makes for an impressive library, ranging from blockbuster classics, to obscure indies, to world cinema... mostly Chinese and Spanish, we have to admit. We're all in some kind of film rental club, and besides me (nearly Christmas - hint, hint) everyone has an unlimited cinema card. We're as close to being film geeks as it's possible to get without feeling compelled to sit in the cinema reciting lines in harmony with the actors.

    So, imagine our delight when the team at Trinity Leeds revealed to us that one of the coolest boutique cinema brand in the UK, Everyman, intends to open its first out-of-London venue in the heart of the scheme; and, in order to introduce Everyman to the people of Leeds they wanted us to dream up a project to support grassroots, independent film making in the city. Our gut instinct was to call Matt Maude at Left Eye Blind to see whether we could work together, and the 2.8 Days Later film challenge is the outcome:

    So, it’s lights, camera and action for this new project, which challenges aspiring filmmakers to write, shoot and finish a film in less than three days. Registration for 2.8 Days Later opened this week and the main event will take place in Leeds on 18th, 19th and 20th November 2011.

    Over the course of three days as many as 150 people, working in small teams, will take up the challenge working from Left Eye Blind’s base in Holbeck, Leeds. Industry professionals will lead workshops covering different aspects of the filmmaking process, and will mentor participants as they create a brand new short film.

    “This is adrenaline filmmaking at its best”, says Matt Maude of Left Eye Blind, himself one of twelve finalists in this year’s Virgin Media Shorts competition. “We piloted the project back in June 2011 with brilliant results, we even had filmmakers taking part in the US and Germany. This time we are focusing our efforts on supporting Northern talent in and around Leeds. It’s great to be working with Trinity Leeds and Everyman Cinema, both of whom we see playing a vital role in the future of film in Leeds and the surrounding area. It’s no secret that the future of funding for British film is uncertain at the moment and this is a great example of how private business can support and is supporting grassroots independent filmmaking.”

    Film will share centre stage in the Trinity Leeds scheme, which will be home to Everyman Cinema’s first venue outside London. Everyman’s chain of boutique cinemas is widely known for screening independent film and world cinema, alongside major releases.

    “Leeds is the birthplace of film and this project is all about tracking down today’s undiscovered talent” says Claire Reynolds, Marketing Manager for Land Securities, the developers of the Trinity Leeds scheme. “We hope to find people who have the potential to rock the future of British film and want to help them reach the big screen. We’re proud to be working with Left Eye Blind and look forward to viewing all the final cuts.”

    All the 2.8 Days Later films will be entered into a new Trinity Leeds film prize. Three awards are up for grabs and the public, the media and a panel of industry experts will pick the winners. The awards winners will each receive a prize ranging from free cinema passes, to support towards a further film, to the opportunity to showcase their entry at an Everyman venue in London – as a trailer at the start of a major movie! The winners will be announced at a special, public screening event in Leeds during spring 2012.

    2.8 Days Later is open to anyone over the age of sixteen, and thanks to support from Trinity Leeds it is totally free to enter. There are only 150 places up for grabs and registration closes on 15 November 2011. Visit the Trinity Leeds page on Facebook to register your place now: www.facebook.com/TrinityLeeds

    The whole team will be heading down there on the day. The only thing to confirm is whether we form a team or go head-to-head in a quest for glory on the big screen - the film challenge is on!