Partners in CreationALISTAIR PEEBLES investigates an ambitious visual arts residency project in Kirkwall. |
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AT PAPDALE Primary School, Kirkwall, a new wave has begun to take shape in the world of education and the visual arts in Orkney. The Stromness-based collaborative, Christil Trumpet, has recently taken up residence in the school and over the next twelve months artists Christopher Prendergast and Matilda Tumim will be working there with pupils, staff and the local community in the first residency of its kind in the county. |
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As well as being the first long term school-based visual arts residency in Orkney, it’s the first of any kind that Christopher and Matilda have attempted, either as individuals or as Christil Trumpet, but I got the strong feeling that given the kind of people they are and the kind of work they do, the residency will go very well indeed. The school itself initiated the project and teachers there seem well pleased with the way things look at the moment. The main thing is they’re not here as teachers but to serve as “models of working artists”With around 60 staff, Papdale is far and away the largest primary school in the county: indeed its roll of 560 accounts for nearly half the primary children in Orkney. The first stage in an ambitious programme of extension and refurbishment to its 50 year-old premises was completed in 2002, and the Head Teacher at the time, Lynn Whitelaw, saw the possibility for an arts residency that would fit very well within the context of the next stage of building work – six new classrooms and a second storey to part of the existing structure – which begins next month and is expected to finish in 2008. Lynn left for a new post in Moray late last year, but the school management team, led by acting Head Teacher, Jane Bruce, was very enthusiastic about the project and continued to see the process through, with assistance and advice from Carol Dunbar, Education Development Officer at the Pier Arts Centre, and OIC Arts Development Officer Clare Gee. There was considerable interest in the residency, both locally and nationally, and many applications. Jane, who has taught in the school for the past 26 years – her whole career in fact – was herself appointed Head Teacher of Papdale in May this year, shortly after the final decision was made to award the residency to Christil Trumpet. “We are very excited about the residency,” Jane said. “We feel that it shows us to be an innovative school, which of course I hope we are, and we did want to have a strong artistic presence here that would help us move forward creatively as the new building work progressed. |
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“As well as contributing to the children’s experience of art, we hope that the artists’ work will contribute to the architectural aspects of the new school environment. As well as creating works of art for the school, Christopher and Matilda have great ideas for the use of space around the school environment, and they will be working with architects and lighting engineers to develop those. “In general we were very impressed by the scope of the proposal that Christil Trumpet were making. Their enthusiasm is quite infectious for one thing, and I know the staff here have been very impressed by their approach. Their inclusion of community involvement in their plans and the links they proposed to establish with parents was something that impressed us, as well as their obvious professional skill. All these things were persuasive, and of course, two for the price of one – that’s hard to beat!” Christil Trumpet moved in on 15 May, and I visited them at the school one morning that week, making my way through the cheerful kids, leisurely swarming before the whistle blew for line-up time. Having found the right door myself and signed the register, I was led onwards by Matilda, past the small chairs and tables, the computers, pegs, toys, classrooms calm with order, and corridor displays and notices fluttering back to rest after the invasion. Only one wrong turn, I think, but it’s a big place. To reach the studio itself we left the school building again and made for the corner of the playground that’s now the interface between Christil Trumpet and the local educational world. |
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Behind an unremarkable portacabin exterior (which may or may not be tidied up later – a certain level of anonymity has a practical value) lies the bright and very adequate working space in which Christopher and Matilda have already installed some examples of their own work, including “Wedded”. These pieces will help introduce pupils and other visitors to the idea of the residency and to the way in which they work as artists. We spoke about art as a curriculum subject and the difference between that and art as artists practise it. The main thing is they’re not here as teachers but to serve as “models of working artists”. For that reason, and because for half the time, proportionately, they have the opportunity to get on with their own work – which they’re expected to do at the school – the location of the studio seems well-chosen. I asked Jane Bruce about this topic later too. “Art teachers do a super job,” she said, “covering key curricular skills in the staged and progressive way that’s defined, for example, in the 5-14 programme. But I see the residency as complementing that work. The artist in residence is much freer to open up a sense of what art is and to give the children an experience of art not easily available otherwise. “Working in small groups is important of course, and so is direct contact with artists who are open to children’s ideas and provide a context that allows them to explore their ideas openly – these things help broaden the children’s experience of art.” The lottery-funded pARTners scheme aims in general to give “Communities with little experience in the arts new opportunities to engage with professional artists”. Currently there are around 50 pARTners projects taking place up and down the country, involving a variety of host communities and artists of every type. The scheme is not simply a source of finance for residency projects, but provides support of other kinds too. Matilda had recently attended a pARTners event at the CCA in Glasgow, something she had found inspiring, and very timely. “I felt really quite bolstered in my confidence in the approach we were planning to take. While obviously we’ve never been formal “artists in residence” before, we have done a lot of work with groups of different kinds, and we have plenty of experience with children of our own! But speaking to several delegates – people such as Alex Hetherington and the “Art Lassies” Rebecca Marr and Lisa Fleming – confirmed the importance of the idea that we remain artists and that we pursue our own interests artistically. “Those personal contacts and the back-up available from the national pARTners organisation are useful. But so is the sense of ownership we’ve started to get from speaking to the staff at the school. They seem really interested in getting involved and in helping us get involved with the children and the school as a whole.” |
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