The Benefits of IntegrationADRIAN CLARK reports on the wide-ranging activities of the Community, Learning and Leisure section in the Highland capital. |
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THIS IS PROBABLY not the time to be writing, with deadlines slipping by for the Day of Dance, the visits by overseas performance groups, and the summer programme in our sights. However some of you may wish know what this particular Local Authority Arts Officer gets up to. One such project which we have recently completed in the Merkinch Area involved close working with the workers and clients in the Social Inclusion area. New Dynamics was the name given to a Scottish Arts Council National Lottery supported programme of new media residencies in 7 SIP Areas around the Highlands. All 7 projects took part in the interview day in Fort William and chose their preferences from the dozen artists presenting their work. |
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“All these projects require considerable effort in terms of practical collaboration and partnership funding but the results are there to see”The integration with Education has made life easier for the Local Motion project, which is the Inverness end of a 3 year Highland wide Out of School Hours project funded by the New Opportunities Fund. The small team, led by Cath Giles, a mature dance graduate, offers a wide range of physical activities (from circus skills and drumming to parachute games and basketball) to Primary Schools in the Inverness Area, during the lunch hour and immediately after school. |
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Gordon the Viking has visited, so too Siyaya, a Zimbabwean performance group and pupils from a number of primaries came to Phipps Hall to see Catherine Wheel’s production of ‘A Little Gentleman’. Additional funding was achieved from the Scottish Arts Council for a Highland wide ‘Time Travellers’ project which involved pupils from four Inverness Primaries in exploring the local heritage and making high quality digital collages, which will go on exhibition and CD. The Cultural Coordinator programme concluded in January but Stage 2 is shortly to be launched. Meanwhile the Traditional Music programme, coordinated by Margo Maclennan, goes from strength to strength. In addition to the 200 or so regular pupils, there have been successful shorter projects in Tomatin and Dalneigh. A performance group, TMC Folk, led by David Bowen and Irene Rule, is now separately constituted and the dance group TX Steppers are also setting up on their own. The Caledonian Canal Ceilidh Trail, which receives funding from SAC and British Waterways Scotland, will make its fourth annual appearance over 4 weeks this summer. |
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| All these projects require considerable effort in terms of practical collaboration and partnership funding but the results are there to see – and with summer on the way the life of this particular Arts Officer hopes to get away from his desk and enjoy some of what is on offer. This includes visits by Culturebank from Australia, Diptesh Bhattacharya, an Indian sarod player, the Dudariki folklore group from Belarus, the Waggish Raddish Children’s Theatre group from Hungary, the Cleveland Youth Wind Symphony from Ohio amongst many other exciting acts coming this way © Adrian Clark, 2005 |
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16 Mar 2010 | |
09 Mar 2010 | |
19 Jan 2010 |
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March 2010 Editorial |
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