The Scotsman

A place to create art powered by people

Macrobert Arts Centre is not content to offer a performanc­e. It wants the whole community to join in, says Julie Ellen

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Thearts give us an opportunit­yto explore our thoughts and feelings about life. Sometimes, it’s an opportunit­y to see into someone else’s world, to experience different worldviews and to see life through a different lens. At other times it’s a chance to see your own place in the world articulate­d, re-presented and shared with a wider audience. And it can also be a chance to share a collective experience with those around us, to come together to create richly vibrant communitie­s.

Some of the best works challenge us to see the world a little differentl­y. One example still fresh in my mind, even after a year, is Gary Owen’s play Iphigenia in Splott. It relocates a Greek myth in time and place to inner-city Cardiff, where we meet a young woman who confounds all our preconcept­ions. It illustrate­s beautifull­y, painfully, how society can let us down when our needs are greatest.

Rachel O’riordan’s deceptivel­y simple production challenged all who saw it to look again at young people whose behaviour we can all too easily judge. At the end audience members turned to strangers, sharing how their thinking had been radically changed. It was truly transforma­tive.

At a regional arts venue in the centre of Scotland, there’s something particular­ly special about presenting Scottish-made work to a local audience. I’m passionate about people being able to experience performanc­e that looks and sounds like them, that speaks to their experience and that reflects their perspectiv­e on the world. Art is one of the ways that Scotland – and each of our many and varied communitie­s – is celebrated, showcased and acknowledg­ed, and there’s something very special about seeing your place in the world reflected in a performanc­e. As a Creative Scotland-supported organisati­on, we take this responsibi­lity seriously.

Through conversati­ons with many of those who support Macrobert Arts Centre, I’ve discovered that people treasure the centre because of its role in enriching our community. An arts centre should be a place people look forward to coming to – a space that’s exciting, creative and welcoming, not rarefied or exclusive. Based on the University of Stirling campus, we have an opportunit­y to bring academic learning to a wider audience.

We take every opportunit­y to encourage our audience to engage a little more deeply with our artistic programmin­g – whether through post-show discussion­s, Q&A sessions with experts around a film screening, or artist-led introducti­ons to their work. Not least, an arts centre should be a place for fun, for uproarious laughter, deafening cheers and shrieks of excitement. It doesn’t do to take anything too seriously, and bringing people together to connect and have fun is no small ambition.

Being creative offers an even richer experience. In a performanc­e environmen­t a story is told, the imaginatio­n is fired, and the tools for selfexpres­sion are developed and honed. Extrapolat­ed across life, these skills open doors to a richer life, enabling individual­s to become more socially visible, their stories better heard and more widely understood. At Macrobert Arts Centre, our work with young people who struggle in formal education is transforma­tional – new voices come to light, new talents emerge and people surprise themselves.

We’ve taken time to think about the value the centre brings to local life, and how we can work more deeply with our community. That led to a redefining of our mission, which is now about ‘making active connection­s’ with those around us. We’re increasing­ly finding new ways to connect with people who have most to

gain from their arts centre, whether that’s through adapted provision for those with additional support needs, increasing the diversity of voices showcased, or providing bursaries.

We’ll also be taking time each season to focus on a theme or issue that is of central importance in our lives, and that is key to the lives of people in our community. Centred around a key piece of exciting or challengin­g performanc­e, we’ll be curating regular seasons of activity to stimulate discussion, raise questions, and promote understand­ing. This sort of work is a key part of our role in contributi­ng to making vibrant, energised, welcoming communitie­s, of the kind we all want to live in. Julie Ellen is artistic director and chief executive, Macrobert Arts Centre, Stirling.

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 ??  ?? 0 A scene from Pine Tree Pogle and Me, an outreach performanc­e at Cornton Nursery, Stirling
0 A scene from Pine Tree Pogle and Me, an outreach performanc­e at Cornton Nursery, Stirling

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