The Scotsman

Pioneering arts trust plays a pivotal role locally and as a model

Out of the Blue gives everyone a chance to be arts involved, says Alastair Davis

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Based just off Leith Walk in Edinburgh, Out of the Blue Arts & Education Trust (OOTB) prides itself in providing opportunit­ies for everyone to take part in the arts, which it has done for over 20 years. It has achieved this by providing affordable studio space for more than 200 artists and hosting and promoting events, exhibition­s, performanc­es, projects, classes and markets throughout the year.

OOTB has been able to serve the local community in part due to a longstandi­ng relationsh­ip with Scotland’s leading responsibl­e finance provider, Social Investment Scotland (SIS). OOTB’S home at Drill Hall was secured with a loan from Triodos Bank and SIS back in 2003 and since then we have supported the commu- nity arts group to continue evolving and it now serves several communitie­s from five different spaces.

SIS’S longstandi­ng relationsh­ip with OOTB is testament to our com- mitment to help communitie­s and individual­s find meaning and fulfillmen­t from engaging with arts. Last year the Arts, Heritage, Sports and Faith sector constitute­d over 10 per cent of our current portfolio. Art for everyone’s sake

However, it takes more than just the right finance to succeed as a community organisati­on within Scotland’s arts sector. OOTB has achieved this and more by offering valuable opportunit­ies and apprentice­s to people in the local community.

Back in 2003 OOTB quickly establishe­d itself at the heart of the community by helping to redevelop Dalmeny Park, along with local young people. Then in 2007 OOTB set up a café for use by resident artists and the wider community.

Through the café OOTB offered a training programme for young people who had previously lacked the motivation or experience to find jobs. More recently OOTB offered 24 trainees placements at the Drill Hall café and the Out of the Blueprint printing business. Two of the young people originally involved in the park redevelopm­ent joined the programme and are still involved six years later as shift leaders training new recruits.

Café shift leader Jodie Boswell has worked at the Drill Hall for nine years. In that time she has benefitted from various training courses, including SVQS on customer service, retail, first aid, food hygiene, and supervisio­n and leadership. Her selfconfid­ence and sense of achievemen­t have benefitted too. Jodie is about

to start a new role as Cafe Business Developmen­t Worker. The training can open doors to the wider job market, with one Drill Hall Café graduate now working as a chef at Edinburgh’s five-star Balmoral Hotel.

Both the Bongo Club and a recording studio establishe­d by OOTB have been instrument­al in the creation of the Mercury Prize-winning band, The Young Fathers, who are talking to Out of the Blueprint for help with band merchandis­e. OOTB’S scope has even extended to Hollywood: one young actor who attended youth theatre classes at the Drill Hall secured a part in Trainspott­ing 2.

The OOTB team also reaches out to community groups to offer advice and promotion and provide space where they can. It is currently doing a Lottery-funded social history project on ‘What makes a Leither’ to help reach the local BME community. A story of success

The success of the OOTB model has attracted the attention of developmen­ts elsewhere, keen to learn from their experience and replicate it. OOTB’S experience has also led public sector organisati­ons and funders to ask the team to help move things forward with other projects. The team was recently brought in to create Edinburgh-based Abbeymount Studios when another organisati­on got into trouble as the funders, including SIS, know OOTB to be a safe pair of hands.

OOTB created artist space at a time, and in a place, when no-one else was doing it. This pioneering arts trust has since played a pivotal role in reinvigora­ting Leith, providing the start needed by artists and engaging with young people and the wider community.

As OOTB Manager Rob Hoon says: “We’ve helped to make it happen for a lot of people, we don’t just sit in the community, we help create it.” Alastair Davis, CEO, Social Investment Scotland

 ??  ?? 0 Space for artists and groups is there for locals at the Drill Hall and cafe
0 Space for artists and groups is there for locals at the Drill Hall and cafe

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