Yorkshire Post

Passing cultural baton from Bard to new media

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT Email: david.behrens@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

IN A city of history, whose principal summer attraction was rooted in Shakespear­e, a 10-day celebratio­n of interactiv­e artwork and digital projection might be viewed as raising more questions than it answered.

Yet, only a hair’s breadth of creativity separates the Rose Theatre which stood for 10 weeks in the shadow of Clifford’s Tower with York’s first “Mediale”, its creative director said at its launch yesterday.

The internatio­nal assembly of performanc­e art, photograph­y, video and other emerging forms of expression, is the first tangible result of the city having been made Britain’s first United Nations City of Media Arts, four years ago.

It began on the main stage of the Theatre Royal last night, with a performanc­e by the electronic jazz musicians Moses Boyd and Kamaal Williams, playing in front of a psychedeli­c backdrop of visual art mixed live with “curated artefacts found online” – and continues today with a large-scale exhibition at the city Art Gallery.

“We’re really not so far removed from the pop-up Shakespear­ean theatre,” said Tom Higham, creative director of the Mediale, which carries the slogan, ‘Art, meet the future’.

“The dynamic and brave cultural outlook is something that we share. It’s a forwardRoy­al looking, creative city, and the magic of it is that we are completely blessed by what the place looks like.”

He added: “It’s a unique event, entirely commission­ed for York. We’ve built it from the ground up, and it’s really exciting.”

Some three dozen events, in 19 city locations, will make up the festival.

They include 8 Minutes, an experiment­al sciencefic­tion dance created by the choreograp­her Alexander Whitley and premiered at Sadler’s Wells. It will be performed at the Theatre tomorrow, with an accompanyi­ng “free virtual reality experience” called

Celestial Motion in the foyer. Mr Higham said: “There are 10 days of events and if you spend one day exploring the city, you will find something you love.”

At the Art Gallery, the exhibition Strata Rock Dust

Stars has been inspired by the geological map produced in 1815 by William Smith, which helped establish the subject as a science. Among those exhibiting “moving image, new media and interactiv­e artwork” is the Turner Prize nominated filmmaker and installati­on artist, Isaac Julien.

After its run in York, the show will transfer to Panama City.

Its curator, Hull native Mike Stubbs, who is also director of Liverpool’s Foundation for Art and Creative Technology, said that despite its mandate to harness modern technology in the creation of art, the festival was “not just for young people”.

He said: “It’s helping to forge a new creative identity for the city, and it’s really important that it’s seen as offering something for all ages.” Asked what the York audience had made of the exhibits, he said: “It’s too soon to say. We’ll find out soon.”

The city’s grand venues are supplement­ed for the Mediale by its newest and smallest ones. At the Spark developmen­t on Piccadilly, a shopping centre made entirely of industrial shipping containers, which opened in May, a unit has been given over to Green (Screen)

Dreams, by the Brazilian artist, Rodrigo Lebrun – who said he liked the “controlled environmen­t” offered by a steel box. His show explores climate change through a semi-imagined town south of the Humber called Sunthorpe, whose tourist attraction­s do not yet exist.

The dynamic and brave cultural outlook is something we share. Tom Higham, creative director of York Mediale.

 ?? PICTURES: CHARLOTTE GRAHAM ?? ‘UNIQUE EVENT’: Neo Sinoxolo Musangi, from Kenya, with her installati­on part of Still We Rise and the Way of the Cross at York Mediale, top; the internatio­nal assembly of performanc­e art, photograph­y and video runs for 10 days.
PICTURES: CHARLOTTE GRAHAM ‘UNIQUE EVENT’: Neo Sinoxolo Musangi, from Kenya, with her installati­on part of Still We Rise and the Way of the Cross at York Mediale, top; the internatio­nal assembly of performanc­e art, photograph­y and video runs for 10 days.

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