Tyneside Cinema Archive Commission

I was lucky enough to work on this commission with Colette Whittington, responding to the Tyneside Cinema’s Archive Collection. We created two installation entitled ‘Junior (Experimental) Film Club’ and ‘Lantern Projections’, which respond to the respective collections of film programmes produced by young people in the 1930-50’s and the collection of glass lantern slides which advertised products and cinema jobs before the feature films. 

Our approach to the cinema archives was pretty open, preferring the stories to emerge as we immersed ourselves in them. However, a clear focus presented itself to us naturally as we explored; the many voices of the cinema’s people, the fabric and DNA of the cinema resonated loudly. These works pay homage to those people”

As part of our research we also ran a number of print Making and animation workshops with the staff which was a great way to meet everyone and get to know more about the cinema.

Tyneside Cinema’s Archive Commissions also feature audio-visual works by Adina Nelu which will play before main feature films, and a series of beautiful poster prints from Sofia Barton, all on display in the cinema now. Tyneside Cinema Archive Commissions are supported with public funding by Arts Council England.

Resonance

I collaborated with MDI’s group for over 50s, Men! Dancing! last year to create a video work, filmed on location at Liverpool Cathedral. The film was funded by HOP (Happy Older People) and explores the idea of harmony and the workers who built the cathedral.

Screened for the first time this year at the first HOP gathering of 2020 at FACT in Liverpool you can now see the film below. I’m hoping to continue working with the group, exploring dance in alternative spaces in future projects, with the idea of taking back our public spaces as we age.

Save The Tavern


Worrying times in London at the moment, and to me, it feels like it’s been coming for a while. Living in Liverpool, but often working in London, and having previously lived in London for 15 years, it’s sad to see it become other worldly. Looking back London was a place of excitement, somewhere where you went that was accessible, diverse and full of life. Now it just feels corporate and unobtainable.

An offshoot of this is a project I was working on with Re-Dock last year, Happy Birthday RVT, celebrating 150 years of the Royal Vauxhall Tavern. The RVT is the UK’s oldest LGBTQ pub and iconic performance space, Towards the end of the project, the venue was sold to Immovate, a re-development company with a history of turning turning places into luxury flats and hotels.

The result is the launch of a campaign to look out for the Future of the RVT. You can sign up at RVT.community The campaign officially launches tomorrow at the Cinema Museum in Elephant and Castle with a screening of the film that came out of the Happy Birthday RVT project, now called Save The Tavern. Here’s the trailer. With some many cultural spaces closing down and people being forced to move due to high rents, it feels like it’s time to make a stand.