Hello everyone
I’m thrilled by how much interest there has been in our call for contributors to our People’s History Museum exhibition next year (the guidelines are pinned above if anyone missed them).
I know lots of loiterers have taken some wonderful photographs of First Sunday dérives over the years and we want to include some of them in the exhibition (we will cover printing costs of digital photos). Please watch out for more details, and in the meantime think about which pictures you would like to share.
There have been a few FAQs so thought I’d answer them here as well in case they are useful to anyone else
We said we want “original” artwork and perhaps we should have said contemporary, as it does not have to be created just for the exhibition, although it can be. To clarify it should be your own original work and relevant to the exhibition themes. If it has been shown / published before that is OK, if it has never been seen by anyone before that is also OK.
Everyone has to fill out an application form because we feel that is the fairest and easiest way to assess entries. I hope you understand that we can not let friends sneak in as that wouldn’t be right. We want to encourage as many applications as possible and to be transparent in how we deal with them.
If anything in the guidelines is unclear, or you would like to discuss a particular idea do please get in touch with the curatorial team (loitering2016@gmail.com) or we can have a chat on either of the walks we are organising this weekend for We Shall Overcome (2pm Wilmslow Station on Saturday, 10am Peoples History Museum Manchester on Sunday)
Please do get applications in before the deadline – 7th December - and I'll post details of the First Sunday photo call out very soon
Cheers and thanks as ever for your support
Morag
Tuesday, 29 September 2015
Sunday, 13 September 2015
The LRM at The People's History Museum: Call for Contributions
Loitering With Intent (working title)
Call for Submissions
The deadline for receipt of applications is noon on Monday 7th December 2015
Call for Submissions
We are delighted that between July-September 2016 The LRM (Loiterers
Resistance Movement) will be curating an exhibition in the community gallery of
The People’s History Museum. We want its content to be exciting, inspiring and
diverse, reflecting the nature of psychogeography, and so we are inviting applications
from anyone who wishes to take part.
We are looking for original art work and archive material
that explores any of these themes:
O Psychogeography (however you choose to define
it)
O Creative walking, walking art and walking as a
cultural or political practice
O Public / private space and the right to the
city
O DIY, creative, activist and other interesting
maps and map making
O The LRM (Loiterers Resistance Movement) and our
events
O Radical, emotional and hidden histories,
especially of or linked to Manchester
O The Situationist International and their legacy
O Critical geographical responses to urban issues
and inequalities such as surveillance, gentrification, homogenisation etc.
Any kind of art or artefact is welcome – photos, prints,
painting, drawing, film, audio, sculpture etc. We also have some capacity to
include events, performances and walks etc. There will be an accompanying blog and
possibly other literature so we welcome writers who wish to contribute as well. We are very open to new ideas so please do get in touch.
Things
to consider:
The Peoples History Museum is family friendly and all work
must be suitable for a wide audience. There are also some logistical
restrictions due to the nature of the space, more information about this will
be provided where relevant.
The majority of the material in the exhibition will be
focused on Greater Manchester and the North West but we hope to include some
work from farther afield.
You do not have to be a professional artist, and
applications from groups / collectives are also welcome.
Previous involvement with The LRM isn’t essential, but we
envisage the majority of work featured will have some link, however tenuous.
This can include attending, or reacting to, any of our walks or other events or
contributing to an online conversation via facebook or twitter.
The LRM is a not-for-profit collective and everyone gives
their time for free so we are unable to pay anyone to exhibit. However, we
don’t want anyone to be out of pocket or unable to contribute because of
expenses so if you need any resources to participate (eg transporting work to
the exhibition or to meet access requirements) please let us know and we will
do our best to help. We currently have a small budget from previous fundraising and will actively seek more if
necessary. Please don’t spend any money on this application without checking
with us first.
Please be aware we have limited space so decisions will be
made by a panel. We will consider the quality, intent, originally and relevance
of every application as well as how it fits within the overall exhibition. We
will let applicants know our decision as soon as possible after the closing
date.
Background
Information
The LRM (Loiterers Resistance Movement) is a
Manchester based collective of artists and activists interested in psychogeography,
public space and the hidden stories of the city. Formed in 2006 we still can’t
agree on what psychogeography means but we all like plants growing out of the
side of buildings, looking at things from new angles, radical history, drinking
tea and getting lost. We believe there is magick in the Mancunian rain. Our city
is wonderful and made for more than shopping. We want to reclaim it for play
and revolutionary fun…. On the first
Sunday of every month we go for a wander of some sort. These derives, or drifts,
help decode the palimpsest of the streets, uncover power structures and
discover the extraordinary in the mundane. We also organise occasional
festivals, exhibitions and other random shenanigans. These have included
building cake maps, playing CCTV bingo, tracing lost rivers and collaborating
on projects like Manchester’s Modernist Heroines. Our events are always free
and open to everyone.
The People’s History Museum in Manchester is the national museum of
democracy. They aim to engage, inspire and inform diverse audiences by
showing ‘There have always been ideas worth fighting for’. This exhibition will
take place in The Engine Hall.
How to
apply
To apply please complete the pro forma – do not send us your work. You can download the form from http://tinyurl.com/q4dko4m or you can email loitering2016@gmail.com
The email address to send applications to is loitering2016@gmail.comTo apply please complete the pro forma – do not send us your work. You can download the form from http://tinyurl.com/q4dko4m or you can email loitering2016@gmail.com
The deadline for receipt of applications is noon on Monday 7th December 2015
For
more information
contact Morag Rose
Email loitering2016@gmail.com tweet @thelrm or call 07974929589
contact Morag Rose
Email loitering2016@gmail.com tweet @thelrm or call 07974929589
Friday, 11 September 2015
Oh! October! It's going to be fabulous
October is going to be an excellent month for Loitering and I really hope you will be able to join us.
The first weekemd is "We Shall Overcome" Weekend - a show of solidarity and rage against austerity. More details are in the post below. Both wanders will blend radical and secret histories, the blurred lines between public and private space, ghost stories and a bit of dramatic ranting. All events are collecting for local projects supporting people affected by austerity so please bring a donation (canned food, gloves food, etc)
Find us at:
Wilmslow Railway Station 2pm Saturday 3rd October (collection for Food Friends)
Outside The People's History Museum Manchester 10am Sunday 4th October (for The Booth Centre)
October 15th is The Walking Inside Out Symposium in Sheffield, and a few free tickets remain for this discussion on Contemporary British Psychogeography. https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/walking-inside-out-a-psychogeographic-symposium-book-launch-tickets-18204864239
Finally, we are going to finish the month with some great music - not psychogeographical but an excellent night out with Case Hardin at The Britons Protectionhttp://www.wegottickets.com/event/332281
This is all very excited and I would love to share these special events with you. For more details please contact loiter@hepzombie.co.uk tweet @thelrm
The first weekemd is "We Shall Overcome" Weekend - a show of solidarity and rage against austerity. More details are in the post below. Both wanders will blend radical and secret histories, the blurred lines between public and private space, ghost stories and a bit of dramatic ranting. All events are collecting for local projects supporting people affected by austerity so please bring a donation (canned food, gloves food, etc)
Find us at:
Wilmslow Railway Station 2pm Saturday 3rd October (collection for Food Friends)
Outside The People's History Museum Manchester 10am Sunday 4th October (for The Booth Centre)
October 15th is The Walking Inside Out Symposium in Sheffield, and a few free tickets remain for this discussion on Contemporary British Psychogeography. https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/walking-inside-out-a-psychogeographic-symposium-book-launch-tickets-18204864239
Finally, we are going to finish the month with some great music - not psychogeographical but an excellent night out with Case Hardin at The Britons Protectionhttp://www.wegottickets.com/event/332281
This is all very excited and I would love to share these special events with you. For more details please contact loiter@hepzombie.co.uk tweet @thelrm
Thursday, 3 September 2015
Septembers First Sunday
Hello everyone First Sunday This Sunday, and time for a wander. We'll meet 2pm at the glacial erratic on Ardwick Green (near the Apollo, a very short walk from Piccadilly Station, and yes the former gathering point of the Victorian Ardwick Anarchists). All welcome for a fairly unstructured derive and a bit of a blether.
Wednesday, 2 September 2015
We Shall Overcome in October
We Shall Overcome is a collective howl of
rage and love celebrating arts and culture, supporting those affecting by
austerity and showing solidarity. http://weshallovercomeweekend.com/ it’s a weekend
of beautiful things and I am delighted The LRM are contributing two special
walks.
We will be wandering the
boundary between public and private space, exploring radical histories, DIY
culture, and public/private space. We will uncover the power structures and
architecture of fear that works to keep us off the streets and share stories of
resistance, solidarity and creative mischief. Expect a wee bit of occult
bobbins and rants against inequality and austerity,
On Saturday 3rd October we venture out of town
and take We Shall Overcome to the streets of George Osbourne’s constituency. It’s
our first ever trip to Wilmslow and I expect it to be very special. Meet 2pm
Wilmslow Railway Station.
Sunday 4th October is First Sunday of course
and so we will be back in Manchester. Meet 10am outside The Peoples History
Museum (the early start means no clash with activities around the Tory conference).
Both events are open to everyone. Please bring a donation
(long lasting food, socks, gloves, hats – I will post a full list soon). In
Manchester we are collecting for The Booth Centre, Wilmslow tbc and I will
update ASAP.
Since the earliest iteration of The LRM I have made clear
I think there are many psychogeographies and we should relish those diverse
blossoms. However that has never implied I think psychogeography is a
meaningless term, more that I don’t want to get stuck in semantics.
I passionately believe there has to be an inherent
political element – a subversive intention, a desire to walk truth to power, to
uncover hidden histories and step towards a better future – to psychogeography. A dérive is more than a leisurely stroll (although
that does not make it unpleasureable) it should be unsettling, peculiar and not
turn away from contradictions or difficult questions. It should be a creative
(re)mapping of imagination and desire, and we should strive to open up and share
those cartographic duties so anyone and everyone can feel like our streets
belong to us all. This feels more important than ever in an environment that
demonises drifting, erodes public space and seeks to enclose and restrict our
minds as well as our bodies, It is also never enough, and can only be one tactic,
one tool, amongst many that build the cities of our dreams. (As an aside I am
so proud to loiter with so many good folk who fight and question and build and
work and dream in so many different ways).
Perhaps most
importantly of all psychogeography is NOT just a theory, it has to be a
practice as well, a living, breathing, panting, messy, contradictory,
beautiful, troublesome walking DOING but just talking. This is one of the
reasons I am contributing my wanders in October to We Shall Overcome and I
would urge other psychogeographers to do the samehy. A dérive is more than a leisurely stroll (although
that does not make it unpleasurable) it should be unsettling, peculiar and not
turning away from contradictions or difficult questions. It should be a
creative (re)mapping of imagination and desire, and we should strive to open up
and share those cartographic duties so anyone and everyone can feel like our
streets belong to us all. This feels more important than ever in an environment
that demonises drifting, erodes public space and seeks to enclose and restrict
our minds as well as our bodies. It is also never enough, and can only be one
tactic, one tool amongst many that build the cities of our dreams. (As an aside
I am so proud to loiter with so many good folk who fight and question and build
and work and dream in so many different ways).
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