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SUMMARY:No Direction Home - Stand Up Comedy @ Migration Museum
DESCRIPTION:No Direction Home is a collective of stand-up comics from refugee and migrant backgrounds\, created in 2018 by Counterpoints\, Camden People’s Theatre and award-winning comedian Tom Parry. \nJoin us at the Migration Museum’s new venue in the heart of Lewisham Shopping Centre for a night of hilarious comedy hosted by Tom Parry with special guest headliners Charlie George and Kae Kurd. \nPlus: Tewodros Aregawe\, Edin Suljic and Selam Mengistu \nTickets £6. Concessions available on request. \nAbout No Direction Home \nCounterpoints Arts runs No Direction Home as part of our PopChange project\, in partnership with Camden People’s Theatre and comedian Tom Parry. It’s a unique course for new comics from refugee and migrant backgrounds. Since 2018 they have performed more than 15 gigs around the country\, including at the Southbank Centre in London (see video below). PopChange explores how the power of pop culture can be harnessed to shift the way we talk\, think and feel about migration and displacement. \n \nAbout Charlie George \nCharlie George is an award-winning stand-up comedian and writer. \nA former circus performer and dancer\, Charlie started doing stand-up in 2018 and\, since then\, has fast become one of the UK circuit’s most exciting new talents. A runner-up in both the prestigious Funny Women and So You Think You’re Funny? comedy competitions of 2019\, she has also performed stand-up on BBC Asian Network Live and the BBC’s No Country For Young Women Podcast. \n“Hilarious and no messin’. ” – BBC Asian Network Comedy \nAbout Kae Kurd \nSmart\, sharp and brilliantly astute\, Kae Kurd is a young British-Kurdish stand up making a serious name for himself. Passionate about making politics accessible to his peers\, his comedy presents beautifully crafted slick routines with confident cutting edge flair.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/no-direction-home-migration-museum/
CATEGORIES:Comedy
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200225T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200225T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20200113T151456Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145419Z
UID:10000262-1582588800-1582588800@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:No Direction Home - Stand-up Comedy @ Stanley's Social
DESCRIPTION:No Direction Home is a collective of stand-up comics from refugee and migrant backgrounds\, created in 2018 by Counterpoints\, Camden People’s Theatre and award-winning comedian Tom Parry. \nJoin us at Stanley’s Social to see some of our newest members! \nAbout No Direction Home \nCounterpoints Arts runs No Direction Home as part of our PopChange project\, in partnership with Camden People’s Theatre and comedian Tom Parry. It’s a unique course for new comics from refugee and migrant backgrounds. Since 2018 they have performed more than 15 gigs around the country\, including at the Southbank Centre in London. PopChange explores how the power of pop culture can be harnessed to shift the way we talk\, think and feel about migration and displacement. \nAfter the smash-hit success of its debut season\, and a sell-out gig at Southbank Centre\, come join us for more laughs from the latest recruits to our talented team of stand-ups.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/no-direction-home-stand-up-comedy-stanleys-social/
CATEGORIES:Comedy
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200202T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200202T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20200113T150749Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145419Z
UID:10000263-1580601600-1580601600@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week Conference
DESCRIPTION:Join us to explore how arts\, culture\, education and the media can bring communities together and help change the conversation about refugees.\nThe Refugee Week Conference is a day of inspiration\, workshops and discussion in preparation for Refugee Week (15-21 June)\, which for 2020 has the theme ‘Imagine’. \nWe’re delighted to be holding two national conferences for 2020 – click the links for more information\, and to book your place: \n1. Refugee Week Conference London\nAmnesty International Human Rights Action Centre\, 10 February 2020 \nView the programme \n2. Refugee Week Conference Bristol (in partnership with Bristol Refugee Festival)\nTrinity Centre\, 13 February 2020 \nWhether you’re involved in arts and culture\, sports\, education\, activism\, media\, community work and/ or are from a refugee background yourself – and whether you’re a Refugee Week veteran\, or getting involved for the first time – all are welcome! \nIf you are a Refugee Week regular\, why not help us grow the movement by passing on an invite to someone who hasn’t been part of Refugee Week before? \nThe Refugee Week Conference is held in partnership with Platforma Arts and Refugees Network\, and produced by Refugee Week UK Coordinators Counterpoints Arts. \nLook forward to seeing you there! \nImage: Chefs from Welcome Kitchen and friends at Refugee Week Conference 2019 (c) Ambrose Musiyiwa
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/refugee-week-conference-3/
CATEGORIES:Learning
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20200123T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20200123T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20200114T163403Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145419Z
UID:10000260-1579737600-1579737600@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Li Dû Man Installation with Zehra Doğan: A Counterpoints Arts' Learning Lab Roundtable
DESCRIPTION:Location: Southwark Room\, Tate Exchange\, Tate Modern\, Bankside\, London SE1 9TG \nDate: 23 January 2020 \nTime: 2:00 – 4:00pm \nJoin us for a conversation with artist\, Zehra Doğan\, in relation to her installation and recent publication\, Li Dû Man (Left Behind).    \nThe Li Dû Man installation and publication was co-produced for the Who Are We? 2019 programme by Counterpoints Arts with The Open University and Tate Exchange in association with English PEN\, PEN International and Index on Censorship. \nLi Dû Man: As a journalist covering the clashes in Kurdish cities in Turkey\, 2015 – 2016\, Doğan took the small objects she found in the debris\, as testimony of a war no one was talking about. The Li Dû Man installation told the stories of those who fled or were killed\, via what they left behind –  inviting the audience into a conversation and to participate in the crafting and performance of stories about place and displacement. Li Dû Man also housed an experimental\, participatory press room where Zehra and her collaborator\, writer and activist Ege Dundar\, along with others wrote content and co-produced with visitors a newspaper for artists and activists imprisoned in Turkey. \nThe Li Dû Man publication reflects on the installation and the participatory letter-writing campaign together with Zehra’s journey as an artist\, activist and journalist.  It offers insight into the current situation in Turkish prisons\, where a number of writers\, academics and writers – many of whom are Zehra’s friends and collaborators – still remain. It also provides a practical and participatory case study on ‘artists at risk’ with a first-hand account and commentary from Zehra. \n\nContributors to the Learning Lab include\, among others: Zehra Doğan (Artist and Activist)\, Ege Dundar (Writer and Activist)\, Jo Glanville (Writer and Producer)\, Dan Gorman (Director\, English PEN)\, Jane Wells (Programme Manager\, Tate Exchange)\, Sahar Halaimzai (Communications and Campaigns Manager\, PEN International)\,  Dijana Rakovic (Producer\, Counterpoints Arts)\, Cat Lucas (Writer at Risk Programme Manager\, English PEN)\, Umut Erel (Senior Lecturer in Sociology\, The Open University)\, Hossam Fazulla (Director of Freedom of Artistic Creation Programme\, AFTE)\, Chrissie Tiller (Writer and Researcher)\, Aurelia Dondo (Europe Programme Coordinator\, PEN International)\, Monique Grimwade (Fellowship Officer\, Index on Censorship).    \nModerated by Áine O’Brien\, Co-Director\, Counterpoints Arts \nZehra Doğan is the founding editor of the all-female news agency Jin News Agency (JİNHA)\, one of the many media outlets to have been closed in Turkey in the wake of the failed coup in 2016. Doğan was among the journalists to be arrested and imprisoned\, serving almost three years in prison in Turkey on charges of ‘propagandising for a terrorist organisation’. She was finally released from prison in February 2019 and arrived in London in March 2019.  In April Doğan won the Index on Censorship Freedom of Expression Award for Arts and is currently Artist in Residence at English PEN. \nFor more information\, dijana@counterpoints.org.uk \nCredit: Tony Cenicula\, The New York Times Banksy’s mural in Manhattan\, New York\, displayed Zehra Doğan’s artwork in protest of her arrest.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/li-du-man-installation-with-zehra-dogan-a-counterpoints-arts-learning-lab-roundtable/
CATEGORIES:Learning
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191129T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191129T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20191122T092552Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145419Z
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SUMMARY:Picturing Climate at Tate Exchange
DESCRIPTION:A three day programme of talks\, workshops and performances\, bringing together an international network of arts organisations working with participatory methodologies to connect the arts\, environment\, migration and working with young people. Counterpoints Arts is a collaborative partner. \nWith Riera Studio/Cuba\, Most Mira/Bosnia and Auranitis Lifeline/Jordan. The Project’s team includes Agnes Czajka (The Open University)\, Eva Sajovic (artist\, photographer)\, Corinne Silva (visual artist)\, Jasmin Hasic (International Burch University\, Sarajevo)\, Dzeneta Karabegovic (University of Salzburg) and our Dijana Rakovic. \nPicturing Climate is hosted by The Open University\, and funded by AHRC. \nImage by Maja Milatovic-Ovadia.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/picturing-climate-at-tate-exchange/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191124T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191124T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20191119T095500Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145419Z
UID:10000265-1574553600-1574553600@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:No Direction Home : the next generation!
DESCRIPTION:In 2018\, Camden People’s Theatre\, Counterpoints Arts and award-winning comedian Tom Parry (Pappy’s; Badults; The Lost Disc) launched the No Direction Home standup programme – a unique new course for aspiring comics from refugee and migrant backgrounds. \nAfter the smash-hit success of its debut season\, and a sell-out gig at Southbank Centre\, come join us for more huge laughs from our talented team. \nFull details & booking: https://www.cptheatre.co.uk/production/no-direction-home-standup-night/
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/no-direction-home-the-next-generation/
CATEGORIES:Comedy
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191021T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191022T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190923T063040Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145419Z
UID:10000269-1571616000-1571702400@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Pop Culture – Young People – Migration & Social Change
DESCRIPTION:#platforma5 \n21-22 October 2019\, Gulbenkian\, University of Kent\, Canterbury \nA 2-day ‘retreat’ as part of Platforma 5 \nIntroduction \nPop Culture and Social Change is a pioneering project from Counterpoints Arts exploring how the power of pop culture can be harnessed to shift the way we talk\, think and feel about migration and displacement. \nAs part of Platforma 5\, the fifth arts & refugees festival run by Counterpoints Arts\, we are holding an event in partnership with Gulbenkian exploring how youth-focused pop culture formats can create positive social change relating to migration and displacement. \nThe main part of this event is for invited participants only\, following an open call in July. If you would like more information about the outcomes\, or the project overall\, contact hello@counterpoints.org.uk \nOutline \nWe will focus on three pop culture strands: \n– Music\n– Videogames\n– Online TV \nAcross the 2-days there will be a chance to engage with all three areas in relation to social change / migration & displacement\, and the opportunity to focus on areas of particular interest. \nExamples \nDuring the retreat all participants will have the opportunity to engage with content from all three main strands. For example\, we will look at Bury Me\, My Love the recent videogame from The Pixel Hunt. And we will be considering: \n– Examples from mainstream and ‘alternative’ games \n– The impact of videogames on understanding of migration \n– Diversity within the games industry \n– How new games can be developed and distributed \n– Building a network of people with an interest in videogames & migration \n \nOn the evening of 21st October\, there will be a screening of the documentary MATANGI / MAYA / M.I.A. \nWith regards to music\, migration and displacement we will consider issues such as: \n– How artists are changing the distribution models for new music so as to be in more control of their output and create new opportunities \n– Approaches to bringing issues such as migration into artists’ creative output \n– How to make effective links between arts & activism \n– Learning from the musical archives \n \nAnd we will look at how online TV from BBC 3\, Netflix and others can engage wide audiences through drama and comedy. Questions to be considered might include: \n– What opportunities already exist for young creatives from refugee & migrant background? \n– What more can broadcasters do to increase opportunity? \n– Where are the potential crossovers between self-made content and  ‘broadcast’ content and where are the differences? \n– What might the industry look like five years from now?
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/pop-culture-young-people-migration-social-change/
CATEGORIES:Pop Culture
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191021T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191021T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20191014T110114Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145419Z
UID:10000266-1571616000-1571616000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Platforma 2019 at Turner Contemporary
DESCRIPTION:Image credit: Chris Constantine \nJoin us for a week of participatory workshops\, conversations\, screenings and talks as part of a Turner Contemporary takeover by Platforma Festival. \nThe programme (coordinated by Tom Green and Dijana Rakovic at Counterpoints Arts) reflects upon several of the themes showcased in the work of the Turner Prize nominees\, such as migration\, displacement\, human rights and the politics of listening\, citizenship\, popular memory and contested histories. \nThe Platforma Festival for the arts\, refugees and migration brings together artists\, organisations\, funders and others for discussions\, workshops and the chance to share practice and showcase new work. The 5th Platforma Festival takes place across Kent & Medway. \nPlatforma Arts is produced by Counterpoints Arts\, a national charity working in the field of art\, migration and social change. \nAll activities are free and many of the workshops are suitable for families. \n#Platforma5\n\nMONDAY 21st \nRich Wiles\, Ongoing Journeys \nInteractive video based work – 12.00 to 17.30\, Monday 21st to Friday 25th \nOngoing Journeys is an intimate\, collaborative photographic exhibition and accompanying interactive multi-media web platform. It explores the idea of ‘family’ through the story of Rami\, Ruba and their children as they attempt to rebuild their lives in Yorkshire following their displacement from Syria. \nBringing together documentary photographs produced in the UK with family archive images and WhatsApp ‘still life’ images – the project probes ‘identity’\, ‘home’ and ‘resettlement’ and examines the notion of family and its fragmentation\, as experienced by millions of people today. \nRich Wiles is a socially engaged documentary photographer. Wiles returned to the UK in 2016 after more than 10 years based in Palestine (including 6 years living in a Palestinian refugee camp) and is currently trying to navigate through the UK’s immigration minefield with his wife\, herself a Palestinian refugee.  \n  \nAida Silvestri\, Why Margate? \nWorkshop – 12:00 to 16:00 \nQuestion: Why did you choose Margate as your home? \nInvitation: Transform Margate’s postcards with embroidery by adding your personal touch to produce fun\, colourful and alternative results. \nPlease note: You are welcome to bring your image\, but it has to be Black & White A5 image printed on a card. \nAida Silvestri is a UK based artist who creates work concerning the sensitive issues of culture\, ethnicity\, race\, identity\, health\, politics\, and the urban landscape. She holds a BA (First Hons) in photography from the University of Westminster\, London.  She has experience of coordinating photo-shoot sessions\, running workshops and public speaking. Her work explores new and unique approaches to documentary photography to raise awareness\, give voice to the voiceless and to promote acceptance within communities. \nSilvestri’s work has been shown in Folkestone at the Brewery Tap and Sassoon Gallery\, in London at Autograph ABP\, Photographers’ Gallery\, Saatchi Gallery\, Roman Road Gallery\, Mall Gallery and in France\, Greece\, Luxemburg\, Taiwan and Reunion Island.  She was voted one of the British Journal of Photography’s two ‘Best of Show Winners’ at the Free Range exhibition\, London in 2013 and was shortlisted for the 2017 Arendt\, European Month of Photography awards. \n\nTUESDAY 22nd \nAnna Ray and People United\, Home \nCrafting workshop – 12:00 to 16:00 \nIn 2018 over the course of seven months\, textile artist Anna Ray ran a series of workshops with a group of women in Ashford\, including recently resettled Syrian women. The workshops explored the ways in which ‘home’ can be represented. The aim of the project was to bring a new community together to discover commonalities and celebrate differences. \nThis group continues to make artwork together as friends\, meeting regularly to embroider and try out new skills learnt during the commission \nJoin the artist and some of the participants in a ‘making together’ workshop at Platforma 2019 alongside the original pieces made by the participants and Ray. \nHome was commissioned by People United\, the Diocese of Canterbury and Ashford Borough Council in 2018 and funded by Arts Council England. \n  \nSawt of the Earth\, Sawt of Margate \nField Sound Recording Workshop – 12:00 to 16:00 \nPlease join us in a workshop with Sawt of the Earth in collaboration with sound artist\, Mark Gergis. \nGergis will share some of his field recording works and explain how this process of capturing sound can be used in a variety of ways. The art and social and political power of field recordings as a means to capture the sonic traces of people\, landscapes and locations will be discussed. Workshop participants will have the chance to capture their own recordings of the sonic environment of Margate and will be shown how to edit these sounds and weave into stories. \nSawt of the Earth are a collective experimenting around the convergence between sonic memory and social collaboration\, exploring the practice of using acoustics as a plane of radical exchange between people\, time and space. \n\nWEDNESDAY 23rd \nAdam Chodzko\, A Hostile Environment 2019 \nConversation with the artist – 12:00 to 13:00 \nInternationally renowned Kent based artist\, Adam Chodzko\, presents his past and current work engaging with questions of displacement\, belonging and citizenship. Adam will be in conversation with Almir Koldzic\, Co-Director of Counterpoints Arts. \n  \nLocal Network: Creating an Archive \nNetworking event\, open to public – 14:00 to 16:00 \nExploring the history of arts\, refugee and migration projects in Kent. How might we work collectively to bring this archive to life? Led by local artists Julie Neville and Douglas Noble. \nAll welcome. To reserve a free place contact julie@jneville.co.uk \n  \nFarhad Berahman\, Memory\, Slow Portraiture and the Afghan Camera Box \nWorkshop -12:00 to 16:00 \nThe Afghan Camera\, or ‘kamra-e-faoree’ is still used as a traditional method of capturing memories by veteran street photographers in Afghanistan and Iran. The hand-made wooden camera acts as both the camera and darkroom\, thus working as a ‘2 in 1’ machine. This enables capturing and instant printing of photographs\, an individual copy handed to visitors upon processing of the image. This process of taking a photograph creates a space for exchange and conversation. \nJoin Berahman in the photographic process and in a hand colouring activity\, a technique of treating images dating back to the early 19th century. The production process underpinning ‘Afghan Camera Box (kamra-e-faoree)’ can also be seen in Marcia Chandra’s short film\, Conversation: Afghan Camera Box. \n  \nUmama Hamido\, On Akka’s Shore \nPerformance and screening 16:00 to 17:30 \nUmama Hamido is a Lebanese artist who is currently based in the UK. Through performance\, film\, sound and text she explores experiences of loss\, yearning\, and remembrance. Her work unearths the ever-present human threads of resistance within seemingly insurmountable structures of power. \n\n\n\n\n\nOn Akka’s Shore is a 60min cinematic performance combining film\, text\, soundscore and rap. The piece is concerned with the chaos of memory in relation to personal and collective history; a meditation on a past\, present\, and future that has been continuously disrupted. Hamido has developed this work with her old friend Jaz\, writing fictional memoirs based on Jaz’s experience of hallucinations and her own dreams\, which mirror and blend into one another\, to speak of a collapsing world\, out-of-body experiences and superpowers. They slip between Akka\, Jaz’s city of origin in Palestine\, a Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon where he was born\, Beirut – Umama’s birthplace\, and London where they both currently live.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n‘Yesterday I dreamt that I was flying over the streets of Beirut. I was my camera\, my body and my eye and all of me was one with the lens. You asked me how it was. I told you\, the feeling resembles everything in it. Do you think places get stuck in time when we leave them?’  (Umama Hamido)\n\n\n\n\nOn Akka’s Shore was originally commissioned for SPILL Festival 2018: On Time. Supported by Jerwood Charitable Foundation\, Pacitti Company and Artsadmin. \n\nTHURSDAY 24th \nFarhad Berahman\, Memory\, Slow Portraiture and the Afghan Camera Box \nWorkshop – 12:00 to 17:00 \nThe Afghan Camera\, or ‘kamra-e-faoree’ is still used as a traditional method of capturing memories by veteran street photographers in Afghanistan and Iran. The hand-made wooden camera acts as both the camera and darkroom\, thus working as a ‘2 in 1’ machine. This enables capturing and instant printing of photographs\, an individual copy handed to visitors upon processing of the image. This process of taking a photograph creates a space for exchange and conversation. \nJoin Berahman in the photographic process and in a hand colouring activity\, a technique of treating images dating back to the early 19th century. The production process underpinning ‘Afghan Camera Box (kamra-e-faoree)’ can also be seen in Marcia Chandra’s short film\, Conversation: Afghan Camera Box. \n  \nJillian Edelstein\, Transitional Portraits\, Photography and Displacement \nArtist talk and photographic workshop – 12:00 to 17:00 \nJoin us for a combined talk and participatory workshop with photographer\, Jillian Edelstein. Edelstein will present photographs from her forthcoming book Here and There: The Search for Great Aunt Minna\, which tells the story of her own family history of displacement. \nMixing photography with writing Edelstein often uses Instagram as a format to curate stories online – with images from Lesvos and Calais\, to meeting Venezuelan refugees in Colombia\, visits and post war trips to Rwanda\, Kosovo\, Bosnia\, El Salvador. And the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South Africa. \nUsing mobile phones and a selfie printer to produce instant images\, the workshop will invite participants to explore a number of themes mixing writing with photography:  the familiarity of culture\, food\, clothing\, music; the fabric and texture of a known\, comforting\, familiar life and how that contradicts with one of non/unfamiliarity; exploring the same themes – music\, food\, culture\, a way of being and new and different rules – lending towards feelings of being ’the other’ and what emotions that stirs up. \n\nFRIDAY 25th \nHenna Asikainen\, Foraging ‘Omens’ Walk \nForaging ‘Omens’ Walk:  – 11.30 to 13.30 \nJoin Asikainen as she guides us on a foraging pathway from Turner Contemporary to 101 Social. \nAsikainen is a mixed-media artist\, born in Joensuu\, Finland.  Her work explores questions surrounding environmental justice\, climate change\, migration\, human relationships with nature and the interplay between social\, cultural and ecological issues. \nMany of Asikainen projects have a site-specific element with communal and social experiences and have been created with the participation of displaced peoples’ communities and especially migrants with a refugee background. \nMeet at front desk\, at 11.30am. \n  \nHeadway London\, Submit to Love Studios \nGallery talks\, sound installation and workshop – 12:00 to 16:00 \nSound Installation: 12 brain injury survivors share their stories in a sound installation. Listen to stories about their cultural\, geographical and physical displacement in an ever-changing world. Drawing on some key themes from this years’ Turner finalists\, these conversations provide a platform to unheard communities with intersecting identities and experiences. Project run by charity Headway East London. \nWorkshop: Led by the artists of Submit to Love Studios as they explore identity and model-making in response to Turner nominee Oscar Murillo’s work. \n10-Minute Talks: Talks will take place in the Turner Prize galleries\, at lunchtime\, please ask for the exact timings. Two members of the Headway group will reflect on the works in the Turner Prize exhibition – Lobna will reflect on the work by Lawrence Abu Hamdan\, and Chris on Oscar Murillo’s projects. \nHeadway East London is a charity supporting people affected by brain injury. They offer specialist support and services to survivors and their families\, whilst also campaigning for greater awareness. They also make art\, music\, food and culture at their Hackney hub. Their vision is to create a community where people with brain injury are valued\, respected and able to fulfil their potential. \n Submit to Love Studios is home to a group of mostly self-taught artists who have all survived brain injuries. They work collectively in an open environment and help bring out the best in each other. Their mission is “discovery through art”\, and the studio is based at charity Headway East London in Hackney. \n  \nJuan del Gado: Drifting Narratives \nScreening of Fleches Sans Corps (8 min\, 2003) – 11.30am to 12.30pm \nScreening of excerpts and a work-in-progress presentation by del Gado\, in relation to his current multi-screen project In the Shadow of the Midnight Sun. \nFollowing a refugee from Damascus in search of answers to his identity in Sweden\, In the Shadow of the Midnight Sun explores displacement\, global warming and belonging via a journey through the vast landscape of the Arctic. \n  \nA Counterpoints Arts’ Learning Lab in partnership with Plymouth College of Art \nThe Art of Networking and the Platforma Festival \nLearning Lab – 13:30 to 15:30 \nA map of the Platforma Festival 2019 spans across the edges and centres of local areas\, neighbourhoods\, arts venues and cultural organisations in Kent and Medway\, resulting in a rich range of creative connections and co-productions. It shows that the art of building networks lies at the very heart of the commissioning and co-curatorial process of the Festival. These are the networks that aspire to be collaborative and cooperative\, are often fluid and thrive on negotiating relationships\, mutual exchanges and the sharing of resources. \nJoin us for a reflective conversation before the Platforma Festival ends to help capture some of the concrete forms and potential legacies of these evolving networks. The dialogue will address questions emerging from the event\, how we move forward to develop tangible projects and what the implications may be for the institutions and organisations that we interact with. This conversation will include several of the artists\, cultural activists\, curators\, producers\, educators and participants who have helped shape and have fed into the reciprocal architecture of the Festival as well as invited participants including: Aida Silvestri (Artist & Community Organiser); Gurvinder Sandher (Artistic Director\, Cohesion Plus); Stephen Felmingham (Plymouth College of Art); Julie Neville (Platforma South East Coordinator); Tim Butcher (Department for People and Organisations\, OU); Tom Green (Counterpoints and  Platforma Coordinator). \nModerated by Áine O’Brien\, Co-Director Counterpoints Arts \nhttp://learninglabeditions.org/ \nhttps://www.plymouthart.ac.uk/ \n\n 
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/platforma-2019-at-turner-contemporary/
CATEGORIES:Learning
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Mooch-Photo-Chris-Constantine-PM-v3-A4-scaled-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191021T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191021T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190923T070852Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145419Z
UID:10000268-1571616000-1571616000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Music\, poetry & screenings @ Gulbenkian
DESCRIPTION:#platforma 5 \nAs part of our 5th Platforma festival we are co-curating a week of events at the Gulbenkian in Canterbury. The programme includes: \n21-22 October: Pop culture / Young People / Migration & Social Change – Pop Culture and Social Change is a pioneering project from Counterpoints Arts exploring how the power of pop culture can be harnessed to shift the way we talk\, think and feel about migration and displacement. (Invitation only) \n21 October: Pop culture\, arts & activism – 18.00-19.00: A free session open to all\, linked to our pop culture retreat. Followed by: 19.30pm Matangi/Maya/M.I.A. – a 2018 biographical documentary film about English rapper\, artist & activist M.I.A.. Directed by Steve Loveridge \n22 October: Popjustice scratch!\, 17.00:\nA free performance\, open to all\, by participants in the pop culture retreat. \n23 October: Tongue Fu\, 19.30\nTongue Fu is one of the UK’s leading spoken word shows. It is a riotous experiment in live literature\, music\, film and improvisation. Featuring top poets Anthony Anaxagorou\, Rachel Rose Reid\, Julian Knxx. Hosted by Francesca Beard \n24 October: No Direction Home stand-up comedy with guest headliner\, 19.00\nAfter a sell-out gig at the Southbank Centre in London\, and guest headliners including Nish Kumar and Romesh Ranganathan No Direction Home bring a hilarious line-up of comedians from refugee & migrant backgrounds to Canterbury for this one-off gig. Special guest headliners to be announced! \n25 October: The Last Tree\, 19.00\nA new feature film\, written & directed by Shola Amoo. Presented as part of Black History Month by Kent University Union. \n26 October: Platforma Family Day\,  from 10.00\nArtist and performer-led workshops\, performances and fun for the whole family\, around themes of home\, identity and migration. \n26 October: Rafiki Jazz – Up Close!\,  20.00\nAcclaimed by Songlines magazine as ‘The best of British’\, Rafiki Jazz bring their diverse and eclectic sound to Kent for a unique Platforma 5 performance. A collective based in the north of England\, comprising musicians from around the world\, their latest album\, ‘Har Dam Sahara’\, draws on the beauty and poetry of Pakistan & Senegal’s mystic Sufi traditions and ancient Middle Eastern Coptic\, Arabic & Hebrew roots.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/music-poetry-screenings-gulbenkian/
CATEGORIES:Community & Participation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/rafiki-jazz1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191006T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191006T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20191002T105744Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145420Z
UID:10000267-1570320000-1570320000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Building Alternative Food Systems
DESCRIPTION:The Arts\, Migration and Food Platforma 5 event\, part of Something Held in the Mouth\, a four day festival of food\, migration & the poetics of food\, organised by  Custom Folkestone. \n14:00 to 16:00 \nInterdisciplinary artist Dana Olărescu and social designer Paulina Sidhom are working with a food bank organiser in Peckham\, examining the system from how we make donations through to the user experience. Their work encourages us to reconsider our responsibility as citizens\, beyond existing power structures\, to redesign food systems collectively \nThey will run a participatory workshop on re imagining a better\, fairer (more nutritious) food banking and sharing system\, aimed at empowering those in need and those that donate. Looking at replacing dried\, canned foods with seasonal\, organic and locally-grown ones\, they aim to create a more holistic model prioritising nutrition and food literacy by reflecting on our contemporary disconnect from food. Come help them build it together. \n16:00 to 17:00 \nWhat role can arts & food projects play in developing understanding of migration & displacement? With May Project Gardens founder Ian Solomon-Kawall (KMT)\, Usman Khalid of Haven Coffee and Dana Olărescu and Paulina Sidhom. \nAbout the panel: \nDana and Paulina test the boundaries between art and design with collaborative work inspired by ecology\, wellbeing\, and non-formal education. They are currently developing a project on natural building and growing microgreens in London\, aiming to address people’s contemporary relationship to locally-sourced food. Previous projects include teaching gardening techniques to vulnerable adults\, and art installations challenging immigrant stereotypes\, with some on show at Tate Modern\, Museum of London\, Goldsmiths University\, and Incheon Arts Platform (South Korea\,) amongst others. @microlifeproject #microchangescreatewaves \n Ian (KMT) has over 20 years experience of working in activism and social change. He’s worked on raising awareness for a multitude of social issues using the powerful words and rhythms of Hip Hop music and a non-exhaustive passion for the environment and conservation\, combining his love for music and love for nature. KMT’S VISION – KMT uses the arts for social change to propose a provocation – Get Comfortable Being Uncomfortable. His philosophy and working methodologies are grounded in a deep respect for the beauty and abundance of Pachamama (Mother Earth)\, linking the issues of global food security and local food growing systems\, to both entertain and educate. Projects form the rich tapestry that is the community-led food growing space May Project Gardens which he designed using permaculture principles. Here he mentors young people\, nurturing ideas and fuelling passions through music and a connection to the environment\, through a six month leadership programme\, Hip Hop Gardens. \n\nHaven Coffee was founded in 2018 by social entrepreneur and refugee Usman Khalid\, Haven Coffee is a coffee brand with a social mission\, running pop-up coffee shops for workspaces and events across London. We provide a coffee shop experience without you even having to leave the building. With our professionally trained baristas and organic high-quality blends\, Haven can give you that perfect cup of coffee you are looking for. What’s more\, each cup of Haven Coffee sold helps support and raise awareness for refugee communities across the UK\, from promoting refugee artists to organising events\, as well as providing barista training to those refugees who are looking to build a new professional life for themselves.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/building-alternative-food-systems/
CATEGORIES:Sustainability & Climate Justice
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/HOLIS-Interdisciplinary-School-Workshop-Sobole-Poland-Photo-Julia-Maria-Karczewska-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20191003T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191003T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190923T062457Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145420Z
UID:10000270-1570060800-1570060800@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Something Held in the Mouth
DESCRIPTION:#platforma5 \nCustom Folkestone presents: Something Held in the MouthA four day festival bringing together artists and creative practitioners to present a diverse programme of art\, events\, workshops and talks about the poetics of food\, the politics of its migrations and the ways in which our bodies hold these stories. The festival convenes dialogues around the way food crosses boundaries and creates connections across the world\, as well as exploring the intersections between art\, food and local markets to forge new alliances through geopolitical conversations.  \nhttps://www.customfolkestone.co.uk \nEvents include: \n6 October  \n14.00: Building alternative food banks –  Interdisciplinary artist Dana Olarescu and social designer Paulina Sidhom will run a participatory workshop on re imagining a better\, fairer food bank system\, aimed at empowering those in need. Looking at replacing dried\, canned foods with seasonal\, organic and locally-grown ones\, they aim to create a more holistic model prioritising nutrition and food literacy by reflecting on our contemporary disconnect from food. Come help them build it together. \n16.00: Panel discussion – What role can arts & food projects play in developing understanding of migration & disaplacement? \n17.00: Join artist and musician Lucky Moyo for the latest East Yard Community Meal.  Custom will be collaborating once again with Dr Legumes and Docker Bakery to produce a Zimbabwean menu designed by Lucky Moyo and friends.  This time we are also going to welcome Lucky’s band of singers\, drummers and dancers to lead us in a musical community celebration! \nPart of the 5th Platforma Festival\, produced by Counterpoints Arts \n 
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/something-held-in-the-mouth/
CATEGORIES:Multi-Art Form
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190927T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190927T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190912T202709Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145420Z
UID:10000273-1569542400-1569542400@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Learning Lab: Art\, Cultural Democracy and the City
DESCRIPTION:Image: Guy’s Map of Cork 1893 \nCities have the capability of providing something for everybody\, only because\, and only when\, they are created by everybody.   \n                    Jane Jacobs\, The Death and Life of Great American Cities  \nA well-crafted city can be repaired\, and a poorly crafted city can’t be…. I’m interested in this question of how can we build something that’s open  enough that it’s adaptive or resilient\, rather than something that completely serves a specified purpose? That’s my idea of the open city. \n                     Richard Sennett\, Building and Dwelling: Ethics for the City \n  \nJoin us for a conversation focusing on who and what makes a city? \nCork city is facing a range of exciting\, overlapping developments with nonetheless physical and infrastructural possibilities and pressures. \nWhose interests and passions actually fuel and shape the current vision for the city? And how might we imagine – from the perspective of 2019 – Cork city in 2050? \nThis Learning Lab will take the form of a ‘think and do’ session bringing civic actors\, artists\, residents\, planners\, small business people\, activists and researchers to think and work together. \nOur aim is to collectively draft a creative ‘blueprint’ for the city\, to be adapted and used as a stepping off point for further conversations. \nQuestions guiding and framing this conversation include (among others): \n\nWhat are the current challenges facing the city and how might socially engaged art and culture be the catalyst for both immediate and slow change?\n\n\nHow is Cork becoming a welcoming city responding to a growing\, diverse demographic?\n\n\nHow might we work together around a common purpose and vision for the city\, even if personal and organizational needs appear to be differently aligned?\n\n\nWhat central role might young actors and new citizens play in the imagining and shaping of the city?\n\n\nWhat can we learn from self-organising and cooperative methods – through which citizens actively choose to navigate power differently? Who is already doing what and where in the city?\n\n\nHow do we create cross-sector coalitions and ways of working – forging pragmatic and creative alliances between small businesses and cultural and civic actors – where decision-making stems from the realities and experiences of diverse neighbourhoods and communities?\n\n\nHow do we avoid a growing disconnect and lack of trust between citizens’ vision on the ground and official policy and how might city planners and elected representatives liaise and learn from grass-roots projects?\n\n\nHow might cross-sector learning result in more powerful communication\, conversation and collaboration between city residents\, planners\, cultural and civic actors and activists and businesses?\n\n\nWhat are the challenges and opportunities on the horizon for Cork post-Brexit?\n\n\nWhat comparative learning can we gain from collaborative initiatives in other port cities?\n\n\nIs it possible to identify a shared city narrative that citizens and dwellers can\, in turn\, make their own?\n\nThe Learning Lab on Art\, Cultural Democracy and the City forms part of a two-day event with Create and partners Crawford Art Gallery (Cork)\, Counterpoints Arts (London)\, Cork City Arts Office and Heart of Glass (St Helens) in the context Create’s 2019 Networking Day for Collaborative Arts.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/learning-lab-art-cultural-democracy-and-the-city/
CATEGORIES:Learning
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190926T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190926T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190912T202221Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145420Z
UID:10000274-1569456000-1569456000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Networking Day in partnership with CREATE Ireland
DESCRIPTION:Image: Tania Bruguera’s Hyundai Commission\, Turbine Hall launch (2018). Credit: Kirsty O’Connor PA. \nWe are pleased to collaborate with our partners CREATE in Ireland in the context of a Networking Day for Collaborative Arts. Other partners include Crawford Gallery Cork and the Cork City Arts Office. \nThe Networking Day promises to open up a space to ask a shared and urgent question: how can collaborative forms of arts practice – engaging with the embodied experiences and knowledge of citizens – initiate and implement civic agency and significant momentum for social change? \nWe will begin the day looking at the role of the arts institution as constituent museum\, with a central focus on socially engaged artist Tania Bruguera’s work on the Tate Modern Turbine Hall Hyundai Commission. Bruguera will be joined b Cara Courage\, Head of Tate Exchange; Jane Wells\, Programme Manager of Tate Exchange\, and Tate Neighbours Natalie Bell\, Shamus Dark\, Debra Reis and Charles Yassin. This session will be chaired by Áine O Brien\, Co-Director Counterpoints Arts. \nFor more detail on the day\, the full range breakout sessions and parallel workshops\, see here.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/networking-day-in-partnership-with-create-ireland/
CATEGORIES:Learning
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/2-tania-bruguera-turbine-hall.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190924T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20191013T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190923T060957Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145420Z
UID:10000271-1569283200-1570924800@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:No Direction Home in Kent
DESCRIPTION:#platforma5\n\nIn partnership with Ideas Test\, Woodville Theatre\, Cohesion PlusNo Direction Home\, produced by Counterpoints Arts & Camden People’s Theatre\, has been running since September 2018\, with free coaching and paid performances for new stand-up comedians from refugee & migrant backgrounds. Led by award-winning comic Tom Parry\, the group have performed at 10 gigs in London & Edinburgh and worked with guest headliners including Suzi Ruffell\, Nish Kumar and Romesh Ranganathan.For Platforma 5 Tom Parry and members of the No Direction Home group will lead a series of free workshops and performances with people in Gravesend and Sheerness.Workshop dates \nGravesend: 24\, 25 September\, 1\,2 October (all 6-8pm) \nSittingbourne: 10 Oct (6-8pm)\, 12 Oct (4.30pm-7.30pm). 13 October (3-6pm) \nPerformances \nGravesend – The Woodville Theatre – 9 October\, 7pm  booking \nThe Ypres Tavern – Sittingbourne – 13 October\, 7pm \nIf you are interested in joining the free workshops and having a go at stand-up comedy\, please contact tom@counterpoints.org.uk \nAll applications are welcome\, whatever your background. No previous experience necessary! Age 18+ \nPart of the 5th Platforma Festival\, produced by Counterpoints Arts
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/no-direction-home-in-kent/
CATEGORIES:Comedy
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190923T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190923T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190915T195417Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145420Z
UID:10000272-1569196800-1569196800@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Platforma 5 : Kent & Medway
DESCRIPTION:Image: A Hostile Environment 2019\, Adam Chodzko \n  \nThe biennial Platforma festival for the arts by\, with and about refugees and migration is produced by Counterpoints Arts. It brings together artists\, organisations\, funders and others for discussions\, workshops and the chance to share practice and showcase new work. \nThe 5th Platforma festival will take place across Kent & Medway this autumn. \nFor more information contact tom@counterpoints.org.uk \nPLATFORMA 5 : PROGRAMME \nSeptember/October: No Direction Home \nStand-up comedy workshops & performances in Gravesend & Sittingbourne  – Counterpoints Arts in partnership with Ideas Test\, Woodville Theatre\, Cohesion Plus. No Direction Home is produced by Counterpoints Arts & Camden People’s Theatre. \nSeptember/October: Hiphop and spoken word workshops with young people \nLed by Oliver Seagar with Pie Factory\, Music for Change and Counterpoints Arts. \nSeptember-October: Worse Things Happen At Sea\, Ramsgate\, 10.00-22.00 \nThis art installation by Mooch is a Morse code soundtrack within the Ramsgate lighthouse listing over a thousand names of vessels lost on the Goodwin Sands. Imagine how it feels to be lost in a storm at sea as the Morse distress call reminds you of the perils beyond the harbour walls\, over many centuries\, to the present day. \n14 September-13 October: Home – The Beaney House of Art & Knowledge\, Canterbury \nAn exhibition of artwork created by textile artist Anna Ray and a group of mothers living in Ashford ­ long term residents and recently resettled Syrian women. Over the course of seven months\, Anna worked with the group to explore the theme of ‘home’. The aim of the commission was to bring a new community together\, to discover commonalities and celebrate differences. Through weekly workshops\, the participants worked with drawing\, painting\, print\, felt­making\, weaving and stitch. As they made artwork together\, the women shared stories of their home­lives\, speaking of the joys of motherhood and the challenges they face. Since the project drew to a close last year the group have continued to make artwork together as friends\, drawing on the skills and confidence gained from this unique project. Home was commissioned by People United\, The Diocese of Canterbury and Ashford Borough Council\, funded by Arts Council England. (picture credit: Anna Ray) \n3-5 October: Music After Detention: Dover Residency \nMusic in Detention (MiD)\, in collaboration with musician Oliver Seagar are running a 3 day residency in Dover\, with musicians they worked with whilst incarcerated in the UK’s Immigration Detention System. Until 2015 there was an Immigration Removal Centre in Dover\, sited in Dover’s Western Heights Nature Reserve. Some of MiD’s musicians were held there. Includes: 5 October Music After Detention Gig @ The Lighthouse in Deal 20:30 – 23:00 \n3-6 October: Custom Folkestone presents: Something Held in the Mouth\, A four day festival bringing together artists and creative practitioners to present a diverse programme of art\,  events\, workshops and talks about the poetics of food\, the politics of its migrations and the ways in which our bodies hold these stories. The festival convenes dialogues around the way food crosses boundaries and creates connections across the world\, as well as exploring the intersections between art\, food and local markets to forge new alliances through geopolitical conversations. Events include\, 5 October\, Community Meal with menu designed by Lucky Moyo + music from Lucky & friends. \n7 October: Platforma 5 Launch event at Kent County Council\, Maidstone 17.00-18.30 \nA special event in partnership with Kent County Council for the official launch of Platforma 5 – contact tom@counterpoints.org.uk to reserve a free place \n9 October: No Direction Home at Woodville Theatre 19.30-21.00 \nStand-up performance featuring local people who have attended the workshops\, plus special guest headliners. From Counterpoints Arts in partnership with Cohesion Plus & Woodville Theatre. \n11 October: Building Partnerships\, Huguenot Museum\, Rochester 13.00-16.00 – How can museums and heritage organisations engage sustainably with refugees and migrants? \nA free seminar from Counterpoints Arts in partnership with the Huguenot Museum and The Migration Museum Project. \n11 October: Swale Festival of Light in Sittingbourne\, with Cohesion Plus \nFollowing workshops local schools to create lanterns around core values of respect\, excellence\, friendship and equality led by artists commissioned for Platforma 5\, a parade as part of a colourful community festival. \n13 October: No Direction Home at Ypres Tavern\, Sittingbourne 19.30-21.00 \nStand-up performance featuring local people who have attended the workshops\, plus special guest headliners. From Counterpoints Arts in partnership with Ideas Test \n15-30 October: Unaccompanied Asylum Seeking Children Art Project\, Sittingbourne Library \nYoung refugees and asylum seekers have created an art exhibition inspired by their journeys to Kent and hopes for the future. \n16-27 October: Why Folkestone? by Aida Silvestri\, Folkestone \nA new exhibition for Platforma 5 by the internationally-exhibited photographer Aida Silvestri. Presented alongside her whose previous workEven This Will Pass. \n18-25 October: Lilacs In Bloom by Joy C Martindale\, Jarman Building – University of Kent \nA participatory artwork made in collaboration with survivors of modern-day slavery and human trafficking. \n18 October – 8 November: Platforma 5 @ 101 Social Club\, Margate \nAs part of their Autumn/Winter programme\, 101 Social Club in Margate presents a series of installations\, screenings and talks \n21-25 October Platforma 5 takeover at Turner Contemporary & 101 Social\, Margate \nA week-long programme of artist-led engagement & talks linked to 2019 Turner Prize exhibition. Co-commissioned and co-curated by Counterpoints Arts and Turner Contemporary. \nIncluding: 23 October – “Creating an Archive” : Exploring the history of arts\, refugees and migration projects in Kent. How might we work collectively to bring this archive to life? Led by Julie Neville and Douglas Noble. \n21-26 October: Platforma 5 at Gulbenkian\, in partnership with Counterpoints Arts \n21-22 October: Pop culture / Young People / Migration & Social Change – retreat\, Gulbenkian Pop Culture and Social Change is a pioneering project from Counterpoints Arts exploring how the power of pop culture can be harnessed to shift the way we talk\, think and feel about migration and displacement. (Invitation only) \n21 October: Pop culture\, arts & activism – Gulbenkian 18.00-19.00: A free session open to all\, linked to our pop culture retreat. Followed by: 19.30pm Matangi/Maya/M.I.A. – film screening\, Guklbenkian\nA 2018 biographical documentary film about English rapper\, artist & activist M.I.A.. Directed by Steve Loveridge \n22 October: Popjustice scratch!\, Gulbenkian 17.00:\nA free performance\, open to all\, by participants in the pop culture retreat. \n23 October: Tongue Fu\, Gulbenkian\, 19.30\nTongue Fu is one of the UK’s leading spoken word shows. It is a riotous experiment in live literature\, music\, film and improvisation. Featuring top poets Anthony Anaxagorou\, Rachel Rose Reid\, Julian Knxx. Hosted by Francesca Beard \n24 October: No Direction Home stand-up comedy with guest headliner\, Gulbenkian.\nAfter a sell-out gig at the Southbank Centre in London\, and guest headliners including Nish Kumar and Romesh Ranganathan No Direction Home bring a hilarious line-up of comedians from refugee & migrant backgrounds to Canterbury for this one-off gig. Special guest headliners to be announced! \n25 October: The Last Tree\, Gulbenkian\nA new feature film\, written & directed by Shola Amoo. Presented as part of Black History Month by Kent University Union. \n26 October: Platforma Family Day\,  Gulbenkian\, from 10.00\nArtist and performer-led workshops\, performances and fun for the whole family\, around themes of home\, identity and migration. \n26 October: Rafiki Jazz – Up Close!\, Gulbenkian\, 20.00\nAcclaimed by Songlines magazine as ‘The best of British’\, Rafiki Jazz bring their diverse and eclectic sound to Kent for a unique Platforma 5 performance. A collective based in the north of England\, comprising musicians from around the world\, their latest album\, ‘Har Dam Sahara’\, draws on the beauty and poetry of Pakistan & Senegal’s mystic Sufi traditions and ancient Middle Eastern Coptic\, Arabic & Hebrew roots. \n26 October: They Came In Crowded Boats\, Tom Thumb Theatre\, Margate\, 13.30 \nThe Margate Film Festival presents a selection of short films that explore the motivations\, challenges and perceptions of global migration and refugee stories. \n26 October: Shiva Nova presents Romany Diamonds\, Quarterhouse Folkestone\, 19.30 \nThree generations of one traditional Gypsy Roma family playing acoustic magic with fire and soul; amazing audiences with back-to-front violin playing and soul-searching ballads followed by musical Gypsy mayhem. Plus: The World in a Tent Roma exhibition will be in the foyer all day hosting workshops in Roma music from 4pm-5pm and dance from 5pm-6pm for everyone to join in! \n27 October: Platforma 5 presents …. Quarterhouse\, Folkestone \nA series of presentations from artists who are part of the Platforma network in Kent and across England\, followed by discussions and networking. \n\nBackground \nPlatforma arts and refugee network supports and develops arts by\, about and with refugees and migrants from marginalised communities. It brings together groups and artists / performers of any background or political status (e.g. refugees and non-refugees). Platforma is run by Counterpoints Arts in partnership with organisations across the country \nPlatforma 1 took place in London (2011)\, followed by Manchester (2013)\, Leicester (2015) & Newcastle and the North East (2017).
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/platforma-5-kent/
CATEGORIES:Community & Participation
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Chodzko.-artwork-for-Platforma-final-tiny-1-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190816T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190816T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190701T180407Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145420Z
UID:10000275-1565913600-1565913600@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:No Direction Home @ Edinburgh Festival
DESCRIPTION:Booking \nNo Direction Home is a stand-up comedy group from refugee & migrant backgrounds mentored by award-winning comedian Tom Parry\, created and produced by Counterpoints Arts and Camden People’s Theatre. \nThe comedians come from countries including Iran\, Pakistan and Syria. All were new to stand-up but each of them has grabbed the chance to represent themselves on stage\, to talk about their lives\, their experiences and what they have observed. Most of all\, they are extremely funny. \nProceeds from the evening will be donated to the Refugee Survival Trust a Scottish charity providing practical support to asylum seekers and refugees\, especially those who are at risk of destitution. 100% of donations collected at the event will go directly to refugees and asylum seekers in the form of grants or bus passes. \nHosted in partnership with Refugee Survival Trust.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/no-direction-home-edinburgh-festival/
CATEGORIES:Comedy
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/CA_NoDirectionHome_NishKumar_20Jan19-82.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190623T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190623T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190531T141821Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145420Z
UID:10000278-1561248000-1561248000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week: 'As Far As Isolation Goes' at Southbank Centre
DESCRIPTION:23 June\, Southbank Centre\, London. \nFree event \nExperience ‘As Far As Isolation Goes’ this Refugee Week. \nThe piece is a collaboration between live artist Tania El Khoury and musician and street artist Basel Zaraa. The incredibly moving piece is built on their previous collaboration entitled ‘As Far As My Fingertips Take Me’ in which El Khoury commissioned Zaraa to record a rap song inspired by the journey his sisters made from Damascus to Sweden. In ‘As Far As Isolation Goes’\, Zaraa and Tania worked together to create another iteration of their previous piece focused on mental and physical health experiences of refugees in the United Kingdom. Zaraa created a song inspired by conversations with friends and colleagues who have recently claimed refuge in UK. ‘As Far As Isolation Goes’ uses touch\, sound\, and interactivity to bring audience members in contact with those faced with inhumane detention centres and a mental health system that disregard their political and emotional contexts. \nSong Conception: Basel Zaraa \nMusic Production: Peter Churchill \nVocals and Lyrics: Jazzar & Shamma Iqbal \nWall Writing: Steaz \nWork commissioned by the Sick of the Fringe 2019. It was installed as part of our Who Are We? project at Tate Exchange. \nTania El Khoury is a live artist creating installations and performances focused on audience interactivity and concerned with the ethical and political potential of such encounters. Her work has been translated and presented in multiple languages in 32 countries across six continents\, in spaces ranging from museums to cable cars to the Mediterranean Sea. She is She is a 2019 Soros Art Fellow and the recipient of the 2017 International Live Art Prize and the 2011 Total Theatre Innovation Award and Arches Brick Award. Tania is currently a visiting assistant professor and festival co-curator at Bard College’s Fisher Center for the Performing Arts. She is affiliated with Forest Fringe and is the co-founder of the research and performance collective Dictaphone Group. She holds a PhD in Theatre Studies from Royal Holloway. In 2018\, a survey of her work entitled ear-whispered: works by Tania El Khoury took place in Philadelphia. \nBasel Zaraa is a spoken word artist and percussionist who writes on themes of exile and resistance. He has collaborated with a wide range of international artists including Akala\, Guildhall youth project (Im)possibilities\, Palestinian hip-hop group Katibeh Khamseh\, Arabic fusion band Raast and funk band Shokunin. He is part of the cast of PsycheDELIGHT’s ‘Borderline’ satire about the Calais camp\, in which he performs original music and DIY sound effects. He is also a visual and stencil graffiti artist and is currently touring with Tania El Khoury’s ‘As Far As My Fingertips Take Me’.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/as-far-as-isolation-goes-at-southbank-centre/
CATEGORIES:Performance & Dance
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/with-Zia-scaled-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190623T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190623T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190516T130603Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145420Z
UID:10000290-1561248000-1561248000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week: No Direction Home with Romesh Ranganathan
DESCRIPTION:23 June\, 7pm\, Southbank Centre  \nTicketed: tickets from £12 \nBooking: https://www.southbankcentre.co.uk/whats-on/134145-no-direction-home-2019 \nLaughter unites us: an evening of stand-up by comics from refugee and migrant backgrounds\, with guest headliners Suzi Ruffell and Romesh Ranganathan. \nNo Direction Home is a stand-up comedy group mentored by award-winning comedian Tom Parry. After a string of sell-out shows in London\, they will be bringing their unique brand of humour to Southbank Centre as the culmination of Refugee Week 2019. \nFeaturing: Arashk Farahani\, Nour-ani Sisserian\, Usman Khalid\, Majid Adin. \nGuest headliners: Suzi Ruffell (“A stand-up gem”\, The Guardian) and Romesh Ranganathan (“Irresistable gags”\, The Guardian) \nNo Direction Home is produced in partnership between Counterpoints Arts and Camden People’s Theatre. \nRomesh Ranganathan has sold out major venues across the UK with his stand-up\, including on his first national tour Irrational Live in 2016. He has made numerous TV appearances including with hit series The Misadventures of Romesh Ranganathan\, Just Another Immigrant and The Ranganation. \nSuzi Ruffell has performed stand-up shows across the country and appeared on Channel 4\, E4\, BBC3\, Comedy Central\, Dave & BBC Radio 4. She will be bringing her new show Dance Like Everyone’s Watching at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe this summer. \nTom Parry is a member of the sketch troupe Pappy’s producing award-winning podcasts\, television and stage shows. He has written\, performed & directed work for stage\, TV and radio and his new stand-up show Parryoke will be at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe this summer. \nMajid Adin is an artist and animator from Iran\, now living and working in London. Majid was shortlisted for the 2018 Groucho Maverick Award celebrating original\, creative artwork that seeks to challenge the status quo. \nNour-Ani Sisserian is an actor and theatre director based in East London. Acting credits include Welcome to the UK at The Bunker and Home Manchester\, Black Lives Black Words at the Bush Theatre. As an assistant director\, credits include a workshop at the National Theatre Studio. \nArashk Farahani is an Iranian performer and film-maker based in London who has recently started sharing his experiences through stand-up comedy. \nUsman Khalid is originally from Pakistan & now lives in London. As well as doing stand-up\, he is establishing a pop-up coffee business @havencoffee that supports refugees.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/no-direction-home-romesh-ranganathan/
CATEGORIES:Comedy
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/romesh-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190623T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190623T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190508T070013Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145420Z
UID:10000293-1561248000-1561248000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week: No Direction Home: Workshop at the V&A Museum
DESCRIPTION:23 June\, 3-4.30pm\, V&A Museum  \nFree. Booking essential here \nTop stand-up comedian and director Tom Parry has been running a project with Counterpoints Arts and Camden People’s Theatre with new stand-ups from refugee and migrant backgrounds. Join him to learn about No Direction Home and have a go yourself! No previous experience required. For 14+. Free. \nThe workshop takes place at Laughing Matters: The State of a Nation\, British Galleries\, Room 55\, Level 1
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/no-direction-home-workshop-at-the-va-museum/
CATEGORIES:Comedy
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/CA_NoDirectionHome_NishKumar_20Jan19-130-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190623T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190623T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20170511T074031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145420Z
UID:10000299-1561248000-1561248000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week at Southbank Centre
DESCRIPTION:Join us and our partners at Southbank Centre for a day of all kinds of creative\, fun and engaging activities in response to this year’s Refugee Week’s theme ‘Our Shared Future’. \nRefugee Week partners bring their own participatory activities to present their work and to celebrate this year’s theme. They will be joined by artists and organisations\, all coming together around the programme which includes  singing\, making\, having conversations and engaging in artists’ workshops. \nThe day will include the launch of the London Syrian Ensemble\, the Big Sing and participatory\, agit-prop installations by Counterpoints Arts-commissioned artists Gil Mualem-Doron and Alketa Xhafa-Mripa. \nThis event is free and suitable for all the family. \n 
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/refugee-week-at-southbank-centre/
CATEGORIES:Multi-Art Form
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/SBC.CAwebsite-scaled-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190531T135550Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145420Z
UID:10000279-1561075200-1561075200@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week: 'As Far As Isolation Goes' at the V&A Museum
DESCRIPTION:21 June\, 6-8pm \n22 June\, 11am – 4pm \nFree event \nDuring the V&A Special Late opening on the 21st and throughout the day on 22nd June\, we present this second iteration of the collaboration between the two artists\, in collaboration with the V&A. \n‘As Far As Isolation Goes’ is a collaboration between live artist Tania El Khoury and musician and street artist Basel Zaraa. The incredibly moving piece is built on their previous collaboration entitled ‘As Far As My Fingertips Take Me’ in which El Khoury commissioned Zaraa to record a rap song inspired by the journey his sisters made from Damascus to Sweden. In ‘As Far As Isolation Goes’\, Zaraa and Tania worked together to create another iteration of their previous piece focused on mental and physical health experiences of refugees in the United Kingdom. Zaraa created a song inspired by conversations with friends and colleagues who have recently claimed refuge in UK. ‘As Far As Isolation Goes’ uses touch\, sound\, and interactivity to bring audience members in contact with those faced with inhumane detention centres and a mental health system that disregard their political and emotional contexts. \nSong Conception: Basel Zaraa \nMusic Production: Peter Churchill \nVocals and Lyrics: Jazzar & Shamma Iqbal \nWall Writing: Steaz \nWork commissioned by the Sick of the Fringe 2019. It was installed as part of our Who Are We? project at Tate Exchange. \nTania El Khoury is a live artist creating installations and performances focused on audience interactivity and concerned with the ethical and political potential of such encounters. Her work has been translated and presented in multiple languages in 32 countries across six continents\, in spaces ranging from museums to cable cars to the Mediterranean Sea. She is She is a 2019 Soros Art Fellow and the recipient of the 2017 International Live Art Prize and the 2011 Total Theatre Innovation Award and Arches Brick Award. Tania is currently a visiting assistant professor and festival co-curator at Bard College’s Fisher Center for the Performing Arts. She is affiliated with Forest Fringe and is the co-founder of the research and performance collective Dictaphone Group. She holds a PhD in Theatre Studies from Royal Holloway. In 2018\, a survey of her work entitled ear-whispered: works by Tania El Khoury took place in Philadelphia. \nBasel Zaraa is a spoken word artist and percussionist who writes on themes of exile and resistance. He has collaborated with a wide range of international artists including Akala\, Guildhall youth project (Im)possibilities\, Palestinian hip-hop group Katibeh Khamseh\, Arabic fusion band Raast and funk band Shokunin. He is part of the cast of PsycheDELIGHT’s ‘Borderline’ satire about the Calais camp\, in which he performs original music and DIY sound effects. He is also a visual and stencil graffiti artist and is currently touring with Tania El Khoury’s ‘As Far As My Fingertips Take Me’.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/as-far-as-isolation-goes-at-the-va-museum/
CATEGORIES:Performance & Dance
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/as-far-as-isolation-goes.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190531T122621Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145421Z
UID:10000280-1561075200-1561075200@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week: Don Letts DJ Set - Special Late opening at the V&A museum
DESCRIPTION:21 June\, 6-10pm\, V&A Museum  \nFree event \nWe are very honoured to have the legendary Don Letts headline this special evening for Refugee Week at the V&A. \nDon Letts’ reputation has been firmly established in both the film and music world by a substantial body of work from the late 70’s through the 80’s\, 90’s and well into the millennium. His work has been exhibited in The Kitchen N.Y.C\, The Institute of Contemporary Art\, The N.F.T in London and was honored at Brooklyn’s BAM festival and The Milan Film festival.  In March 2003 he won a Grammy for his documentary ‘Westway To The World’. \nHe came to notoriety in the late 70’s as the DJ that single handedly turned a whole generation of punks onto reggae. It was whilst as a DJ at the first punk club ‘The Roxy’ in 1977\, that made his first film ‘The Punk Rock Movie’ w/ Sex Pistols-The Clash and many others. This led to a period directing over 300 music videos for an diverse mix of artists ranging from Public Image to Bob Marley. \nHe then moved into documentary work making films on the likes of Gil Scot-Heron\, The Jam\, Sun Ra\, The Clash and George Clinton. His most recent documentary was for Sir Paul McCartney’s ‘New’ project. Feature films include the legendary Jamaican movie  1997’s ‘Danchall Queen’. \nAlong with his autobiography ‘Culture Clash: Dread Meets Punk Rockers’ released in 2007 Don was also the subject of the documentary film ‘Superstonic Sound: The Rebel Dread’ in 2010.  \nHe currently presents a weekly radio show on BBC 6 Music called ‘Culture Clash Radio’ and still DJ’s nationally and internationally. \nSupported by\na boutique talent agency representing some of the finest highest profile artists alongside the hottest\, up and coming acts. \n 
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/don-letts-dj-set-special-late-opening-at-the-va-museum/
CATEGORIES:Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/beb60c5d_don-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190531T054334Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145421Z
UID:10000281-1561075200-1561075200@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week: Dance for Refuge - Special Late Opening at the V&A Museum
DESCRIPTION:21 June\, 6-10pm\, V&A Museum  \nFree event  \nWe are over the moon to be working with the brilliant Dance for Refuge again this Refugee Week. \nThis is a project which started in 2015\, reacting to the desperate situation in Calais. They’ve been putting on parties ever since\, and raised over £25\,000 for charities which support refugees. \nDance for Refuge have had the support from some amazing musicians and DJs including Mall Grab\, Mafalda\, Eclair Fifi\, Peach\, Auntie Flo\, Andrew Ashong\, Dark Sky\, Shy One\, Mor Elian and many more. Apart from The Victoria & Albert Museum\, they’ve been putting on events at Corsica Studios\, Bussey Building/CLF Art Cafe and Five Miles. \nTheir line up of DJs to be announced soon. \n 
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/dance-for-refuge-special-late-opening-at-the-va-museum/
CATEGORIES:Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Dance-for-Refuge-c-Jake-David.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190531T051927Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145421Z
UID:10000282-1561075200-1561075200@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week: Awate - Special Late Opening at the V&A Museum
DESCRIPTION:21 June\, 6-10pm\, V&A museum  \nFree event \nWe are a little bit in love with AWATE\, and so happy to welcome him to what promises to be a very special evening. \nAWATE is a visionary rapper from Eritrea weaving together psychedelic melodies and sharp\, witty lyrics. Born in Saudi Arabia and raised in Camden where he was a Resident Artist at The Roundhouse\, AWATE gained the respect of artists such as Yasiin Bey (Mos Def)\, Lowkey and Pharoahe Monch.   \nWith Turkish Dcypha’s infectious\, funk-based production\, AWATE’s critically acclaimed Shine Ancient EP and Happiness LP have been praised and featured on BBC Radio 1\, 1Xtra and 6Music as well as Noisey\, Spotify and The Guardian and garnered a nomination for Best Urban Act at the 2018 Unsigned Music Awards.   \nHaving a reputation for energetic and emotive performances\, supporting Black Star\, Ghetts and Shabazz Palaces – 2018 saw this London griot’s first headline tour with shows in the UK\, Spain\, Brazil\, Germany and the USA. \nPart of our PRS Foundation funded ‘Music for Social Change’ project. \nImage by Jake Lewis.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/awate-special-late-opening-at-the-va-museum/
CATEGORIES:Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Awate_photo-credit-Jake-Lewis-scaled-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190531T051007Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145421Z
UID:10000283-1561075200-1561075200@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week: Madz - Special Late Opening at the V&A Museum
DESCRIPTION:21 June\, 6-10pm\, V&A Museum  \nFree event \nBeatboxing in the Gamble Room! \nMadz is a 22 year old professional Beatboxer who has been performing and pushing the art on both the streets and public platforms from a very young age and advanced his musical abilities through the years to be booked for hour plus long sets\, due to his ability and stamina whilst perform high energy beats for long periods of time. \nHis sets cover all modern day electronic music and dance music genres\, his high rhythm and timing abilities opened up lots of opportunity’s for him to play as live beatbox drummer in bands and orchestras as well as getting him involved in several work shops and beatboxing tutorials across the country working with schools and companies mainly with Music Action International. He’s performed in venues including Bridge Water Hall and the Royal Festival Hall. \nHe also preformed solo at many venues and music festivals around the UK and became the founder of ‘Takeover’\, his band\, in late 2018. \nPart of our PRS Foundation funded ‘Music for Social Change’ project.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/madz-special-late-opening-at-the-va-museum/
CATEGORIES:Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Madz.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190531T045457Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145421Z
UID:10000284-1561075200-1561075200@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week: Chineke! Junior String Quartet - Special Late Opening at the V&A Museum
DESCRIPTION:21 June\, 6-10pm\, V&A Museum  \nFree event \nIt is with huge pleasure that we welcome Chineke! Junior String Quartet to Refugee Week. \nThe Chineke! Foundation was founded in 2015 to provide career opportunities for Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) classical musicians in the UK and Europe. Chineke!’s mission is: ‘Championing change and celebrating diversity in classical music’.  \nThe Foundation’s flagship ensemble\, the Chineke! Orchestra\, comprises exceptional musicians from across the continent\, brought together several times per year. As Europe’s first majority-BME orchestra\, the Chineke! Orchestra performs a mixture of standard orchestral repertoire along with the works of BME composers both past and present. \nThe Chineke! Orchestra works closely with its sister ensemble\, the Chineke! Junior Orchestra\, a youth orchestra of BME players aged 11-22\, with senior players acting as mentors\, teachers and role models to the young musicians. Several of the Chineke! Juniors have gained scholarships to the Junior and Senior conservatoires in the UK and some have “graduated” to play in the professional Chineke! Orchestra.  \nThe members of the Chineke! Junior String Quartet are all regular players in the Chineke! Junior Orchestra. The Quartet has performed at Festivals in Brighton and at venues in London\, including Kensington Palace. \nPart of our PRS Foundation funded ‘Music for Social Change’ project.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/chineke-junior-string-quartet-special-late-opening-at-the-va-museum/
CATEGORIES:Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Chineke-Juniors-at-fashion-show-3.9.2016.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190621T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190508T065437Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145421Z
UID:10000294-1561075200-1561075200@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week: Special Late Opening at the V&A Museum
DESCRIPTION:21 June\, 6-10pm\, V&A Museum  \nA date for the diaries – Refugee Week Friday night treat at the V&A Museum. \nDance for Refuge return for the third year in a row\, taking over the Grand Entrance and programming a set of music to help raise awareness of the importance of migrant culture in the arts. \nFollowed by Don Letts DJ Set – legendary DJ spins upbeat reggae and tunes inspired by the Refugee Week theme of #generations. \nMusic in the Gamble Room\, a programme headlined by London-based rapper and an old friend of Counterpoints Arts – Awate! Details of this programme will be published as a separate event. \nRoyal College of Music’s cellist Jobine Siekman performs a concert\, with piano accompanist\, at The Globe\, from 18:30 to 19:30. Included in the performance is the work by the Hungarian-Austrian composer of refugee background\, Ligeti. \nCohere\, by Geoff Brokate\, Gallery 47C\, level 0 \nCohere is a visual and poetic response to the meaning of place\, and how our homeland and its culture impact our sense of self. hear spoken word poetry by refugee writers and explore your own sense of belonging through poetic visual imagery and language. \nKwibuka 25- Rwandan poetry and stories\, by Laila Sumpton and Jo Ingabire\, The Globe\, 20:00 to 21:30 \nKwibuka means remember in Kinyarwanda. Join Rwandan poets and storytellers from the Ishami Foundation as we remember the genocide 25 years ago\, look back at the time before and look forward to the future. Add our pop up writing mosaic before and after as we explore the V&A’s collection and think about how conflict changes lives and identities. \nOur newest Refugee Week partners at the International Rescue Committee will be at the Sackler Centre reception throughout the evening with ‘Rescuing Futures’\, sharing the objects and materials designed by young people building their entrepreneurship and business skills through the Rescuing Futures projects. All of the young people have fled conflict and crisis and are now working to kick-start their careers. \nCapernaum\, with UNHCR\, Hochhauser Auditorium\, Sackler Centre\, Level 1\, 16:00 to 19:00 \nWatch this critically acclaimed drama of hardened\, streetwise 12-year old Lebanese boy who sues his parents in protest of the life they have given him. Book here \nBelly Full: Feeding the Nation’s Narratives\, Art and Digital Art Studio\, The Sackler Centre\, Level 0\, 19:00 to 21:30 \nWith young contemporary artists explore lost histories\, undocumented stories and personal lives integral to the fabric of this nation. In collaboration with Laundry Arts. To book check the Museum’s website\, tickets £12\, £10 concessions.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/special-late-opening-at-the-va-museum/
CATEGORIES:Multi-Art Form
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/dance-for-refuge-2019_960.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190620T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190620T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190517T110525Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145421Z
UID:10000289-1560988800-1560988800@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Rubble Theatre
DESCRIPTION:German-Syrian artist Manaf Halbouni’s sculpture Rubble Theatre is a highlight of this year’s Refugee Festival Scotland. It recreates a scene of destruction in Syria\, featuring the rubble of a bombsite and an abandoned car. Halbouni was born in Syria\, the son of a Syrian father and a German mother. He studied at art school in Syria and then moved to Germany a few years before the war. In 2017\, far-right groups in Germany protested against his installation Monument\, which erected three\, upended buses at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin and at the Frauenkirche in Dresden\, in homage to a barricade of buses that protected civilians from sniper fire in Aleppo.\n\nVehicles (and most frequently cars) are a repeating theme in Halbouni’s work – whether as a means of escape or as a mobile home. ‘With the car\, a symbol of mobility\, I try to reach a place that I can call home to take root again\,’ he says. Rubble Theatre will bring the theme of displacement to the heart of Glasgow and be a space for emerging artists from refugee and migrant backgrounds and others to meet\, discuss and share their work. \nRubble Theatre will continue Halbouni’s ongoing exploration of belonging and ‘home’\, acting as a catalyst for public discussions central to Refugee Festival Scotland’s theme of ‘Making Art\, Making Home’ – enabling wider dialogue about the pivotal role of art in creating welcoming and inclusive communities. \nJoin us at Rubble Theatre for the launch of Refugee Festival Scotland 2019 on World Refugee Day\, Thursday 20 June. Halbouni will also be in conversation with Counterpoints Arts about his international work as an artist on Monday 24 June. \nRubble Theatre will be open to the public between Thursday 20 – Wednesday 26 June. The installation is outdoors and wheelchair accessible. \nCommissioned by Counterpoints Arts and Refugee Festival Scotland and supported by Creative Scotland. \n\n  \nConversations with Artist \nAs part of Rubble Theatre\, Manaf Halbouni will discuss his way of working and what inspires his practice with other artists and cultural practitioners: including Rachel Disbury\, Alchemy Film; Helen Trew\, Creative Scotland; Leila Sinclair-Bright\, University of Edinburgh; Sara Sharaawi\, Highlight Arts. \n23rd June \n4:00pm: Rubble Theatre\, St Enoch Square \nIn conversation with Rachael Disbury\, Alchemy Film \n24th June \n4:00pm: Rubble Theatre\, St Enoch Square \nIn conversation with Helen Trew\, Creative Scotland \n24th June \n7:00 – 8:00pm: Scottish Youth Theatre\nManaf Halbouni will take part in a public conversation with Kate Gray\, Director of Collective\, Edinburgh at the Scottish Youth Theatre\, Brian Cox Studio Theatre\, The Old Sheriff Court\, 105 Brunswick Street\, Glasgow G1 1TF \n25th June \n3:00pm: Rubble Theatre\, St Enoch Square \nIn conversation with Leila Sinclair-Bright\, University of Edinburgh and Claudia Zeiske\, Deveron Projects \n26th June \n4:00pm: Rubble Theatre\, St Enoch Square \nIn conversation with Sara Sharaawi\, Highlight Arts
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/rubble-theatre/
CATEGORIES:Multi-Art Form
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Picture1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190620T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190620T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190507T073914Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145421Z
UID:10000296-1560988800-1560988800@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week at the BFI - Styx
DESCRIPTION:Lone yachtswoman Rieke (Wolff) is sailing to Ascension Island to explore the man-made paradise created by Charles Darwin. En-route she encounters a marooned vessel whose occupants need help. Defying all warnings\, she attempts to follow her conscience and a nightmare begins…This adrenaline-driven thriller boasts stunning cinematography and compelling performances; it’s a film which raises deep questions about the limits of our humanity. \nWith Q&A with Director Wolfgang Fischer (work permitting). \nIn partnership with the British Film Institute.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/refugee-week-at-the-bfi-styx/
CATEGORIES:Film and Photography
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/styx-01.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190619T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190619T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T104826
CREATED:20190610T130921Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145421Z
UID:10000277-1560902400-1560902400@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Integration of Refugees within the Creative Industry
DESCRIPTION:We are delighted to be working with Strange Beast on a special event for Refugee Week exploring Integration of Refugees within the Creative Industry. We’ll be premiering a new film by Anna Ginsburg and Melissa Kitty Jarram and screening 3 more inspired by refugee stories. Following this will be a panel discussion. \nBooking via Eventbrite \nAll proceeds from ticket sales* will be donated to Counterpoints Arts \nPremiere \n‘Ugly’ by Anna Ginsburg and Melissa Kitty Jarram – an animated narration of the Poem by Warsan Shire \nScreening \n‘Al Hurriya’ by Loup Blaster \n‘Dear Habib’ by Majid Adin \n‘Then I Came By Boat’ by Marleena Forward \nExhibition \nOriginal hand-painted frames from ‘Ugly’ by Melissa Kitty Jarram \nPanel Hosted by Lucy Bourton – Deputy Editor of It’s Nice That: \nTom Green – Counterpoints Arts \nMajid Adin – Artist and Animation Director \nArteh Odjidja – Photographer \nEvent Supported by: \nStrange Beast \nFriendship Adventure Brewery \nThe Trampery \n*Donation total is subject to Eventbrite fees
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/integration-of-refugees-within-the-creative-industry/
CATEGORIES:Pop Culture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/https___cdn.evbuc_.com_images_63489018_167137863217_1_original.jpeg
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