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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20160702
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20160712
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160701T081239Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145503Z
UID:10000141-1467417600-1468281599@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Platforma SE showcase & exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Turner Contemporary\, Margate \nA new exhibition developed by Platforma South East network will launch with a Showcase Event on 2 July based on the Refugee Week 2016 theme ‘Welcome’. The show will bring together work created by\, with and about refugees and migrants from marginalised communities. \nThe exhibition will feature the following visual artists from across the region working in a variety of media: Hong Dam\, Jay Gearing & Amanda Rigby\, Gil Mualem Doron\, Edi Mandala\, and Josepa Munoz. \nProgramme for 2 July (subject to change): \n10-1pm\, 2.30-3.30pm & 4.30pm-5pm: Interactive photography installation with Gil Mualem Doron\, Sunley Gallery \n2pm-2.15pm: Artist showcase and introduction from Platforma\, Sunley Gallery \n2.30-3.15pm: Puppet Theatre with Ellen Muriel\, Foyle Studio \n3.30-4.30pm: Music performance and film screening with Kotchin\, Azza and young people \nSupported by Platforma\, Arts Council England\, Counterpoints Arts\, Music for Change\, Refugee Week \n 
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/platforma-se-showcase-exhibition/
CATEGORIES:Music,Visual Arts
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160625T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160625T233000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160510T080308Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145503Z
UID:10000133-1466879400-1466897400@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:European Connections with Transylvania
DESCRIPTION:Refugees Welcome! Part 2: European Connections with Transylvania plus Guests as part of Refugee Week \nProduced as part of our music project Celebrating Sanctuary London. \nVenue: Rich Mix London \nEastern European band Transylvania headlines an evening of music celebrating Refugee Week 2016. \nThe second of two artist and activist nights at Rich Mix\, the evening also features a key match in the European Championships. \nTransylvania are a party band spanning the folk beats and music of the Ukraine and Romania\, combined with electronic dance music. Pushing the Balkan boom sound to the limits and with DJs and a VJ adding fuel to the fire of their show\, expect the evening to be true to form of their motto: ‘DAMN FUN!’ Transylvania will be presenting the mother of all parties to conclude Refugee Week\, the European cup final\, and the vote on whether we stay in or out of Europe! \nThe evening will kickstart with a showing of the match followed by a programme featuring artists and activists calling for support of those seeking safety across Europe\, and challenging the racism towards refugees that many in politics and the media have exploited in the run up to the Referendum Vote. \nMusicians\, spoken word artists and activists come together for a programme in support of Refugees rights concluding Refugee Week 2016. Balkan party sounds and music from Refugee artists including a host for the evening. \nExpect to question and be provoked\, expect to be inspired to show unity for refugees. \nTransylvania centres around the talents of Konstantin Zgomot and Vlad Damien. Their repertoire\, with an array of awesome acoustic musicians\, draws on their roots\, rhythms and melodies from the Bukovina region\, but with red hot beats and samples provided by ultra producer Konstantin. Live the band kicks up a storm\, with original visuals and video mixes. Latest CD MR VLAD is out now. \ntwitter: @Transylvania_cc
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/european-connections-with-transylvania-2/
CATEGORIES:Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/Tranyslvania-Group-shot-1-870.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160625T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160625T160000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160415T105846Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145504Z
UID:10000127-1466863200-1466870400@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Beats of the Antonov
DESCRIPTION:Beats of the Antonov is a documentary film following the displaced existences of the Blue Nile and Nuba Mountain communities along the border of North and South Sudan. Directed by Hajooj Kuka (who was born in Sudan)\, the film sets out to explore the issues of identity that lie at the heart of the Sudanese civil war. \nWinner of the 2014 People’s Choice Award at the Toronto International Film Festival\, Beats of the Antonov explores the resilience of a community in the face of cultural oppression\, through music and dance. \nInstead of focusing solely on the Sudanese conflict\, Kuka chooses to spotlight the vibrant cultural traditions of the Nuba population and the ways in which these are recreated in refugee camps. Scenes of music-making are interspersed with interviews and observational shots to provide a personal representation of the reality on the ground. \nBeats of the Antonov is a short but optimistic film that throws up more questions than answers\, bringing much-needed attention to the on-going conflict in Sudan\, whilst also demonstrating the important role of music in maintaining hope and identity. \nThe screening is a collaboration between Counterpoints Arts and BFI\, in conjunction with Refugee Week and African Odysseys – a programme of films by and about the people of Africa. \nTickets will be £6.50\, available to buy on the BFI website. \nWatch the film’s trailer here.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/beats-of-the-antonov/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160625T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160625T170000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160523T153847Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145503Z
UID:10000136-1466852400-1466874000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Moving Stories - Supplementary Schools and families Special event
DESCRIPTION:Refugee Week celebrations at the British Museum continue with a Special Event focused on supplementary schools\, young people and families.  \nThe Museum team collaborated with us to organise a special day for families to take part in lots of fun and engaging activities and to find out about the positive contributions refugees have made and continue to make to the UK.  \nCome to the Museum to create art work to add to a large ‘Welcome’ door installation in the Great Court\, watch an animation film made by the British Red Cross youth groups\, a performance created in collaboration between Dost and the Young Vic. There will be a chance to find out more about Amnesty International\, the UNHCR\, and the International Rescue Committee’s work across the world as well as to attend a storytelling session and special guided tours of the Museum.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/moving-stories-supplementary-schools-and-families-special-event/
CATEGORIES:Multi-Art Form
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160624T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160624T200000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160510T081416Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145504Z
UID:10000134-1466798400-1466798400@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugees Welcome! Featuring Logic\, Afrikan Boy and OpSa! Balkan Band with Azza
DESCRIPTION:A hip hop gig engaging with this year’s Refugee Week theme of Welcome. \nProduced as part of our music project Celebrating Sanctuary London. \nVenue: Rich Mix London \nLogic\, one of the UK’s leading voices in political hip hop\, will be heading up the first of two special Refugee Week evenings featuring artists and activists calling for action and awareness for refugees in the UK\, Europe\, the Middle East and beyond. \nLogic is an artist and activist\, and states this position through empowering songs entitled Question Everything\, For my People and his latest track I’m not an Alien. His socio-political activism and commentary is entwined throughout lyrics with current themes about imperialism\, war\, government cuts & corporations\, equality and social consciousness. \nLogic has emerged from strong roots in the South London underground hip hop scene and is also co-founder of The People’s Army\, which he established with like-minded artists such as Lowkey to effect ‘positive change’. Featuring luminaries of the UK hip hop and grime scene like Akala\, George the Poet\, and Mic Righteous\, the People’s Army is a community and platform for ideas to raise awareness – and encourages participation by anyone who wants to contribute. His energy can be felt by music fans of all genres. Songs like Spectator tear your heart out with hard-hitting lyrics whilst more up-tempo anthems such as The Future make Logic one of the most talented live performers in UK hip hop. \nWe are delighted to host Grime artist and MOBO nominee Afrikan Boy two years after his South Bank debut with us. African Boy is a second generation Nigerian living in London who has built a strong reputation for cultural exchange\, youth activism and engaging with other rappers internationally in countries like Sudan and Algeria. He has toured and guested on songs by MIA\, collaborated with DJ Shadow\, and toured with the Africa Express 8 tour that featured legends like Baba Maal\, Femi Kuti\, Fatoumata Diawara and Damon Albarn. \n\nAfrican Boy is cheeky and vibrant in his performance\, with an extra sharp wardrobe cut from Nigerian threads – but at the heart of his songs are the hardships of the migrant and refugee experience\, visa issues\, and identity fused with urban sounds from the UK and Nigeria. His music is rooted in influences like Fela Kuti\, King Sunny Ade and Dizzy Rascal. In 2015 he performed at the “Jungle” camp in Calais where he met with and performed to refugees there – this resulted in a film produced in partnership with Secret Cinema called ‘Border Business’. The humanity with which Afrikan Boy highlights refugee predicaments and his energized celebration of migrant roots will be just the ticket for this very special Refugee Week show. \nThe Op Sa! Balkan Band are a brass-centred Balkan party band performing songs spanning Serbia\, Macedonia\, Bosnia and Roma cultures with a contemporary twist. They are returning once more to Refugee Week with Czech Roma MC Azza from Margate\, with a special set to open the Rich Mix nights on the festival theme of ‘Welcome’. \nExpect to question and be provoked\, expect to be inspired to show unity for refugees. \n\nfacebook: Logicarmy\, Afrikanboy\, OpSaBalkanBand \ntwitter: @cslondonfext\, @LogicArmy\, @AfrikanBoy
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/refugees-welcome-logic-for-refugee-week-uk/
CATEGORIES:Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/CounterArts_AKALA__©Marcia_Chandra_052-870.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160624T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160624T203000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160510T104544Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145504Z
UID:10000135-1466791200-1466800200@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Moving stories: a Refugee Week special at the British Museum
DESCRIPTION:FREE EVENT \nIn partnership with the British Museum we produced a very special Friday Late event\, curated around the 2016 Refugee Week theme of Welcome and around the incredible Museum’s collection of objects\, stories and ideas. \nThe multi-disciplinary programme included theatre\, spoken word\, music\, film screenings\, social broadcasting project and an array of engaging workshops and activities by some of our arts and advocacy partners. \nThe Museum’s Great Court\, the Enlightenment\, Assyria\, Parthenon Galleries were some of the spaces we ‘took over’ for this very special evening. \nWe hope that this event is the beginning of a long term friendship and collaboration with our partners at The British Museum. \nProgramme: \nUNHCR at the British Museum\n18.00-20.30\, East Lawn\nVisit the very special tent painted by Syrian refugee children and learn more about the people and the facts behind the ‘refugee crisis’. \nGuest book with Refugee Council\n18.00-20.30\, Colonnade\nEngage with the work of Refugee Council and answer the question ‘What does ‘Welcome’ mean to you?’ Share your thoughts and reflections from the evening. \nThe Open Gateway\n18.00-20.30\, Great Court\nInspired by Mimmo Paladino’s work in Lampedusa\, this door installation by artist Emily Tracy will be decorated with visitors’ messages and drawings around the theme of Welcome. \nWorld map\n18.00-20.30\, Great Court\nJoin Amnesty International UK with their beautifully hand-painted map of the world installation. \nHealing Classroom\n18.00-20.30\, Great Court\nCome along to a recreated International Rescue Committee Healing Classroom. Help us to create classroom materials for students in Nigeria and view our accompanying multimedia exhibition. \nFloating Life by Hong Dam and Bern O’Donoghue\n18.00-20.30\, Room 25\nHong Dam and Bern O’Donoghue present Floating Life a participatory installation. The two artists contemplate the hopes and dreams of refugees and the perils they encounter on their journey in search of a new life. \nRefugees Welcome by Alketa Xhafa-Mripa\n18.00-20.00\, Room 34\nAlketa is an artist originally from Kosovo and her ongoing Refugees Welcome installation\, a Counterpoints Arts commission\, is a safe and welcoming space for conversations\, memories of artist’s own welcome to the UK and questioning of support and welcome that exists today. \nIllustration workshop by Olivier Kugler\n18.00-20.30\, West Foyer\nOver the last two and a half years illustrator Olivier Kugler has been commissioned by  Médecins Sans Frontières to create drawings documenting the circumstances of Syrian refugees. Join Olivier in his ‘artists studio’ to explore his practice. \nObject handling with the Islington Centre for Refugees and Migrants\n18.00-20.30\, West Foyer\nCome and meet ESOL learners and find out the connections they have made to the collections in the British Museum. \nSomething to Declare by Cultivators\n18.00-20.30\, Studio\nExperience border control and the transition from one place to another at the Something to Declare – ‘Arrivals Bureau’. Once you get through the queuing\, form filling\, senseless questions and  bureaucracy\, you’ll be led to the interview room to record your own or your family’s arrival to London story. \nTrail – Museum wide\nThe trail is based on the objects that refugees receive when welcomed in refugee camps across the world.\nFree\, collect from the Information Desk in the Great Court Special event \nKayo Chingonyi followed by Maya Youssef\n18.00-18.30 & 20.00-20.30 Great Court\nWriter\, editor\, creative producer and Counterpoints Arts’ Poet-in-Residence\, Kayo introduces this special event. Virtuoso Syrian kanun player and composer Maya Youssef has been a regular commentator in the media and a performer of many prestigious events. Maya will be accompanied by percussionist Antonio Romero. Free\, no seating \nLouai Alhenawi and Stephen Ellis\n19.00-19.40\, Great Court\nThis is a first-time collaboration led by Syrian ney musician Louai Alhenawi and Stephen Ellis from indie band Revere and Gabby Young & Other Animals. Joining them will be Syrian musicians Sanaa Wahbah on Qanun\, Moheddin Aljabi on vocals and members of Revere. Through acoustic instruments\, percussion and Classical Arabic music the artists will explore the Refugee Week theme of ‘Welcome’ with their unique blend of new\n& reinterpreted songs. \nFrom Syria to Sicily\,  storytelling with Alia Alzougbi\n18.15-18.45 & 19.45-20.15\, Room 17\nFar from the 24-hour rolling news are cultures rich with stories and wisdom. Join storyteller Alia Alzougbi as she shares a dynamic tapestry of tales from Syria to Sicily. Free\, just drop in\, limited seating. \nHaymanot Tesfa followed by Tales from Noah’s Ark from Write to Life\n18.00-18.30 & 19.30-20.00\, Room 1\nAmharic singer & traditional krar player\, Haymanot is originally from Ethiopia. ‘Freedom from Torture’s Write to Life creative writing group present their imaginative\, moving – and funny – responses to Julian Barnes’ account of the Noah’s Ark story’ Free\, just drop in\, limited seating. \nChildren of War by Arcola Theatre / Ala-Turka\n19.00-19.30\, Room 18\nArcola Ala-Turka present extracts from their sellout production CHILDREN OF WAR / SAVAŞIN ÇOCUKLARI\, which reimagines Euripides’ The Children of Hercules\, a 2400 year old study of tolerance\, understanding and displacement. Performance is in Turkish. Free\, just drop in\, limited seating. \nWe are here by the Young Vic / DOST\n18.30-19.00 & 19.30-20.00\, Room 25\nInspired by the recent hit production of If You Kiss Me\, Kiss Me at the Young Vic and set to a soundtrack of popular world music\, ‘We’re Here’ is a piece of live performance made by a group of young people from all over the world who now call London home. Free\, just drop in\, limited seating. \nA day in the life by ice&fire theatre\n19.30-20.30\, Sackler Rooms\nSince 2015\, ice&fire has been running fortnightly creative expression sessions with a several members of Room to Heal\, a healing community for refugees and asylum seekers who have survived torture and other forms of organised violence. Tonight\, the group will share an intimate performance of some of the work that has been\ncreated through these sessions. Free\, just drop in\, limited seating. \nFilm Programme\n18:00-18:30. Stevenson Lecture Theatre\nAnonymous in Lampedusa\nScreening of the film Anonymous in Lampedusa.  Followed by Q&A. \nFilming Syria: Stories from the Jasmine Tree\n19:00-20.00\, Stevenson Lecture Theatre\nFilming Syria is a selection of short films produced by young filmmakers based in Syria with support from Bidayyat Audiovisual Arts. Presented in collaboration with artist\, Juan delGado. Followed by Q&A. \nShare your experience\nFollow @britishmuseum and @counterpointsarts on Twitter and tweet using #refugeeswelcome. \nMore details on the programme and contributing artists and organisation to be announced shortly.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/moving-stories-a-refugee-week-special-at-the-british-museum/
CATEGORIES:Multi-Art Form
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160619T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160619T220000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160311T103132Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145504Z
UID:10000111-1466341200-1466373600@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week launch at Southbank Centre
DESCRIPTION:Counterpoints Arts is delighted to collaborate with Southbank Centre for the launch of Refugee Week in London on 19 June as part of their world famous Meltdown festival – curated by Guy Garvey. Under the heading of Refugees Welcome\, there will be an entire day of FREE activity at Southbank Centre involving Refugee Week partners. \nBeginning at 1pm with Refugees Welcome\, musicians\, poets\, artists and dancers will pop ­up across the site\, and the marketplace will host activities and craft workshops. Enjoy readings from Kayo Chingonyi\, the Refugee Tales Project and Bards Without Borders\, performance We Are Not Birds by Paper Project and meet with organisations including: Women for Refugee Women\, the Refugee Council\, UNHCR\, Amnesty International\, Migrant Help\, IOM\, Student Action for Refugees\, Red Cross\, the Migrant Offshore Aid Station and others. \n2.30-3.30pm Songs to Welcome  \n A big sing event for singers of all ages and abilities. Learn songs of welcome and share your voice in support of refugees and migrants.  \n3.30-7.00pm Music Live: Refugees Welcome  \n Our poet in residence Kayo Chingonyi will host an afternoon of performances featuring Zee Guveya & the Heritage Survival Band\, Rafiki Jazz\, Reem Kelani and Bruno Heinen. \n7.30-10.00pm Free Concert curated by Guy Garvey \nWith acts chosen by Guy Garvey and featuring the Southbank Sinfonia. Full lineup to be announced in the next few days. \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/refugee-week-launch-at-southbank-centre/
CATEGORIES:Multi-Art Form
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Southbank.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160614T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160615T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160607T190145Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145504Z
UID:10000139-1465862400-1465948800@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Migration Lab: Art/Human Rights/Refugees
DESCRIPTION:Venue: The Octagonal Exhibition Space\, South William Street\, Dublin 2 \nMigration Lab Partners: Counterpoints Arts\, Fire Station Artists’ Studios\, Immigrant Council of Ireland and Irish Film Institute. \n  \nSupported by the Community Foundation of Ireland\, British Council\, Creative Europe Desk Ireland – Culture Office and Arts Council of Ireland. \n  \nArtists communicate what is often difficult to put into words\, saying with clarity and directness through imagery or making something that shows urgency and purpose. It is these qualities that Artists can bring to bear on one of the biggest crises of our times\, as a catalyst for action and for assertion of human rights. \n  \nThis Call to Action for Artists and for Civil Society lies at the heart of this gathering in Dublin\, standing in solidarity with Refugee week UK and beyond. \n  \nBooking and RSVP: artadmin@firestation.ie \n  \nFull programme \n  \nFor further information: hello@counterpoints.org.uk / artadmin@firestation.ie
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/migration-lab-arthuman-rightsrefugees/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160611T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160611T160000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160607T191130Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145504Z
UID:10000140-1465650000-1465660800@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Learning Lab: Making Human Rights Across Borders
DESCRIPTION:  \nImage: This man in…Calais used my battered old Hasselblad to turn the tables; don’t think he took the shot. Jillian Edelstein \nMaking Human Rights across Borders: A Counterpoints Arts’ Learning Lab with the Migration Museum Project and ‘the drawing shed’ \nVenue: Palmer Room\, Hoxton Hall\, 130 Hoxton St.\, N1 6SH \nLearning Lab will explore the politics and consequences of curating\, representing and working at Calais refugee camp and other border crossings with communities of displacement. \nWhat does it mean to work in a precarious landscape where people’s identities are vulnerable to state surveillance and surrounding civic aggression? Who has the rights of authorship over the representation of people who live without the full exercise of political and civic rights? Whose ‘story’ is being framed\, mediated and communicated? For whom and to what end? What are the critical\, ethical and methodological challenges for individuals and organisations working in these spaces across the arts\, activism and advocacy? \nThe aim of Learning Lab is to share methodologies\, experiences and practices\, to bring a group of interdisciplinary and committed arts and other practitioners to reflect and learn together. Projects will include (among others): Art Refuge UK\, Calais Builds\, Refugee Rights Data Project\, and Altered Landscapes. \nFor more information and to register\, please contact: \nAnnaick@counterpoints.org.uk
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/learning-lab-making-human-rights-across-borders/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/Calais-Hblad-6658.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160602T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160602T180000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160413T132837Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145505Z
UID:10000126-1464890400-1464890400@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week Preview: Fire at Sea (Fuocoammare)
DESCRIPTION:In collaboration with BFI\, Counterpoints Arts presents a Refugee Week Preview of Fire at Sea. Directed by Gianfranco Rosi\, Fire at Sea is a powerful and beautifully-shot documentary film focusing on the experiences of Lampedusans as they struggle to deal with the thousands of North African and Middle Eastern refugees arriving daily to the island. \nThe film won the Golden Bear at the 2016 Berlin Film Festival and marks a new wave in documentary film-making that directly engages with the refugee crisis and its victims\, many of whom have perished in the Mediterranean sea. \nThis documentary follows the life of 12-year-old Samuele\, a local boy whose life is entrenched in traditional island culture. It thoughtfully examines to what extent the daily lives of Lampedusans are affected by the arrival of refugees\, using the perspective of the island doctor to serve as a bridge between each side. \n‘Rosi contrasts the tough but essentially content\, settled conditions of the Lampedusans with the terrifying uncertainty experienced by the incomers.’ \n– From the Guardian review of Fire at Sea by Andrew Pulver. \nFire at Sea is a delicate testimony to the struggle of refugees and will provide an important contextualisation of the current refugee crisis ahead of Refugee Week (20th-26th June 2016) as one of many events organised throughout June. \nThe screening will be followed by a panel discussion (guests to be confirmed). Tickets available on the BFI website. \nWatch the film’s trailer here.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/refugee-week-preview-fire-at-sea-fuccoammare-2/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Fuocoammare1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20160504
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20160505
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160420T113804Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145505Z
UID:10000129-1462320000-1462406399@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Screen Stories of Conflict\, Migration and Place
DESCRIPTION:Screen Stories of Conflict\, Migration and Place was part of the Platforma North West Hub Learning Lab\, delivered by Community Arts North West (CAN) in partnership with Counterpoints Arts and Highlight Arts under the Moving Worlds Film Programme. \nVenue: HOME\,  2 Tony Wilson Place First Street Manchester M15 4FN \nDate: 4 May 2016 \nThis daylong event focused on the changing nature of digital storytelling and film production in the context of the Syrian civil war and other places of conflict. What motivates screenwriters\, filmmakers and producers to engage in creative storytelling in the middle of a violent conflict? Or when experiencing and/or witnessing dramatic human displacement? What are the new methods of capturing and re-imagining stories of everyday life for people and places undergoing transition because of conflict? \n2. Morning Workshop – Filming Syria \nThe civil war and scale of human displacement in Syria is one of the most YouTubed of conflicts. Despite Syria being a media-controlled territory before 2011\, filmmakers\, creative storytellers\, journalists and eyewitnesses have against great odds produced and communicated extraordinarily moving screen stories. \nThis workshop focused on films made in or about Syria\, exploring the notion of ‘home’ through the lens of first and second-time filmmakers. We looked at films produced within and against the backdrop of the civil war\, discussing recurring themes and film language and approach. Clips were screened  from films using low-budget mobile technologies that are reaching local and global audiences through social media\, including entries from Syria’s Mobile Phone Film Festival\, 2015. \n2. Workshop themes include: Place-making and ‘home’ though film; film in conflict; Syria captured through a particular lens; creating a vision of a place through film; displacement; violence versus non-violence. \nWorkshop questions include: What kind of storytelling matters? What equipment matters? What different form or process does it take to make these films; Are they reactions to a situation or the emergence of a new aesthetic? \n2. Afternoon Workshop – Widening the Lens \nIn the afternoon\, we explored how the morning’s workshop themes related to everyday and local experiences of migration\, displacement\, conflict and home. \nThis was a practical workshop in which participants developed a short story idea from the first person perspective. Participants developed an understanding of the digital storytelling process. They explored the power of self-representation; digital storytelling as a self-advocacy tool; models and tools for constructing and telling a digital story; and the ‘how to’ and ethics of digital distribution. \n3. Final session \nIn the final session\, we explored together the future needs of the Platforma North West Hub in the context of building sustainable platforms for digital advocacy\, storytelling\, and arts for social change. \nEvening Screening \nQueens of Syria Director\, Yasmin Fedda | Jordan/UAE/UK | 2014 | 70 mins \nWhilst the conflict in Syria continues and thousands have been displaced\, Yasmin Fedda’s powerful documentary ‘Queens of Syria’ follows a group of women living in exile in Jordan as they prepare to perform Euripides’ tragedy\, The Trojan Woman. Though separated by two thousand years and more\, the uprooting\, the enslavement and the bereavement suffered by the fictional queens of Ancient Greece mirrors the modern suffering of these ordinary\, yet extraordinary women. \nPost-screening Q/A  \nAine O’Brien\, Co-Director Counterpoints Arts in conversation with Yasmin Fedda\, Director of Queens of Syria \nFor more information\, please contact: \nAt CAN\, Manchester: sara@can.uk.com; katherine@can.uk.com \nAt Counterpoints Arts\, London: aine@counterpoints.org.uk
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/screen-stories-of-conflict-migration-and-place-2/
CATEGORIES:Learning
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160426T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160426T183000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160420T210600Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145505Z
UID:10000132-1461686400-1461695400@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Sampling as a Kind of Writing – An Interactive Lab with Kayo Chingonyi
DESCRIPTION:kayoVenue: RichMix\, 35-47 Bethnal Green Rd\, London E1 6LA \nDate: 26th April 2016 \nTime: 4- 6:30 pm \nPlease join us for a Learning Lab with Kayo Chingonyi\, where we’ll explore\, through discussion and practice\, the idea of ‘sampling’ and writing as acts of migration. In particular\, we’ll look at the potential for ‘creative revision and activism’ when artists play with the texture of a word\, sound\, or image. \nDuring the Learning Lab we’ll also look at various kinds of disembodied language (content that has no explicit author). We’ll work with ‘found’ text and content to make new writing. \nAhead of the Lab\, we’d like you to record (in audio or visual format) some examples of words being used in this way. Some examples: leaflets\, signs\, train station announcements\, etc. \nPlease send one image or one short audio recording (10 – 15 seconds or so) tok.chingonyi@gmail.com by midnight April 24th with ‘sampling as a kind of writing’ in the subject field. Preferred format for audio is wav\, mp3\, or aac. \nLinks for further reading/inspiration:\n\nhttp://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2011/01/mess/ (an article by poet and performer\, Douglas Kearney) \nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jDGO6BrYNXQ&list=PLUjRLqgT2VpVK9Y5zhaOkF9J85XwTH9vb (A playlist exploring the role of sampling in Hip Hop and in particular the oeuvre of James ‘J Dilla’ Yancey). \nhttps://vimeo.com/112424063 (A collaborative performance incorporating poetry and sampling) \nhttp://www.tate.org.uk/context-comment/audio/speaking-out-spoken-word-artistic-practice-audio-recordings (Audio from a symposium held at the Tate re: Cathy Lane’s book Playing With Words – which collects writing from a range of artists who use the spoken word in their practice). \nKayo Chingonyi is a fellow of the Complete Works and the author of two poetry pamphlets\, Some Bright Elegance (Salt\, 2012) and The Colour of James Brown’s Scream (Akashic\, 2016). He has held residencies with First Story\, the ICA\, and Nuffield Council on Bioethics and is currently Poet-in-Residence for Counterpoints Arts and Royal Holloway\, University of London. \nTo register and for more information\, contact Tom Green: tom@counterpoints.org.uk \nThe Lab is part of Kayo’s ongoing residency\, a collaboration between Humanities and Arts Research Centre\, Royal Holloway and Counterpoints Arts: https://artsmigration.wordpress.com/ \nA related event featuring Kayo will take place at RichMix that evening from 7.30pm: Literature and Activism – bringing refugee experiences ‘home’. The event is presented in association with Pereine Press in the run-up to the publication of breach\, by Olumide Popoola and Annie Holmes \nDetails and tickets: https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/literature-and-activism-bringing-refugee-experiences-home/ \n 
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/sampling-as-a-kind-of-writing-an-interactive-lab-with-kayo-chingonyi/
CATEGORIES:Learning
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/kayo.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160426T073000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160426T093000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160111T154031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145505Z
UID:10000105-1461655800-1461663000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Literature and Activism - bringing refugee experiences 'home'
DESCRIPTION:The refugee ‘crisis’ has dominated the media in recent months and public engagement with the issue has never been higher.  Across TV\, radio\, newspapers and social media\, all aspects of the crisis are exhaustively discussed. So what role if any does literature play in helping to deepen our understanding? \nThe event will launch a highly anticipated new book\, breach\, by Olumide Popoola and Annie Holmes\, who were commissioned to engage with and bring back “home” the experiences of refugees and migrants in Calais. Coming from his unique poetical perspective will be the multi-talented spoken word artist\, Kayo Chingonyi\, who is currently doing a residency around the issues of migration. \nHosted by an author and experienced immigration expert\, Tim Finch\, the event will question whether literature can really move us to act and engage with experiences of refugees. And what can writers add to the efforts of their journalist colleagues. \nDrinks will be available from the bar. Kayo will also play a few tunes from his eclectic record collection. \nFeatured writers include: \nOlumide Popoola is a Nigerian German writer. Her publications include poetry and essays\, the novella this is not about sadness (2010) and the play Also by Mail (2013). She lives in London\, where she lectures in Creative Writing at Goldsmiths.  www.olumidepopoola.com \nAnnie Holmes is a Zimbabwean writer and film-maker\, now London-based. In addition to publishing short fiction\, she has co-edited two volumes of oral narratives in the McSweeney’s Voice of Witness series\, Underground America and Hope Deferred. Twitter @AnnieHolmesLit \nKayo Chingony is the author of two poetry books\, Some Bright Elegance (Salt\, 2012) and The Colour of James Brown’s Scream (Akashic\, 2016). He has been widely published in journals and anthologies and has delivered lectures and readings at venues and events around the world. He was awarded a Geoffrey Dearmer Prize and is currently a resident artist of Royal Holloway\, University of London and Counterpoints Arts\, engaging with issues around migration and activism. \nTim Finch\, author of The House Of Journalists (“A savagely funny broadside aimed at the industry of suffering” Metro “[An] effective mixture of often-light comedy and often-brutal reportage from the front line against tyranny” Daily Mail) and former Director of Communications at the Refugee Council. \nManveen Rana is a journalist for The World At One on BBC Radio 4. Last year\, she spent a few months following one Syrian family on their arduous journey from Turkey to their final home in Germany. Along the way they met people smugglers\, walked through forests at night\, got caught up in riots at the Macedonian border and spent nights sleeping on Serbian streets. Her reports of the family’s journey and their subsequent experiences of trying to forge a future in Frankfurt have been collated in a successful podcast series and a documentary. “A New Life In Europe: The Dhnie Family” has been shortlisted for both the Peabody Awards and the One World Media Awards. \nOrganised by Counterpoints Arts in collaboration with Peirene Press and Royal Holloway\, University of London \nTickets are £6 and can be booked on the Richmix website.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/literature-and-activism-bringing-refugee-experiences-home/
CATEGORIES:Learning
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/CounterArts_AKALA__©Marcia_Chandra_0052.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160423T200000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160423T200000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160223T130856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145505Z
UID:10000110-1461441600-1461441600@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Bards Without Borders: Shakespeare 400
DESCRIPTION:Richmix\, 35-47 Bethnal Green Rd\, London E1 6LA \n8pm\, £10/£8 \nGolden lads and girls all must\,\n As chimney-sweepers\, come to dust. \nShakespeare has been dead for a while\, and on the anniversary of his death Bards Without Borders (BWB) held an international wake\, all be it 400 years late! Imagine a multilingual carnivalesque funeral which blended the traditions of ten different countries and involved a few of the Bard’s major and minor characters. \nBWB\, the London-based collective of poets and musicians from refugee and migrant backgrounds hosted an evening of new poetry\, live music\, puppetry and revelry rounded off with a DJ set and the chance to toast the original Bard and make sure he was truly spinning (and dancing) in his coffin. Bards Without Borders broke all borders be they national\, spiritual or literal. The night set the record straight on how Shakespeare shines a light on our very own experiences of journey\, loss\, joy and displacement. \nStirringly good\, heartfelt and skilled music for the ears tonight from #Bardswithoutborders (@DebsNewbold) \nJust when I needed a reminder that there is so much loveliness in the world (@skanoli) \nIf this were played upon a stage now\, I could condemn it as an improbable fiction. (William Shakespeare) \nFollowing workshops led by poet/facilitator Laila Sumpton and theatre director Arne Pohlmeier (Two Gents Productions) and sell out debut performances at Hackney Showrooms\, Arcola Theatre and the Poetry Café this Rich Mix performance marked the exact date\, 400 years ago\, of Shakespeare’s passing. \nPresented in association with Platforma Arts & Refugees Network and supported by Arts Council England\, Global Shakespeare and Spread The Word. \nBWB poets: Freddy Macha\, Tolu Agbelusi\, Shamim Azad\, Alia’ Kuwalit\, Belinda Zhawi\, Edin Suljic\, Lloyd Benjamin\, Haroon O Mahdi\, Barbara Lopez\, Fatima Diriye & Hamdi Khalif. \nhttp://www.richmix.org.uk/events/spoken-word/bards-without-borders
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/bards-without-borders-shakespeare-400/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/BWB┬йBrionyCampbell_030.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160419T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160419T170000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160420T105512Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145505Z
UID:10000128-1461074400-1461085200@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Everyday On Canalside Community Event\, Saturday\, April 9\, 2016
DESCRIPTION:Counterpoints Arts and the Canalside Residents’ Association co-hosted a ‘Learning Lab’ at the Whitmore Community Centre \nThere was lots of hands-on creative activities\, including: \n* Radio podcasting with Social Broadcasts\n* A photographer  taking portraits for Humans of Canalside \n* Your histories\, ideas\, stories and knowledgewere shared through maps and posters \n* The Canalside gardening group met and talked about summer activities \nThere was also sharing of ideas and planning for the BIG Canalside Street Party in July! \nThoughts on activities\, music\, performance\, food\, art was all shared. Residents and local businesses met and shared with each other the diverse cultures and skills that exist in Canalside. \nMore info: Email info@everydayoncanalside.org or contact the Canalside Residents’ Association
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/everyday-on-canalside-community-event-saturday-april-9-2016-2/
CATEGORIES:Learning
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/canalside-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160401T103000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160401T133000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160223T125709Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145505Z
UID:10000109-1459506600-1459517400@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Beyond Borders
DESCRIPTION:Young Vic\, 66 The Cut\, Waterloo\, London SE1 8LZ \nCounterpoints Arts/Platforma and the Young Vic invite you to a free event looking at theatre and performance with and by refugees and migrants. \nA chance to hear about the Young Vic’s work with refugees and and asylum seekers and their future plans. \nAnd an opportunity to discuss themes including:\n– How participatory work can link to main house production\n– Connections between work in the UK and overseas\n– Pathways for artists from refugee and migrant backgrounds\, from their first engagement to career development. \nThe half-day session builds on an event held by Counterpoints Arts/Platforma and The Tricycle theatre July 2015\, bringing together organisations\, artists and others working in this field. \nTo reserve a place email Sharon Kanolik: sharonkanolik@youngvic.org\nIf you have any questions please contact Tom Green: tom@counterpoints.org.uk
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/beyond-borders/
CATEGORIES:Learning
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/young-vic1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160226T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160226T170000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160222T160756Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145506Z
UID:10000108-1456495200-1456506000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week Conference EXTRA
DESCRIPTION:Image by Ambrose Musiyiwa \nDue to unprecedented demand for the Refugee Week Conference\, we are holding a special extra event on 26 February 3pm-5pm at Rich Mix in Bethnal Green\, London. \nThe mini-conference will be an opportunity to enjoy some of the highlights of the Refugee Week conference\, witness inspiring performances and speakers\, and share ideas with organisers and supporters from across the country in preparation for Refugee Week 2016. \nClick here for details and to book your free place.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/refugee-week-conference-extra/
CATEGORIES:Learning
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160223T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160223T220000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160208T182755Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145506Z
UID:10000106-1456254000-1456264800@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Migration Lab @ Design Museum
DESCRIPTION:Going behind the headlines\, Migration Lab focuses on the ‘on-the-ground reality’ of forced migration\, inviting you to put yourself in the shoes of those who are creating solutions by making\, doing\, sharing\, and debating. \n\nWhat Can you Expect: \nThe Design Museum and the Learning Lab at Counterpoints Arts are collaborating to create the Migration Lab – an evening exploring the potential of design to build collective futures in the face of the daunting physical\, social\, and cultural challenges triggered by global population displacement. \nParticipate in a ‘bodging’ session led by artist and designer\, Jasleen Kaur. Using everyday and found materials and low-tech processes\, find out how to repair and make objects ‘built for how we do things\, not for how we should be doing them’. \nMeet some of the volunteers who have been working for StartupAid’s ‘Marhacar.com’ project\, distributing first aid items on the island of Lesbos. The ‘operations zone’ reconstructs Lesbos and its different camps and warehouses in miniature across the museum\, so that you can take part in simulated operations\, organising missions which use coordinated design and collaborative action to help as many people as possible. \nWatch a screening of The Architect by Muajhid Attar\, 2016. The Architect was supported by the Syria Mobile Film Festival training workshop. It explores a young boy’s dream to re-design and re-build his beloved city of Aleppo. \nEngage in a discussion led by Engin Isin\, author of Citizens Without Frontiers\, on diverse practices of mobile creativity across borders and the urgent realities of new modes of global citizenship. Engin will be in conversation with Joanna Theodorou\, Ismail Einashe\, Shahed Saleem\, Yasmin Fedda\, Paula Schwarz and Jasleen Kaur. \nMore about Speakers \n\n\n\n\nEngin Isin is Professor of Politics at The Open University\, UK. He is Chief Editor of the journal Citizenship Studies and author and editor of fifteen books in the field\, including Being Political and Citizens Without Frontiers. Engin is particularly interested in the history and practice of population exchange and the role of creative arts and design in recognizing the ingenuity of new modes of global citizenship. \nJasleen Kaur  is a Scottish-Indian artist based in London. Jasleen engages with the malleability of cultures and how social histories are embedded in materials and objects. Jasleen is a visiting lecturer at The Royal College of Art\, exhibits worldwide and was awarded the Jerwood Makers Open in 2015. Her work is in the permanent collection of the Royal College of Art and the UK Crafts Council. \n\n\n\nStartupAid was launched at the Global Economic Forum in January 2016 and is the initiative of social entrepreneur\, Paula Schwarz\, and her team. StartupAid connects humanitarian and creative entrepreneurs\, designers and NGOs through the ‘Harbor’ Internet – where users exchange knowledge and develop tools to solve problems together that refugees\, volunteers and NGOs face on a daily basis. \nPaula Schwarz – StartupAid studied Investment Management in Stanford and at ALBA University in Greece. She mentored for the Venture Bus in East Africa and founded the first carpooling community in Kenya (Jambocar.co.ke). She is a trained Investment Manager and worked for the private fund of Philipp Schindler (Google Global Head of Operations) in the Middle East. \nJoanna Theodorou – StartupAid specializes in Cultural Diplomacy and founded the NGO ‘Reload Greece’ in 2012. She is project leader for the social entrepreneurship programme of the municipality of Athens and is a grant officer for the Stavros Niarchos Foundation. \nIsmail Einashe is a freelance journalist\, researcher and associate editor at Warscapes. He writes for Prospect\, Index on Censorship\, African Arguments and Welt-Sichten\, and has published in The Guardian\, Internazionale and The Mail & Guardian. Ismail presented on BBC radio on Four Thought\, The Cultural Frontline and From our own Correspondent’. Born in Somalia\, Ismail lived in Ethiopia before arriving in Britain as a child refugee. \nShahed Saleem teaches at the University of Westminster School of Architecture\, and is senior researcher on the Bartlett’s Survey of London project. Shahed’s The British Mosque is a social and architectural history and the first comprehensive account of Muslim architecture in Britain. Shahed’s work engages with processes of making community and religious spaces\, negotiating discourses of planning\, migration and visual cultures. \nYasmin Fedda is an award-winning documentary filmmaker whose films have focused on a range of themes from Edinburgh bakeries to Syrian monasteries. Her films have been BAFTA-nominated and screened at numerous international festivals. Films include Breadmakers (2007)\, A Tale of Two Syrias (2012)\, Queens of Syria (2014). Fedda has also made broadcast films for the BBC and Al Jazeera. \n\nTickets include entry to the Designs of the Year and Designers in Residence exhibition before the activities begin. Doors will open at 18:15. Events begin at 19:00 and last until about 22:00. \nAdults £12 / Students £9 / Members £6 \nTo find out about other similar learning platforms\, visit our Learning Lab project site. \n\n 
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/migration-lab-design-museum/
CATEGORIES:Learning
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160217T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160217T180000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160212T173936Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145506Z
UID:10000107-1455703200-1455732000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Unexpected: Continuing Narratives of Identity and Migration
DESCRIPTION:Ben Uri Gallery\, 108A Boundary Road\, London NW8 \nIn collaboration with Ben Uri\, this new exhibition juxtaposes works from Ben Uri’s permanent collection by artists including Frank Auerbach and Eva Frankfurther with invited artists offering a contemporary response across a range of practices and media including Behjat Omer Abdulla\, Güler Ates\, James Russell Cant\, Ana Cvorovic\, Juan Delgado\, Tam Joseph\, Joyce Kalema\, Jasleen Kaur\, Fowokan George Kelly\, Jessica Marlowe\, Edwin Mingard\, Eugene Palmer\, Zory Shahrokhi\, Salah Ud Din and other. \nBoth individually and collectively\, the featured works touch on themes of journeys\, displacement\, loss\, memory and identity\, evoking powerful and sometimes unexpected juxtapositions and responses. \nFull details: http://benuri.org.uk/exhibitions/unexpected \nImage: Divided To The Ocean\, by James Cant
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/unexpected-continuing-narratives-of-identity-and-migration/
CATEGORIES:Visual Arts
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/1-Keith-Ben-Uri-e1455299274305.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160215T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160215T170000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160108T175102Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145506Z
UID:10000103-1455534000-1455555600@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Refugee Week Conference 2016
DESCRIPTION:The one and only Refugee Week conference\, featuring inspirational speakers\, networking opportunities and workshops to help organisers and supporters across the country prepare for Refugee Week 2016. \nThe conference is free (lunch provided) and open to all – newcomers especially welcome. \nFull programme to follow at www.refugeeweek.org.uk \nWe have a small travel budget for people from refugee and asylum seeker groups and communities who would like to attend the conference. These funds are allocated on a first come first served basis\, to apply please contact Refugee Week UK Coordinator Emily Churchill Zaraa on emily@counterpoints.org.uk or 0207 012 1761.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/refugee-week-conference-2016/
CATEGORIES:Learning
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160130T173000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160130T183000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160108T121551Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145506Z
UID:10000100-1454175000-1454178600@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Bards Without Borders at Arcola Theatre
DESCRIPTION:5.30pm\, Arcola Theatre\, 24 Ashwin Street\, London E8 3DL \nPlatforma presents a free performance by Bards Without Borders in support of Nine Lives at Arcola Theatre. \nBards Without Borders (BWB) brings together poets from refugee and migrant backgrounds to create new writing and performance in response to the work of William Shakespeare. Their first gig last month was sold out\, and they are now working on new material for performances throughout 2016 – the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death. \nBWB is led by poet/facilitator Laila Sumpton and theatre director Arne Pohlmeier (Two Gents) with support from Platforma / Counterpoints Arts. BWB poets: Freddy Macha\, Tolu Agbelusi\, Shamim Azad\, Alia’ Kuwalit\, Belinda Zhawi\, Edin Suljic\, Lloyd Benjamin\, Haroon O Mahdi\, Barbara Lopez\, Fatima Diriye\, Hamdi Khalif. \n \nNine Lives is a gripping new play from Zodwa Nyoni (Channel 4 Writer in Residence 2014) threading together humour and humanity to tell the real personal story behind asylum headlines. Former West Yorkshire Playhouse Associate Director Alex Chisholm directs Lladel Bryant\, UK Young Citizen of the Year in 2006 and the co-founder of Chicken Shop Shakespeare. \nFull details about Nine Lives\, and free booking for Bards Without Borders: https://www.arcolatheatre.com/production/arcola/nine-lives \nImage by Briony Campbell
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/bards-without-borders-at-arcola-theatre/
CATEGORIES:Literature & Spoken Word,Platforma
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/bwb-1024x681.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160129T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160129T203000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160111T153737Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145506Z
UID:10000104-1454090400-1454099400@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:7 Days in Syria - screening and a Q/A
DESCRIPTION:You are invited to a special screening of the feature documentary 7 Days in Syria\, 29th January 6:00-8:30 pm\, Institute of Historical Research\, Wolfson Room Senate House\, Malet Street\, London WC1E 7HU. The screening will be followed by a Q/A with award winning war correspondent and Newsweek Middle-East editor\, Janine di Giovanni\, who also produced the film. \n‘7 Days’ gives a window into the lives of families struggling to survive the Syria Conflict. Their courage and resilience shines through in impossible circumstances’ – Angelina Jolie Pitt \nFilm details here: http://www.7daysinsyriafilm.com\n\n‘
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/7-days-in-syria/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Syria-Movie-Poster1920px_RHUL5-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20160128T160000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20160128T190000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20151218T121017Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145506Z
UID:10000004-1453996800-1454007600@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:‘Eastern Europeans for Dummies’: Immigrant audience development
DESCRIPTION:Image: Patricia Oliveira \nVenue: Romanian Cultural Centre in London\, Manchester Square\, 18 Fitzhardinge Street\, London W1H 6EQ \nDate: 28th January 2016 \nTime: 4:00 – 7:00 pm \nJoin us for a Learning Lab focusing on the unique interdisciplinary methodologies and creative thinking behind the performance duo There There\,  as they embark on audience development for a wider touring of their Arts Council England funded\, Eastern Europeans for Dummies. \nPart ‘performance taster’ by There There\, part a ‘think and do’ roundtable\, Learning Lab will bring together a mix of people\, practices and sectors across the arts\, advocacy\, activism and academia to connect with and feed into the next stage of Eastern Europeans for Dummies at both research and implementation level. \nFor more details\, see Learning Lab Editions  \n 
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/eastern-europeans-for-dummies-immigrant-audience-development-work-of-there-there/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/lab-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160123T173000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160123T183000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160108T122948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145506Z
UID:10000101-1453570200-1453573800@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Mbira Kuwirirana at Arcola Theatre
DESCRIPTION:Arcola Theatre\, 24 Ashwin Street\, London E8 3DL \nPlatforma presents a free performance by the brilliant Mbira Kuwirirana in support of Nine Lives at Arcola Theatre. \nMbira Kuwirirana is a trio of mbira players based in the UK. The name of the group can be loosely translated to “mbira is friendship”. The trio is composed of Fungai Gahadzikwa\, Doug Langley and Takudzwa Mukiwa who met because of mbira and have maintained a close friendship since. \nThe trio has been playing together for over 5 years and have played at events including the British Forum for Ethnomusicology Annual Conference in 2010\, Mwalimu Express\, Music For Liberia concerts and many more including at venues such as the Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford. \nNine Lives is a gripping new play from Zodwa Nyoni (Channel 4 Writer in Residence 2014) threading together humour and humanity to tell the real personal story behind asylum headlines. Former West Yorkshire Playhouse Associate Director Alex Chisholm directs Lladel Bryant\, UK Young Citizen of the Year in 2006 and the co-founder of Chicken Shop Shakespeare. \nFull details about Nine Lives\, and free booking for Mbira Kuwirirana: https://www.arcolatheatre.com/production/arcola/nine-lives
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/mbira-kuwirirana-at-arcola-theatre/
CATEGORIES:Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/mbira.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20160121T000000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20160121T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160420T114301Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145506Z
UID:10000005-1453334400-1453334400@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:‘Everyday on Canalside’ Year 2: Co-Production and Making Together
DESCRIPTION:Image: Ian Buswell \nVenue: Whitmore Community Centre\, 2-4 Phillipp St\, London N1 5NU \nTime: 6:30 – 8:30 pm \nDate: 21 January 2016 \nA Learning Lab at the Whitmore Community Centre which focused on the second year of ‘Everyday on Canalside’ – a participation and community-arts programme located on the Canalside Estate in Hoxton. \nLearning Lab facilitated the Community Residents Association (CRA) together with residents on Canalside\,  the ‘Everyday on Canalside’ team in addition to partners at Metropolitan Housing in their planning for the programme’s second year. \nRunning from 6:30 -8:30 pm\, we looked back at the ‘Everyday on Canalside’ project and made plans for 2016. \nLearning Lab was followed by a social get-together of residents and invited guests to mark the New Year and what promised to be an exciting programme shaped by collaboration and creative action. \nFor more details re Learning Lab please email: dijana@counterpoints.org.uk
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/everyday-on-canalside-year-2-co-production-and-making-together/
CATEGORIES:Learning
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/year-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160119T183000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160119T203000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20151215T173748Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145506Z
UID:10000099-1453228200-1453235400@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Poetry and Activism – with Kayo Chingonyi
DESCRIPTION:Free\, booking required \nToynbee Studios\, 28 Commercial St\, London E1 6AB \nHumanities and Arts Research Centre (Royal Holloway\, University of London) and Counterpoints Arts invite you to the the launch of a new creative collaboration around a residency for poet Kayo Chingonyi. \nThe arts and humanities have a vital role to play in shaping our responses to the current crisis of migration at Europe’s borders. We look to the arts not only for an understanding of who we are and how we relate to others\, but also the kind of society we want to live in. A public conversation about these ideas has never been more urgently needed. \nThis new partnership between and Counterpoints Arts and Humanities and Arts Research Centre\, Royal Holloway will provide the opportunity for a collaborative approach to work on current forced migration from within the arts and humanities\, centred on a residency for the poet Kayo Chingonyi. \nDrawing on research and expertise from across the two organisations and their wider networks\, the residency will provide opportunities for the development of multi-disciplinary responses to forced migration through reflective forms of creative-critical practice. A central focus will be on responses to the language of forced migration\, in particular on unpacking how certain terms and concepts –‘welcome’\, ‘hospitality’\, ‘crisis’– become freighted in public discourse. \nAt this launch event we will present the outline of the residency and invite you to respond to some of the central questions and concerns and suggest areas for research. \nThe event will also feature performances by poets and activists Saradh Soobrayen and Hamdi Khalif. \nTo reserve a free place for the launch event please email: tom@counterpoints.org.uk \nKayo Chingonyi is the author of two books of poetry\, Some Bright Elegance (Salt\, 2012) and The Colour of James Brown’s Scream (Akashic\, 2016) and is currently working on a third. His work has been published in a range of anthologies and literary magazines and he has delivered readings and talks around the world. He is a writer-in-residence at George Green’s School\, a commissioned poet for the Nuffield Council on Bioethics\, and Associate Poet at the ICA from Autumn 2015 to Spring 2016.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/poetry-and-activism-with-kayo-chingonyi/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/kayo2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160116T173000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160116T183000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160108T123746Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145507Z
UID:10000102-1452965400-1452969000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Platforma Jam at the Arcola
DESCRIPTION:Arcola Theatre\, 24 Ashwin Street\, London E8 3DL \nPlatforma presents a free performance in support of Nine Lives at Arcola Theatre. \nFive friends from four continents bring you songs\, sounds and spoken word from Ethiopia\, Palestine and beyond. Featuring Haymanot Tesfa\, Leila Seguin\, Duncan Mortimer\, EbsilBaz\, Emily Zaraa. \nNine Lives is a gripping new play from Zodwa Nyoni (Channel 4 Writer in Residence 2014) threading together humour and humanity to tell the real personal story behind asylum headlines. Former West Yorkshire Playhouse Associate Director Alex Chisholm directs Lladel Bryant\, UK Young Citizen of the Year in 2006 and the co-founder of Chicken Shop Shakespeare. \nFull details about Nine Lives\, and free booking for Platforma Jam: https://www.arcolatheatre.com/production/arcola/nine-lives
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/platforma-jam-at-the-arcola/
CATEGORIES:Music,Platforma
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Platforma-Jam.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20151203T193000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20151203T220000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20151127T162202Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145507Z
UID:10000098-1449171000-1449180000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Bards Without Borders at Hackney Showroom
DESCRIPTION:Bards Without Borders present a poetry & music scratch night\, bringing together London poets from refugee and migrant backgrounds and contributions from live music & spoken word experts Tongue Fu.* \nFollowing three workshops led by poet/facilitator Laila Sumpton (Spread the Word\, Keats House\, Exiled Writers Ink) and theatre director Arne Pohlmeier (Two Gents Productions) focusing on The Comedy Of Errors\, this will be the Bards Without Borders’ premiere performance. \nPresented in association with Platforma arts & refugees network. \nSupported by Arts Council England and Spread The Word. \nBWB poets: Freddy Macha\, Tolu Agbelusi\, Shamim Azad\, Alia’ Kuwalit\, Belinda Zhawi\, Edin Suljic\, Lloyd Benjamin\, Haroon O Mahdi\, Barbara Lopez\, Fatima Diriye & Hamed Khalif. \n* Tongue Fu is “Poetry\, but not as you know it…amazing” (The Guardian). Created and hosted by poet Chris Redmond (Scroobius Pip’s Beatdown XFM; Pick Of The Week – BBC R4)\, it is one of the UK’s liveliest and largest spoken word shows: a riotous experiment in live literature\, music and improvisation featuring the genre hopping Tongue Fu Band (Nostalgia 77\, Jamie Cullum\, Beardyman)
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/bards-without-borders-at-hackney-showroom/
CATEGORIES:Music
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/bwb-1024x681-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20151105T113000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20151105T130000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20160420T115008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145507Z
UID:10000130-1446723000-1446728400@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Economics\, People and Place: policy versus participatory arts practice in the context of migration.
DESCRIPTION:Image: Everyday on Canalside\, Marcia Chandra\, 2015 \nDate: Thursday 5 November – 2015 \nTime: 11:40 – 1:00 pm \nLocation: De Montfort University\, Leicester LE1 9BH \nThe 2015 Budget painted a very partisan picture of the parsing of the public purse with harsh everyday effects for diverse communities of place. Can we credibly claim to engage in socially engaged and community-led arts projects without also grappling with the language of economic policy? Do we shy away from such discourse and debate at our peril? \nCan we re-frame economic relations with values of empathy\, care and humanity? What might this do to participatory arts practice? \nAt this Counterpoints Arts’ Learning Lab Round Table at the Platforma Festival 2015\, we explored the critical space between economic policy\, inequality\, participatory arts and communities of place.
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/economics-people-and-place-policy-versus-participatory-arts-practice-in-the-context-of-migration-2/
CATEGORIES:Learning
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/marcia-ll.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20151105T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20151106T000000
DTSTAMP:20260430T180914
CREATED:20150402T150549Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240709T145507Z
UID:10000068-1446681600-1446768000@counterpoints.org.uk
SUMMARY:Platforma Conference 2015
DESCRIPTION:The Platforma Conference on will take place 5-6 November 2015 in Leicester\, in partnership with De Montfort University and ArtReach as part of the third Platforma Festival. \nA special session for international delegates\, and those based in this country but working in part overseas\, will take place on 4th November. \nThe Platforma arts and refugees network is run by Counterpoints Arts with funding from the Baring Foundation and Arts Council England\, in partnership with organisations across England. \nThe Conference is a chance for artists\, other practitioners and academics to share their experiences and discuss various aspects of work by\, with and about refugees. It covers all art forms and all types of work\, including participatory. \nThe Platforma Festival will run across the first week of November\, with various arts events around Leicester. The programme will be confirmed in summer 2015. \nFull details: www.platforma.org.uk/pf_events/platforma-conference
URL:https://counterpoints.org.uk/event/platforma-conference-2015/
CATEGORIES:Learning
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://counterpoints.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/Platforma-Conference.png
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR