£10,000
Holly Gallagher & creative team in R&D
Listen to the audio version here
What is the opportunity?
ARC is looking to support artists to create new performance-based work in response to one of the provocations below, working with local communities in Stockton.
There are two opportunities to receive £10,000 in cash, along with space, accommodation, marketing, technical, producing and community engagement support.
These opportunities are expected to lead to finished work, with a public performance at the end of the process.
We are looking for ideas that can be delivered before the end of June 2024.
Deadline to apply: 10am, Mon 25 Sep 2023.
What are the provocations?
These two provocations were created by independent creative director Paula Clark through creative conversations with our local communities as part of a project in 2021, which began with the question What’s On Your Mind? (you can read more about the project here).
The project was designed to capture the key areas of interest and concern to our communities. We are using them as guiding principles for our programme to help ensure that ARC’s work is relevant to our local communities.
Artists are asked to select one provocation to base their idea around. They are intended to be starting points for creative ideas, we are not looking for literal interpretations.
#Money
They are taking £20 a week off the people who need it most. That is food out of our children’s mouths. You can buy quite a lot for £20 if you are careful. Now it’s the fuel crisis. Some of us have never had the heating on anyway.
Why is it ok that we live in a society where there is so much money but children go hungry, food banks are normalised and footballers have to fight the government to feed poor school children?
Nobody really knows what it’s like to be properly poor. They say they do; they say they are working class. What does that even mean? I am not even working-class mate. If you really look there is another class that people don’t want to see.
#Climate
I couldn’t care less. It’s God’s will! I do my bit. Did you know the concept of your personal carbon footprint was invented by Shell to pass responsibility onto the individual? I don’t recycle, I’m sorry but what’s the point. If I had all of the money in the world, I would use it to find a way to take all of the plastic out of the ocean. I would move us to another planet so we can start again. It’s evolution simple as that. It’s too late now. The protestors are going too far blocking the M25. The government does nothing. It’s time for action. Would women have gotten the vote if the suffragettes hadn’t blown shit up? How come the kids understand this better than the adults? This is a climate emergency.
What are we trying to achieve?
Over the next three years, ARC is seeking to achieve a shift in our programme to a more community-led/influenced way of working. These opportunities form part of exploring how we might do that, by inviting artists to respond to things that are on the minds of our local communities.
ARC’s artistic policy is to provide creative activity and cultural experiences that are contemporary and relevant. We want to present a creative programme that helps us understand and enjoy the world as it is today and excites us about the future.
Co-design is a key principle of our creative programme. This means we work proactively with artists and communities to develop work that is relevant to and resonates with our local communities. This doesn’t necessarily mean work that is about, or made specifically for Stockton and the Tees Valley, but we present work that our local communities can connect to, and that helps us understand the world we live in.
By communities, we mean communities of place, interest, identity, need and action, and we also think of artists we work with as a ‘community’.
The work we create is for our local communities, but also for communities like ours. They exist all over the country, in areas where there are high proportions of people facing inequalities and barriers to engaging with culture, usually as a result of either their protected characteristics or socio-economic status.
Working with communities
Part of the exploration we want to undertake is around how we can invite local people to be involved in the creation of work that doesn’t necessarily rely on the traditional ‘co-creation’ model. We recognise that not everyone can or wants to work alongside artists as fully participating members of the creative team and are keen to test out other ways of meaningful involvement.
Firstly, we are involving local people in the selection process for these opportunities, which is a form of co-design.
We are looking for artists to consider how local people might contribute to the development of their ideas by:
- sharing skills or stories in the development of the work, in a way that enriches participants’ own lives; this could be a conversation over a cup of tea, or by artists joining existing groups to learn about their skills, work etc
- playing a part in the creation of a work during the development process; this could be through attending a workshop or engagement opportunity, or working with artists to engage other people
- in other new ways that are beneficial for the artist, individuals involved and the creative process
It could be through direct involvement in the creation, playing a proactive role in the development and devising process as well as the final work, working alongside artists in a more traditional co-creation way.
In addition to the £10,000 budget, we have up to £1,000 available to support community participants to take part, which may be in the form of expenses, bursaries, vouchers etc.
What do you get?
- £10,000 budget
- Producing, marketing and community engagement support from ARC
- Technical support for the sharing
- Rehearsal and creation space at ARC
- Accommodation in the ARC House (subject to availability)
The final sharing can take place in any of the spaces at ARC, but we anticipate would be most likely to be in the Theatre or Studio. You can read about the spaces here.
How to apply
Please send us the following information either in writing (maximum three A4 pages) or in a video or audio file (maximum 7 mins) plus up to three images of your work to [email protected]
Please use WeTransfer (which is a free service) if you are sending large files.
Deadline to apply: 10am, Mon 25 Sep 2023
Please tell us:
- Your name and contact details
- Any relevant experience – this can include professional, educational, voluntary, personal and lived experience
- Your idea, and how is connects to one of the provocations
- Suggested timeline for delivery
- Why you want to make this work, and who for
- How you will involve local communities
- Your ambition for the future of this project
- How you will minimise any negative impact on the environment in the making and presentation of your work
The Selection Process
All applications will be read by a panel made up of ARC staff and local people. There are two separate panels for the different provocations:
#Climate Panel
- Rach Butler, Carbon Reduction Coordinator, Stockton Borough Council
- Daniel Bye, Artist & Creative Coalition for Climate Change member
- Mel Greenwood, Co-Owner of Drake the Bookshop
- Humira Imtiaz, Artist & Creative Coalition for Climate Change member
- Chloe Lawrence, Programmes Manager, ARC
- Lauren Pattison, Producer, ARC
#Money Panel
- Jess Hunt, Programme Director, East Durham Creates
- Chloe Lawrence, Programmes Manager, ARC
- Andy Newcombe, Producer, ARC
- Kay Nicolson, Chief Executive, A Way Out
- Scott Turnbull, Artist
Each panel will shortlist a small number of artists who will be invited to a follow up meeting either in person or by Zoom to chat about their idea in more detail. Each panel will then select one artist to support as part of this programme.
Timeline
Deadline for proposals: 10am, Mon 25 Sep 2023
Shortlisted applicants notified by: 5pm, Mon 2 Oct 2023
Follow up meetings:
#Money – Fri 6 Oct 2023
#Climate – Wed 11 Oct 2023
Feedback to all applicants Wed 8 Nov 2023
Please indicate within your proposal if you are not available on the date of the follow up meeting.
Selection Criteria
The selection will be based on the following:
- Idea for the project
- Potential quality and impact of the community involvement
- Deliverability of the project, including the skills and experience of the people involved as well as the available resources and timescale
- Future potential of the idea
- Environmental impact
We will provide brief feedback to all applicants, and more detailed feedback for those who are shortlisted. Feedback will be provided within four weeks of the deadline, or four weeks of the selection meetings for shortlisted candidates
Please note: If you need any support in making your application, please contact [email protected]
Frequently Asked Questions
Audio Versions