Prof Rees

Forum Replies Created

Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • in reply to: Share some inspirations #19817
    Prof Rees
    Participant

    ADAIN AVION

    ADAIN AVION – Wales’ flagship project for the London 2012 Cultural Olympiad and London Festival 2012 took the form of a DC9 Aeroplane transformed into a mobile arts space, social sculpture and travelling time capsule that migrated around Wales nesting in key locations where the local community pulled the plane into position. It then acted as a catalyst/magnet for a week long programme of events in each location with over 2,000 participants, 50 artists and 65 community groups involved in the project, 150 events in total and an overall audience of 48.000.

    Hello

    • This reply was modified 4 years ago by Prof Rees.
    in reply to: Share some inspirations #19376
    Prof Rees
    Participant

    AGORA – an independent space to imagine a future

    Commissioned by The National Eisteddfod / Visit Wales, produced by Ffiwsar

    ’The democratic pavilion of 100 black painted doors at the Llanrwst Eisteddfod, the doors that invited us to project mass imaginative strategies on them, will remain in the memory, symbolising the threshold we are at today and that the tide is beginning to turn.’

    Dylan Huw, ‘O’r Pedwar Gwynt’ ( translation )

    AGORA celebrated the rural North Wales town of Llanrwst’s historic bids for independence. In 1276 Llewelyn ap Gruffudd the last true Prince of Wales proclaimed that the free Borough of Llanrwst was autonomous of the diocese of St Asaph. In 1947, Llanrwst town council made a submission to the United Nations for a seat on the security council, stating that Llanrwst was an independent state within Wales. This bid was unsuccessful but the hunger for independence within society persists.

    I wanted to shine a light on Llanrwst’s historic yet topical reputation by constructing a temporary independent space in which to imagine new possibilities and visions of the future; creating an agora, a gathering place for the assembly of active citizens.

    The project’s egalitarian foundation was represented in its very fabric. We invited the people of Conwy to donate their discarded wooden doors, a 100 of them – ranging from farm, hotel, pub, office to toilet doors with which we then built our own AGORA.

    Inspiration for the design came from the recent unveiling of Llys Llywelyn at St Fagans. This re-creation of a Royal Court of the Princes of Gwynedd was based on the surviving remains of Llys Rhosyr in Anglesey.

    Nothing remains of the original court apart from its foundations which have provided the clues for archeologists and architects to interpret and re-construct the Llys Llewelyn. Our AGORA is a re-imagining of their re-imagining.

    During the Eisteddfod I programmed a number of events – discussions, performances and concerts,12 in total within AGORA and also conceived three splinter performances that took place around Conwy – Ôl-Llywelyn, LLinell | LLinyn and Wal Werin.

    Images: Keith Morris

    AGORA

    Design Team : Jenny Hall Crafted Space & Tabitha Pope

    Fabric : Melin Tregwynt

    Creative Producer : Iwan Williams Ffiwsar

    Ôl-Llywelyn

    Performer : Eddie Ladd

    LLinell | Llinyn

    Choreographer : Matteo Marfoglia

    Performers : Angharad Harrop, Angharad Jones

    Harp : Helen Wyn Pari

    Sound Artists : Alan Chamberlain, Ed Wright

    Mist (installation)

    Artist : Sébastian Preschoux

    Curator : Karine Décourne, Migrations

    Wall Werin

    Choreographers : Kate Lawrence, Angharad Harrop

    Performers : Lisa Spaull, Angharad Jones

    Harp : Ceri Rimmer

    • This reply was modified 4 years ago by Prof Rees.
    • This reply was modified 4 years ago by Prof Rees.
Viewing 2 posts - 1 through 2 (of 2 total)