![[NeighbourHOOD] exhibition at performance ]SPACE[](/img/wcs/h2/trans/000000/%5BNeighbourHOOD%5D%20exhibition%20at%20performance%20%5DSPACE%5B.png)
We first came across performance]SPACE[ during
the 'Printers Paradise'
walk. The door was open and a small sign invited us in. A quick
detour into a smoke filled room with people performing across the
space seemingly ignoring the audience of 20 strangers that just
walked in on them. As first encounters go, this one was curious
enough to get in touch and find out more about what was going on.
We met Bea, Benjamin and Anna who have been generous in offering
their space for one of our Wick Sessions (unfortunately it was
double booked) and have recently invited us to a very local dinner
as part of their international residency project [neighbourHOOD]
EVENT which will conclude on Saturday the 3rd of December.
[neighbourHOOD] EVENT
Saturday 3rd December 11am - 11pm
Following a 10 day intensive research residency the
[neighbourHOOD] artists will draw together an exhibition and
evening of performance art and film. Artists: Tine Voeks, Maria
Lucia, Benjamin Sebastian, Kimbal Quist Bumbstead, Liam Yeates and
isik met knutsdotter
Exhibition: 11am - 11pm
Developed and led by the artists, the exhibition is
anticipated to grow out of the research-lab, through install-action
and the exhibition of research material. Constructed throughout the
day, the exhibition will both lay bare artistic process and weave
together loose ends to form a live archival document of Hackney
Wick now. The exhibition will also include performance-for-camera
photographic prints from each artist, produced site-specifically in
collaboration with ]performance s p a c e [ photographer Marco
Berardi.
Performances: 7 - 9 pm (TBC)
New performances made in response to the
[neighbourHOOD] residency in Hackney Wick.
Film: 9pm - 'DEFAULT THE BRUTAL'
by Enrico Masi, produced by CAUCASO FACTORY (10'
UK, 2011, color/B-w, 16mm/Full HD)
'Discovering a new space in east London, after the negative stigma
of the 80's, Stratford will now present himself as a thrilling new
urban device for people to move, work, shop and travel. The
increasingly spectacular Olympic park, with Anish Kapoor's
monumental red panoramic tower growing in his middle and a special
toilet only for the queen. 'Default the Brutal' is like forecasting
on weather conditions.'
CAUCASO FACTORY have worked in collaboration with ]performance s p
a c e [ and PAS throughout [neighbourbourHOOD] to document the
activity unfolding. The collective's current area of research has
focused on the regeneration and development of Olympic boroughs and
the current socio-economic climate across Europe.
[neighbourHOOD] is a free event
Beer, gin and bagels will be served all
day!!
Posted in Blog on November 29, 2011 12:17 by Andreas Lang

Posted in Blog on October 18, 2011 15:43 by Andreas Lang

Come & join us at Wick Green & help transform
the play equipment using materials from the Albion Kids
Show.
TAKE OVER
WICK GREEN
OCTOBER 6TH 2011
1PM - 6 PM
Opposite St Mary's Church
Pirate Ships, Puppet Theatre, Parachute Tents, Wheels
& Swings will be available for you and your family to play
on.The day will help inform more permanent future changes to Wick
Green.
Posted in Blog on October 4, 2011 14:41 by Andreas Lang

NOT JUST FOOTBALL PITCHES .....
Tell us what you'd really like to do on
Mabley Green. It can be anything you like, anything at
all - from the fantastical to the practical.
Then on Saturday 20 August, all of your ideas will be sketched
out and painted HUGE on the grass of Mabley Green using Hackney
Council's football-pitch painting machine.
Better still, your ideas will be used to help kick start a new
Master Plan for Mabley Green. So get creative and help build a
brand new park.
The People's Pitch is a collaboration between public works and
Christopher King, with support from muf and the Design for London.
All ideas will be published on the PEOPLES PITCH WEBSITE.
If you'd like to get in touch, email us on peoplespitch@gmail.com
View Larger Map
commissioned by muf and
Design for
London
Posted in Blog on August 10, 2011 12:56 by Andreas Lang

we are artists how can we help? dinner discussion
Proposals are invited for meaningful temporary art works and/or
other projects to be situated in the public realm, (including
web-based works) to address the complex and dynamic environment of
Hackney Wick and Fish Island. The work is to be exhibited or
launched at Hackney Wicked, July 2011.
The aim of the commissions is to test the capacity for "home grown"
art and other creative practices to be part of the ongoing debate
to shape the future of Hackney Wick and Fish Island.
The proposal must therefore address or respond to at least one of
the statements regarding art practice, regeneration and Hackney
Wick/Fish Island from the "We are artists how can we help" debate,
these are illustrated and listed in the brief and appendix. You may
proposal a work that opposes or supports a particular statement.
You can download the brief and appendix here
Timetable
Call for submissions 3rd May
Deadline for submissions 24th May
Selection 27th May
Contract signing 31st May
The work to be complete and exhibited at Hackney Wicked festival
July 2011
You can download the submission template as a word document
here
and the submission template as a zipped
InDesign document here
For information updates you can go to the
"we are artists how can we help"
blog
Posted in Blog on May 5, 2011 13:52 by Sara Thor

24hr Olympic State poster
The Olympic Games, Urban renewal & Surveillance: A
marathon of presentations, film, sound, performance and discussion
24 HOUR OLYMPIC STATE
The Olympics can arguably be described as a laboratory for the
neoliberal city utopia; after all, the Games represent the success
of a brand and an event based on a combination of massive urban
renewal, dodgy governance, hugely profitable advertising and
broadcasting contracts, the corporatisation and militarisation of
public space, and the criminalisation of dissent.
The Olympics depend, to a large scale, on their ability to operate
on a clean, consensual space: without history, without discontents,
without opposition. The Olympic Park is the fantasy of such space,
Jim Woodall's Olympic State installation, currently on show at See
Studio Exhibition Space, is one of its disruptions.
The Olympics Games is the strategic occupation of the social and
economic space of the city, but they allow, or even invite, for a
tactical response. The goal of this 24h marathon of activities,
echoing the 24hr surveillance of the site, is to bring together
artists, activists and researchers challenging the Olympic dream.
We wish to amplify Jim Woodall's radical gesture by summoning an
assemblage of talks, films, interventions, performances and
concerts which are part of the myriad of militant productions
taking place in the city right now.
In particular, we are interested in exploring the dynamics of urban
renewal brought to East London by the Olympics and the issue of
surveillance and control of public space. This 24 hour event aims
at providing a generous and welcoming space for discussion. Join us
for an evening, a night, a morning or a day - or stay up for the
whole marathon...
24 HOUR OLYMPIC STATE is curated by Isaac Marrero, Cristina
Garrido and Jim Woodall
You can download the press release here
Thursday 5th May 18:00 - Friday 6th May 17:59
SEE STUDIO EXHIBITION SPACE
13 PRINCE EDWARD ROAD,
HACKNEY WICK,
E9 5LX
020 8986 6477
Barbeque beautifully prepared and served by 'The Sit Down
Affair'.
Posted in Blog on May 3, 2011 15:11 by Sara Thor

PRINT(ED) MATTERS Verity-Jane Keefe
You
are invited to the premiere of "Print(ed) Matters", a cinematic
portrait of the process of print in Hackney Wick,
by the visual artist Verity-Jane
Keefe, which will be screened in the yard of Central Books
on Friday May 6th 2011 at 8.00-9.30pm. For directions please see the invite here.
The Hackney Wick and
Fish Island area is a rich tapestry of both artist and industrial
production. The film makes visible the often invisible industry
within the area, focusing on the chain of print: printing to
finishing to distribution, whilst exploring both the similarity
between art practise and industry, and the process of production
and making.
The artist has worked
with Quadroprint DM Ltd, BRG finishing and Central Books Ltd to
construct a narrative soundtrack of the relationship between
industry, the local area and art in general to accompany the film.
The film (11 minutes) has been shot in high definition and will be
screened to both an invited and incidental audience passing by.
Refreshments will be served and an accompanying inventory of skills
(used and unused) of the workers of Hackney Wick and Fish Island,
will be distributed.
London Thames Gateway
Development Corporation have commissioned a program of artworks as
part of the Hackney Wick and Fish Island urban improvements. These
improvements address issues of severance and seek to increase the
quality and permeability of the public realm, for the benefit of
local residents and visitors.
Print(ed)
Matters is one of six
temporary commissions that explicitly addresses improved social
connectivity and "joining up" of isolated and/or disparate
communities. All of the temporary commissions supported the brief
development for three permanent commissions and are an opportunity
to address with interested parties expectations of what art
practice can deliver within an urban design context.
hello@verityjanekeefe.co.uk
www.verityjanekeefe.tumblr.com
www.twitter.com/veritykeefe
you can download the pdf invite
here
and the press release here.
Friday 6th May 2011
8.00-9.30pm
Refreshments will be served.
The film will be screened at 8.30 and
again at 9pm.
Central Books Ltd Yard
99 Wallis Road
London
E9 5LN
Enter via the yard
entrance on Wallis Road.
Posted in Blog on April 28, 2011 14:34 by Sara Thor

We put maps accompanying the 6 ROUTE BOOK WALKS online via
google maps and pasted them here below.
SUNFLOWER AVENUE
Sunflower Avenue connects Mabley Green to Victoria Park cutting
straight through the heart of Hackney Wick. It is a Local
Initiative by Lea Bank Square Purple Garden to establish a planted
connection between the two local parks
View
SUNFLOWER AVENUE in a larger map
WALKING THE PRESS
A walk from Abbey Gardens to Lea Bank Square moving the trolley
which houses the seed bomb press. The press is used in the making
of the seed bombs used on the Sunflower Avenue walk.
View
WALKING THE PRESS in a larger map
PRINTERS PARADISE WALK
'Printers Paradise' was the informal name of the dense cluster of
printers and related industry spread around the Wick and along the
Carpenters Road. Map showing location of printers, finishers, litho
and repro in and around Hackney Wick covering those that exisited
in the 'heyday' of the mid 1980's- 1990's to present day. Mapped
from personal accounts, aural histories and research gathered from
those still operating in the area and from those who have moved
out.
View
PRINTERS PARADISE in a larger map
THE WAY WE WALKED - CHRISTMAS SWIM WALK
View
WALK THIS WAY-CHRISTMAS SWIM WALK in a larger map
FRIDAY FISH WALK
View
FRIDAY FISH WALK in a larger map
OFF THE TRACK
Monkey Parades were popular from at least the 1840's and were a
British working class institution, which probably started life in
the crowded urban centres. This courting congregation that saw men
and women lavishly dressed to impress was rife in Hackney in 19th
Century. The walk will retrace a visual journey of the Wick by
George Sims, a journalist during the height of the popularity of
Monkey Parades in the late 1800s. Participants are invited to dress
to impress and the ladies are invited to wear lavish hats (designed
by the ladies at the Wick) ending with a drink on Mabley Green.
View
OFF THE TRACK in a larger map
Posted in Blog on April 25, 2011 14:43 by Andreas Lang

CALL FOR CONTRIBUTORS
Forthcoming Myrdle Court Press book on 2012 London
Olympics
Seeking critical cultural practices by artists, writers,
activists, academics, residents and anyone who has examined the
London 2012 Olympics.
Myrdle Court
Press has commissioned Hilary Powell to
edit a book that will document and highlight critical responses to
the official London 2012 Olympic Games site and Cultural Olympiad.
The book will be published in 2012 and will collect the range of
critical responses that have occurred since the governing bodies
choose to bid for the 2012 Games. The book will also present an
overview, history and critique of the Cultural Olympiad and in
doing so will argue against the corporatisation of urban space. The
critical work, projects and ideas published will be indispensable
for citizens of future bidding cities.
DEADLINE: Tuesday 31st May 2011.
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES:
· A brief outline of the proposed work's main themes and arguments
· Estimated word count & Biography of the author
· 3 low resolution images where applicable
· Email your proposals to: hilary@optimisticproductions.co.uk
EDITOR:
Hilary Powell has been engaged with and producing work and events
around the edges of the London 2012 Olympic site since 2007. She is
currently working on a three year project entitled 'The critical
Pop-Up book: Re-imagining London's Olympic Structures of
Enchantment' (AHRC Fellowship in the Creative and Performing Arts
at the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL). www.hilarypowell.com
PUBLISHER:
Myrdle Court Press is an independent publishing company that
advances the ideas of critical urbanists. It is the publishing arm
of the not for profit organisation 'This is Not A Gateway'. Central
Books are the sole distributor of Myrdle Court Press books in
Europe.
www.myrdlecourtpress.net /
www.thisisnotagateway.net
BOOK
OVERVIEW: Most modern Olympics are controversial but the
clamour and countdown to the Games themselves drowns out the many
playful, angry, nostalgic, ironic and creative voices of dissent
and critique crying out in the wake of their arrival in town. What
the London 2012 bid and organising teams didn't take into
consideration is that the greatest number of artists in all of
Europe, live alongside what is now the biggest development site in
Europe. Unsurprisingly, since The Games were proposed artists &
cultural practitioners have been at the forefront provoking
Londoners with critical insights and poetic summaries of a global
event played out on their patch.
There is currently no book that brings together critical
cultural projects and practices that have emerged in response to
the Olympics and its large-scale regeneration project. This book
intervenes in the dominant discourse and language surrounding the
Cultural Olympiad to bring together projects that engage
intelligently with the changing landscape - from resistance and
counter narratives, analysis of cultural policy, legal frameworks
and changing land use to predictions and potential blueprints for
future host cities as Russia gears up for the Winter Olympics 2014
and Rio De Janeiro looks towards 2016. Focusing as it does on the
work of artists it examines how cities are shaped through cultural
memory and spatial practices and presents powerful arguments
against the politics of erasure and the
corporatisation/militarization of urban space.
This research has an immediate and lasting impact on the debate
around the politics of urban space and regeneration and engages
with diverse cross disciplinary fields and constituencies of
interest from academia to quangos and policy makers, third sector
and public bodies, artists, cultural organisations, urban
designers, planners, geographers and local communities - all those
affected by regeneration and involved in the discourse surrounding
it. Most specifically the knowledge produced and transferred will
make a valuable contribution to research on how future bid/host
cities approach Olympic-led regeneration provoking and empowering a
critical vision and response to the local, political, social and
geographical changes it entails.
Including commissioned articles by practitioners and theorists
at the front line of activities in this area alongside photographs,
interviews and a catalogue of projects the book will address a
selection of the following
THEMES:
· (Un)Official Cultural Olympiad
· A Travelling Circus: Learning from London?
· Artists Taking the Lead or Following the Leader
· 'Art of Regeneration': Hijackers and Hijacked
· The collectors, collected and collectables
· The Emerald City: Legacy visions
· Urban Village: The Rise and Fall of Hackney Wick
· History Repeating
· The Right Side of London?
Posted in Blog on April 19, 2011 11:25 by Andreas Lang

Olympic state by Jim Woodall
Jim Woodall presenting his work in the Wick Curiosity Shop in March 2011
Daren Ellis has openend the long awaited See Studio Galery Space in Hackney
Wick just next to the Hackney Pearl. On show until mid may is the
piece entitled 'Olympic State' by Jim Woodall.
See Studio Exhibition Space
13 Prince Edward Road
Hackney Wick, London, E9 5LX
Thursday-Sunday 12am-6pm
Posted in Blog on April 18, 2011 14:16 by Andreas Lang