Culmination of 20 year journey for two organisations, Iniva & Autograph ABP
Rivington Place, a new £8m public building, will be the first permanent space dedicated to culturally diverse visual arts in the UK when it opens in London on 5 October.
Rivington Place (http://www.rivingtonplace.org/) celebrates the 20 year vision of two organisations: Iniva (the Institute of International Visual Arts) and Autograph ABP of establishing a permanent home to profile international issues and perspectives in contemporary art and photography and to lead debate on diversity.
The building, by award-winning architect David Adjaye OBE, is the first new-build public gallery in London since the Hayward Gallery opened in 1968. The 1,445 sq m building contains two project spaces capable of housing exhibitions, film screenings and talks; the Stuart Hall Library; an education space; a café; workspaces for local creative businesses and the offices of inIVA and Autograph ABP. It is set to become an important national resource as well as a local cultural and social hub.
Rivington Place is supported by a £5.9 million Arts Council England Lottery Capital 2 programme grant. Barclays is the Rivington Place founding corporate partner, contributing £1.1m toward the development.
Since their foundation in 1988 and 1994 respectively, Autograph ABP and inIVA have championed difference in the visual arts. The opening exhibition, London is the Place for Me (5 October - 24 November), looks at migration through photography and moving image. The exhibition will explore the presence of the many different diasporic communities living in Britain today and will include work by Dinu Li, Keith Piper, Mona Hatoum, Harold Offeh and Leticia Valverdes. amongst others. [Full details on the exhibitions in Further Information].
Professor Stuart Hall, Emeritus Professor, Open University and Rivington Place Project Champion, said: "Difference is complex - it alters and evolves, but does not go away. Difference matters and will continue to matter, it provides an incredible source of richness, new ways of seeing and creativity. Rivington Place is a landmark building which celebrates diversity and the exciting and essential contribution it makes to the visual arts."
Shreela Ghosh, Interim Director, Iniva, said: "Rivington Place signals the end of one journey, the search for a sense of place for both organisations, and the beginning of new and exciting possibilities. Our work as agencies now has a window - an identifiable and tangible space where audiences of all kinds will be able to discover the international perspectives in the visual arts that we have championed for so long."
Mark Sealy, Director, Autograph ABP, said: "This project is not just about bricks and mortar, it represents a modest but important destination. It will be a home for the work inIVA and Autograph ABP have been doing collectively for over 20 years and will provide a sense of place for the artists and issues we champion. It is also a strategic shift towards greater certainty and greater autonomy for both the organisations."
Sarah Weir, Executive Director, Arts Council England, London said, "The opening of Rivington Place this autumn will be a true celebration of the richness and diversity of the arts in England today. With innovation and internationalism at its heart, it is set to really make its mark on the cultural landscape. It will challenge perspectives, champion new visions and give artists and visitors different opportunities to explore what it means to live in a city as vibrant and diverse as 21st century London."
David Adjaye, Director, Adjaye Associates said: "Rivington Place is hugely significant as it's my first completed arts building anywhere in the world. It's a natural addition to the East End's existing landscape of art institutions and reinforces the area's position as a national and international arts and culture destination."
Chris Ofili, artist, said: "It's been a long time coming..Rivington Place through both its architecture and curatorial programming will provide a hub for the ever-rotating world of visual arts. It's a necessary project for our present and our future."
Kallaway
Anna Cusden 020 7221 7883 anna.cusden@kallaway.co.uk
Will Kallaway 020 7221 7883 william@kallaway.co.uk
Rivington Place
Josie Ballin
Press PR Manager 020 7229 9616 josie@iniva.org
Opening Exhibition
London is the Place for Me
5 October - 24 November
London is the Place for Me takes its title from the 1950s British calypso compilation album and reflects on how our sense of home is shaped by the ever-changing cultural landscape around us.
Barclays Project Space
Dinu Li, a British Chinese artist will exhibit a new series of photographs, commissioned by Autograph ABP, featuring people from diverse communities calling home from international phone centres - those small shops/booths that have mushroomed in the UK's major cities. During the Windrush era, making an international call to one's distant motherland was an impossible dream for most migrants. Li's response was to create a set of portraits, entitled Press the * then say Hello, illustrating not only how circumstances have changed for today's diverse communities, but also revealing the interplay between closeness and distance as manifested by each individual caller's body language.
Project Space 2
The moving image work presented by inIVA in Project Space 2 approaches the title of this exhibition both as a question and an affirmation. Installations of Mona Hatoum's Measures of Distance , Keith Piper's Go West Young Man, and Harold Offeh's Alien at Large, Oxford all expose the concept of ‘home' as a site continually under construction. Whether London, or Britain, or any place is ‘for us' will necessarily need to be negotiated through dialogues with difference.
Education Space
Brazilian artist Leticia Valverdes will create a photographic studio at Rivington Place during London is the Place for Me. A contemporary version of the famous Harry Jacobs studio in Brixton in which thousands of newly-arrived immigrants to the UK had their pictures taken between the 1950s and 1980s, the aim is to document the aspirations of recent immigrants to the UK. These will inform different backdrops and props created for the studio at Rivington Place and will raise sensitive questions about how people want to be seen in London and how they want to present their London life to those still in their countries of origin.
Stuart Hall Library and Iniva Archive
The Stuart Hall Library is named after the eminent cultural theorist and vice-chair of Rivington Place. Iniva's Library is a unique facility for the contemporary visual arts, a gateway for bringing the work of culturally-diverse artists to the widest possible audience and providing that work with a critical, theoretical and historical context.
To celebrate the opening of the Stuart Hall Library, Iniva plans to introduce acclaimed writers, novelists, journalists, art historians and critics to the collection and invite them to browse and choose their favourite book. Their selection, along with a short explanation from each writer, will be on the Library section of the Iniva website.
Adjaye Associates
David Adjaye is one of Britain's leading contemporary architects, whose designs emphasise the experience as much as the function of architecture. Born in Tanzania, his influences range from African art and architecture to contemporary art and music. He has made numerous collaborations with artists including Olafur Eliasson and Chris Ofili.
Adjaye Associates is currently working on projects in the UK and mainland Europe, Russia, China, the U.S and Africa.
Rivington Place Funding Supporters
Arts Council England works to get more art to more people in more places. It develops and promotes the arts across England, acting as an independent body at arm's length from government. Between 2006 and 2008, it will invest £1.1 billion of public money from government and the National Lottery in supporting the arts. It believes that the arts have the power to change lives and communities, and to create opportunities for people throughout the country.
Barclays is the founding corporate partner of Rivington Place, contributing £1.1 m towards the project's development. The innovative partnership reflects Barclays history of supporting positive social change and making a real and lasting difference to the diverse communities in which it operates. Barclays is a committed corporate supporter with a focused programme of community support which last year totalled over £45 million - one of the most substantial in the UK.
The Rivington Place project has London Development Agency, City Fringe Partnership, European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), and Hackney Council funding for SME workspaces for cultural/creative industries in the building. It has received access funding from The City Bridge Trust. The Foyle Foundation and the Garfield Weston Foundation have also contributed funds to the project and the Brodksy Center and Clifford Chance have provided in-kind support.
Iniva (Institute of International Visual Arts), established in 1994, is a contemporary visual arts agency that supports and promotes the work of artists, curators and scholars form diverse cultural backgrounds, making their artistic practice and ideas accessible to new and diverse audiences. The agency invests in artists who deserve wider recognition for their talents; takes art into unexpected places as well as the more traditional venues; and engages new audiences, young and old, in contemporary art.
Autograph ABP is an international non-profit making photographic arts agency established in 1988 that addresses issues relating to cultural identity, social change, human rights and historically-marginalised photographic practice. Its primary role is to develop, exhibit and publish the work of photographers and artists from culturally diverse backgrounds and to act as an advocate for their inclusion in all mainstream areas of exhibition, publishing, training and education and commerce. To this end, Autograph ABP produces its own programme of activities and collaborates with other arts organisations, nationally and internationally.
http://www.autograph-abp.co.uk/
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