We are looking for contacts, local community groups, interested individuals, routes into funding, places to exhibit, support, volunteers, publicity and people to network with in order to develop our projects.
Please contact us by emailing milesanddacombe@virginmedia.com.

Showing posts with label Nottingham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nottingham. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 February 2015

Forward Footing gallery

And we're off!


We have taken our first steps of Forward Footing, with a lively walk in Nottingham with members from the Mary Seacole group. Images from the walk are now on our Flickr gallery and we will add more to the gallery as the project progresses.

Do visit our gallery as we continue our explorations - next stop, Stoke-on-Trent!

Click here for the gallery of images, including all walks to date and where we will add more. You can add your own too!

To see what we got up to in Nottingham, click here.


Tuesday, 26 August 2014

Announcing our new project: Forward Footing

We are pleased to announce that we have a new project, Forward Footing, to bring your more creative walking over the next year!

Thanks to a grant from the National Lottery through Awards for All, Miles & Dacombe will be creating a Landscape Intervention Kit and running a series of walks to promote the use of the kits.


We are making the kits this autumn, and running our walks in the new year. The idea of the kits is to motivate people to get out walking by giving a walk an extra creative slant! The kit will be a bag of ideas, materials and tools to inspire you to create your own temporary art works in the landscape. The ideas will work in urban or rural areas and we hope will make walks fun, creative, a shared experience and a new way to look at and interact with your environment.

We will also set up an online site so that anybody using the kits across the country can post photos of art works they have created in the landscape, to share and inspire others!

We will be taking our walking methodology further afield with this new project. Our walks and kits will tour to eight different counties. So far we have confirmed walks in Northamptonshire, Norfolk, Derbyshire and Nottingham. Dates for walks will be posted on this blog in due course - perhaps you can join us for one?

If you have a group who need a bit of motivation to get out walking and you think would like one of our walks and an Intervention Kit, email us! milesanddacombe@virginmedia.com

Wednesday, 22 December 2010

It's underneath our feet

A couple of things coalesced for me last week.  More maps, walking, networks...
 
On Monday I had a great time walking around Snibston and finding the footpaths that lead in and out of the site.  (There is now a Facebook page for the Transform project at Snibston.)


I also met with Nick at the museum, who was fantastic and spent lots of time showing me the maps of the mining seams and how they had been mapped from the mid 1800s until the 1980s, a period of almost 150 years of mining in the area.


Walking back through the fields I had this astonishing sense of the mapped tunnels beneath my feet, layer upon layer of seams cut through the earth, like the floors of a building inverted.


On the maps you can see that the mining seams are absolutely vast, stretching out underneath the town and neighbouring villages.


The maps themselves are beautiful, and incredibly complex.  Spiderwebs of tunnels that radiate out, the drawn lines mapped on top of other maps of the surface - the underneath layered on top, a very strange sense of parallel worlds that exist simultaneously in the same place.

Lines and networks stretch out everywhere, below and above ground.


A couple of days later I attended the New Research Trajectories event in Nottingham.  Bringing together research students from across the region, the event had a small audience who were also participants in exploring Nottingham on a walk, where we  encountered and took part in art presentations and happenings in unusual places.  (There is a great write-up and photos of the event on Heather Connelly's blog, scroll down to NEW RESEARCH TRAJECTORIES - Navigation in the City and Online Space event, Nottingham, 15th December.)

I met Jackie Calderwood who has done some interesting work on exploring spaces and walking.  She led us in an exercise on "Clean Language", asking each other questions in a set format which revealed deep levels of thought about our own research interests as well as producing extremely concise words or short poems.

We had to write our results on a sticker and also use colour in a grid pattern to express our research interests.  We then had to find a place to "disseminate" our stickers.

We visited the incredible Nottingham tunnels, we also experienced work in an old theatre and finished in a room above the Surface Gallery currently being used as a LAB for an artists' collective, where they served us an excellent minestrone soup!

My disseminated sticker ended up with the words "It's underneath your feet".  The colours on the grid represented the natural and the urban, reflecting how suddenly, by walking, you can cross from a predominantly urban area into a green stretch of land and countryside.  I placed my sticker on the bottom of a scaffolding pole, a place being refurbished which, for me, made it a transitional space.

Lots of connections with my walk at Snibston.  And a very fascinating day.

Wednesday, 26 May 2010

A new journey

Welcome to the beginning of our new journey: Undiscovered Networks.

We have started this blog to open up our conversation as our new project develops.

Following our last project, which took place in Corby, Northamptonshire, UK, (please visit Fingerprints on the Pew to see our project book), we became interested in the new train station recently reopened. When a new rail network is re-opened, how does that connection affect a town? We started thinking about the idea of connections, networks, and undiscovered places.

We have selected 12 places that are linked to Corby on the network. 12 places we don’t know, 12 undiscovered places. Our project will find connections between these places.

Corby
Metheringham
Cleethorpes
Blythe Bridge
Peartree (Lincs)
Thetford
Dore
Haven House
Langwith-Whaley Thorns
Fiskerton
Whatstandwell
Wittlesea
March