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Artichoke's contemporary art and ideas festival marks 300th anniversary of Great Fire of London |
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Temple, David Best, 2015. Produced by Artichoke in Derry-Londonderry. Photo by Matthew Andrews.
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LONDON.- Three more London landmarks, a live digital broadcast presented by Lauren Laverne and a talks programme inspired by major themes across the festival have been announced as part of LONDONS BURNING, Artichokes contemporary art and ideas festival marking the 350th anniversary of the Great Fire of London.
The series of spectacular art events, which are all free to the public, will take place in key sites across the City, Southbank and Bankside from 30th August - 4th September 2016, marking this momentous event in Londons history and addressing its contemporary resonance with themes including displacement, disaster and the resilience of the urban metropolis.
Artist Martin Firrell presents Fires of London, two new commissions either side of the River Thames. Fires Ancient will light up the south and east sides of the dome of St Pauls Cathedral with a fiery projection echoing both the catastrophic impact of the Great Fire of London on the Cathedral itself and the birth of the building designed by Christopher Wren that emerged, phoenix-like from the ashes. The projection will be visible from across the river and with a unique up-close view from the public Roof Terrace at One New Change.
On the other side of the river, Firrells Fires Modern will be projected onto the flytower of the National Theatres (NTs) iconic Grade II listed building. The projection of Firrells text and flames will reveal stories of resurgence and change that have shaped the UKs capital city and created the open and diverse metropolis that we enjoy today. Projecting Fires Modern resonates with the National Theatres mission of making the very best theatre and sharing it with as many people as possible. Fires Modern will join a historically impactful series of artistic projects that have used the NTs flytower to reach as wide an audience as possible.
With views across to the City and St Pauls Cathedral, French fire alchemists Compagnie Carabosse will create a Fire Garden, transforming the riverside area in front of Tate Modern into a crackling, spitting, after-dark adventure.
(Supported by Aon)
Helen Marriage Director of Artichoke said: LONDONS BURNING brings a unique contemporary perspective to the Great Fire, exploring the challenges and issues faced by major world cities today, our relationship to catastrophe and crisis and our ability to adapt, adjust and rebuild. It is an artistic response that addresses the impact of the Great Fire of London on the City, its inhabitants and buildings, and how it emerged from the ashes and evolved to the resilient world city it is today.
In addition to the live festival programme, Artichoke has been commissioned by The Space to produce a live digital broadcast of the spectacular finale event, London 1666. An extraordinary 120-metre long sculpture of the 17th-century London skyline will appear on the River Thames and burn, in a dramatic retelling of the story of the Great Fire of London of September 1666. A collaboration between American burn artist David Best and Artichoke, the project has involved months of work and participation with local schools and young Londoners.
The broadcast will be hosted by Lauren Laverne from 8.25pm on Sunday September 4th, and will include key guests and a series of short films revealing the stories behind the project. The event will be filmed using state-of-the-art equipment and techniques to capture a multi-camera live experience, directed by Tim van Someren, who created the London 2012 Olympic Opening Ceremony. The programme will give online audiences front row, immersive access and a memory that will burn bright long after the fire has died.
A talks programme will accompany the Londons Burning artistic programme exploring how cities past and present have responded to crisis. It will include an exclusive poetry reading by actor Simon Callow at the top of The Monument, and The Great Fire in Three and a Half Pints, a series of three guided walking tours, including a spine-tingling tour of the Citys streets led by psychiatrist Joanna Moncrieff, each tour stopping off at historic Fullers pubs along the way.
Elsewhere in the programme speakers include Londons highest-ranking female Fire Fighter, Becci Bryant, and authors Suzanne OSullivan and Andrew Mitchell Hurley, whose talks will explore historical and contemporary themes including our fascination with fire, the language of crisis, the part art can play in solutions to crisis, responses to world trauma and the psychology of fear.
In addition, BBC Radio 4 will be marking the Great Fire anniversary with a series of programmes including Cities from the Ashes, presented by Nicholas Kenyon, 30th August, Great Fire 350, which charts the making of Artichokes Londons Burning festival, 3rd September; and Pepys After the Fire, 5th-9th September.
Mark Boleat, the City of London Corporations Policy Chairman, said: The Artichoke team has worked tirelessly with a wide range of organisations and leading artists to put together a spectacular and ambitious programme of events to commemorate the 1666 Great Fire of London. As the founding sponsors of LONDONS BURNING, the City of London Corporation has been very proud to be involved in this major project that will remember how the Fire claimed lives and devastated the City of London, but also celebrate how it rose triumphantly from the ashes.
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