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Northern Big Board – What I did part 3

Hurrah! The final instalment on the 7 installations and things that I made as part of Northern Big Board. You can find part one here, and part two over here. Today, a little about Cuppa. Trust Me, and the BONUS CONTENT. Let’s get straight into it…

CUPPA

Cuppa was made in response to the importance of the cafe to the pool building – to making it a place people stay, rather than justa place people go. As part of the cuts and restructures the pool was undergoing the cafe had had its hours drastically cut.
Northern Big Board InstallationsThis meant that not only was it not open much of the time, but that people were never certain whether it might be – people stopped wandering up on the off chance. A reasonable amount of the families and older visitors to the pool talked sadly about this, and so I wanted to make a piece that reflected that meeting place. Hence, Cuppa. Cuppa was a piece for two participants, with a part a and part b. It involved a tea set with real (Yorkshire) tea and a single biscuit. It was a synchronous piece of audio that asked two participants to move together – not always in unison, some times differently, thinking on their own, or moving to compliment the other – two sides of the same experience.  It was a requiem to the closing cafe. To those places of accidental crossing, weak tea, and chip butties. You can, if you want to see how the two parts worked together, read the script here. The aim was for it to be quiet and gentle and a small space for two people to come together.

TRUST ME

This was the ‘big’ piece for me, I don’t necessarily think it was for the people who experienced the installations, it was focal in that way, but it was really important for me. For several reasons, first that it was the hardest to write, by far, second (and relatedly) it was the one I felt the least prepared to, and most want to do justice to – because it was about diving, and finally, because it was the one (I felt) that linked up most strongly with everything Emma was saying in her play for the project. Throughout the 6 weeks I had been learning to dive with the help of a brilliant coach and diver called Dave Cowen. Bradford Esprit diving had worked with Northern Big Board to set up the ‘big board amnesty’ every Friday – where members of the public could turn up and have a go at diving, maybe even take a leap off the 5m board. That experience of learning to dive was one of the most brilliant and rewarding things I’ve done in recent years. I do quite a bit of sport, but it’d been a while since I learnt something, and I love learning things. I additionally loved learning something physical, of working with (as opposed to despite my tired) body, of pushing myself past fear. Incredibly rewarding, a proper rush, and something really important about learning by doing, and working with, rather than against, failure. With Trust Me, I tried to approach these things. So Trust Me is a piece about facing your fears. About how fear is natural  failure useful, and the most important things being willing to try again. It’s also a piece about diving. It emerged out of a conversation I recorded with Dave. The love in his voice as he spoke about the sport was unmistakable. He said after the interview that Shipley Pool was his first pool, “It’s like your first love, you never forget it”. That’s what this piece was about. Trust, failure, the love of being better. The piece itself took place in a dark enclosed space with a semi-transparent curtain/screen directly infront of you. A video projected water onto the floor. Participants entered to find a bench, and are throughout the piece invited to come towards a platform (obscured) in the centre of the room, urged to take steps towards giving up their fears, to find the best of themselves. There’s a slideshow of pictures below. And because I’m feeling generous, an embed of the audio.

The final piece I made was a bonus track of sorts. To encourage people to explore as much as possible I introduced a simple little collection mechanic – after each installation you could collect a token, and with 3 or more exchange it for a URL of a download, or if you didn’t have access to the internet, the piece on a CD. It was a simple little audio montage of all the voices I’d gathered from the pool, just under three minute. I also made this available to all the staff, who shared it with everyone they could. I was really proud to begin to represent the story of their place to them.

This whole project was very hard, but the majority of that burden was right for me to feel. It was a privilege. A real privilege, to listen to and attempt to tell the stories of these people.

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Northern Big Board

Announcing! Northern Big Board... So it turns out I haven’t actually blogged about this, yet. I DON’T KNOW WHY. Because it’s properly, properly ace. Also the first bit of work I’ll be doing as a proper freelancer – that’s right, I am now available for all your arts, digital, theatre making, writing and playful/pervasive needs. Hire me! After this has finished. I’m free December-ish.

Anyway. Northern Big Board. Ridiculously excited to be part of this collaboration between Chol Theatre, Slung Low and Emma Adams. All working towards a bit community theatre gala on the 18th of November. Here’s a bit of blurb:

“a celebration of the life of Shipley Swimming Pool and all who swim in her. Inspired by a fear of the big bad diving board that towers 5 metres above the pool, Northern Big Board is a project about taking leaps of hope.

Join us for the Gala performance of a new play written for Shipley Swimming Pool by Emma Adams and directed by Slung Low, art installations by Hannah Nicklin to reveal the hidden life of the building, and spectacular diving and swimming demonstrations.

Northern Big Board hopes to uncover the human stories at the heart of Shipley Swimming Pool and doff a swimming cap to the water-filled palaces in neighbourhoods up and down the country that equip us for life’s adventures and help us to leap off into the world.”

My part in it all is a residency at the pool between now and the 18th of November, I’ll be hanging around 2-3 days each week collecting stories from people who use the pool, people who work there, people who train there, and creating a series of installations, which might be games, sound experiences, video installations, interventions… maybe even an online piece, too. Basically totally reactive to the feel for the pool I get from being there and talking to people. 7 weeks, so a couple talking to people, a couple writing and making, then testing, installing, and launching along with the big gala day where there’ll be a play in the pool and lots of other community-based fun things. There are also ‘Leap Off Fridays’ starting next Friday (12th) 6-7.30 where we’ll invite people to hang out with us, take a leap off the high board, and possibly run writing and storytelling workshops.

Emma and I make a really interesting parallel as creatives on this, she’s writing from the point of view of overcoming her fears of the water, and me, well, I feel more at home in water than I do the air. Everything is thicker… Whole-er. More in control. I’ve been swimming since I was tiny, even swum for my club in Europe when I was a teenager. I left swimming behind when I broke both my arms one summer and never really caught back up in training, but I have a love of the water which has never left me. So, yeah, that’s where I’m writing from.

I shall try and blog things as I go, a little more scrap-booky than usual. And in that spirit, here’s a little snapshot of my notebook after my first visit yesterday. No pictures in the pool allowed, so resorted to sketching skills I’ve not employed since I was 18! Just trying to capture the space for reference when I’m working away from it. More to follow, I hope (not drawings, but blog posts).

And finally, here’s a quote from Emma in the Yorkshire Post about the project that I endorse wholeheartedly:

“For me the piece is absolutely about the story of the emotional connection people have to the place, but actually that’s a bit of a Trojan Horse for me to talk about how important these places are,” says Adams.

“Places like the Shipley Pool are our municipal secular cathedrals were everyone goes and is together as a community, regardless of things like race or age or gender. Like the arts in this country, which I absolutely argue the case should be subsidised, we need to recognise how important these places are. I wanted to write something that would celebrate the stories of the people who have these emotional connections to the place, but I wanted to celebrate the place itself too.”