Stunning art festival bridging Irish gap
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Helen Marriage is co-director of Artichoke, a creative company that stages big public street events
- The company's newest project, a festival of illuminated art, is underway in the UK
- Festival, called Lumiere, seeks to help unite divided Irish city of Derry-Londonderry
- Marriage spoke to CNN at PopTech, an annual conference in Camden, Maine
Its official name, and
the name used by most residents of the UK, is Londonderry. But Irish
nationalists and Catholics call it simply Derry.
The city was a flashpoint
for the violent conflict between unionists and nationalists that swept
Ireland from the 1960s through the 1990s. Its Catholic and Protestant
children attend segregated schools. Even today it's not uncommon for
road signs pointing motorists to Londonderry to have the "London"
blacked out by graffiti.
This weekend, however,
Derry-Londonderry plays host to an event its organizers hope can help
unite this divided city, at least for a few days. Called Lumiere, it's a four-day festival expected
to attract tens of thousands of spectators to see the city's historic
cathedrals, walls, bridges and squares illuminated by splashes of light.
Projects range from LED and neon sculptures to large-scale projections
by leading artists and lighting designers from Ireland and beyond.
"It (the city) has been a
contested space for a very long time. And we're going there in the hope
that ... maybe people who haven't felt comfortable standing next to
each other in the streets will find an opportunity to do that," said
Helen Marriage, co-director of Artichoke, a London-based company that stages large-scale public events across the UK.
Helen Marriage, co-director of Artichoke, a UK-based company that plans large-scale artistic events.
"It may be a naive hope,
but the hope is that communities who are divided by heritage or
tradition or faith will find something new they can all enjoy together."
Marriage knows what she's
talking about. In her eight years at Artichoke, which she co-founded
with Nicky Webb, she has orchestrated numerous public, artistic
spectacles in London and other cities. Each have drawn throngs of people
who packed the streets, faces bright with wonder, to witness their city
be transformed if only for a moment into something magical.
"I don't exaggerate the power of what we do," Marriage told CNN during her recent appearance at the PopTech conference,
an annual gathering of artists, scientists and thought leaders in
Camden, Maine. "But the way people are moved by the work, and the way it
makes them feel about their town, is something that's hard to describe.
You can absolutely feel it in the air."
The Sultan's Elephant
In retrospect, the birth of Artichoke's first project was a minor miracle.
In the early 2000s, Marriage and Webb wanted to bring Royal de Luxe,
a French street-theater company, to London to mount a spectacle in the
streets with enormous marionettes acting out a fanciful story about a
young girl and a time-traveling elephant. Marriage had to persuade
skeptical city officials to shut down parts of central London and
reroute traffic while convincing them the event wasn't just a piece of
frivolous disruption.
"You can imagine sitting
in front of 25 gentlemen in various uniforms and suits, and saying,
'Hey guys, it's a kind of fairy story, about an elephant and a little
girl. And we'd like to shut the city (down) for four days,'" she said.
"A lot of them admitted afterwards that they thought we were mad."
This lobbying effort took Marriage five years.
"I used to go to these
meetings and say, 'Please, may I do this?' And then I realized I was
asking the wrong question. If you say to somebody, 'Please may I do this
thing that's a bit unusual,' you're placing them in a position where
they have to authorize your unusual behavior. And of course their
instinct is to say no," she said.
"The Sultan's Elephant" brought Londoners together to witness a massive street spectacle.
"So I said, 'This is
happening, on these dates. How can you help me?' And immediately the
response was different. Because nobody was being asked to take
responsibility for something they couldn't possibly imagine. Nobody ever
really said yes. They just stopped saying no."
The event, "The Sultan's Elephant,"
was a huge success in May 2006. Londoners, despite anxieties about
crowded public spaces after the terrorist bombings that had rocked the
city 10 months earlier, turned out in droves.
Crime in London
plummeted that weekend, and the event -- funded by government arts
agencies and private donors -- generated an estimated 28 million pounds
to the city's economy, Marriage said.
To her, the emotional impact was even greater.
"People really took it
to their hearts," she said. "It's always an incredible moment when the
city is returned to the people who live and work there. And they can
wander freely as if in a playground, for no better reason than something
is happening that they love. The real point of it is to create a moment
of magic and wonder in people's lives."
Plinthers and a Telectroscope
Artichoke's subsequent
projects were smaller in scale but no less imaginative. In 2008, they
worked with British artist Paul St. George to unveil the Telectroscope, a fanciful contraption that claimed to link London and New York by means of a transatlantic tunnel and lots of mirrors.
Thanks to a fast
broadband connection, people in London could peer into the "tunnel" and
see a live feed of New York City, and vice versa. Thousands invested in
the illusion that they were peeking through a subterranean scope at the
other side of the world.
Marriage and her team followed that in 2009 with "One & Other,"
which took over London's Trafalgar Square for 100 days and nights. The
square's famous monument to Adm. Horatio Nelson is flanked by four
smaller plinths, or platforms -- one of which sits empty. So Artichoke
turned it into a monument to living Brits by inviting people to be
hoisted atop the plinth to do whatever they pleased for one hour.
The rules: Only one
person would be allowed at a time, they could take up only what they
could carry, and they couldn't do anything illegal.
More than 35,000 applied
and the winners -- "plinthers," they were called -- were picked
randomly by lottery and assigned a time. The event began in July and ran for 2,400 hours, day and night,
with a new person occupying the plinth each hour. Many used their 60
minutes for performance art, others for tribute or protest. Some played
music. Twelve stripped naked. One man proposed to his girlfriend.
"People used it in
incredibly imaginative ways," Marriage said. "The summary of all of
those hours became the artwork. It was sort of a portrait of a nation at
that point in our history.
"We always choose
projects where we can insert the project itself into the DNA of the
city," she continued. "We don't work in galleries or opera houses or
theaters. We work in the streets, using the buildings of the city, the
architecture of the city, as the stage."
Cities of light
The Lumiere festival transformed the divided Northern Ireland city of Derry-Londonderry into blazes of light.
Then came the first
Lumiere festival, held in November 2009 in Durham, a small medieval city
in northern England. For four dark, wintry nights, Artichoke's artists
transformed its cityscape of castles, stone walls and cobbled streets
into gleaming spectacles of light.
The festival proved so
popular that it was repeated in 2011 and then again earlier this month,
when an estimated 175,000 people came to view 22 installations across
the city.
The success of Lumiere in Durham inspired Marriage to double down this year on the festival in Derry-Londonderry.
In planning the event, she and Artichoke were careful to embrace both
Irish and English traditions and to include members from Catholic and
Protestant communities.
"Many of the works that
we have commissioned have been made to reflect on the city's divided
history and the current progress being made towards its shared future,"
she said.
At its simplest level,
Lumiere invites people to come out and enjoy artworks specially designed
for each nook and cranny of its historic host cities. Whether the
Derry-Londonderry festival, which closes Sunday night, has a more
profound, lasting impact remains to be seen.
But Marriage is optimistic.
Based on her experiences
with past Artichoke events, she believes "the simple act of sharing a
newly imagined world leaves a lasting legacy in all those who experience
it."
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