Central Stn have some more information on their blog regarding the new V&A museum to be built in Dundee.
Georgina Follett has been seconded from her position as Dean of Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design to lead the V&A at Dundee project which will deliver a Victoria & Albert Museum on the waterfront at Dundee. The project is a collaboration formed between University of Dundee, University of Abertay, Dundee City Council and Scottish Enterprise with the V&A Museum in London and is a 20 year partnership.
There is also an article on the Guardian website.
The Dundee project is being led by the University of Dundee, supported by Abertay University – the Dundee-based institution pioneering digital technologies, the city council, the investment agency Scottish Enterprise and the Scottish government.
It emerged today that the centre will be built over the water of the Tay, next to the RSS Discovery, the Dundee-built research ship used by Captain Scott and Ernest Shackleton’s expedition to Antarctica in 1901 now berthed on the river. The site will be about half the size of the Baltic gallery in Gateshead, at 7,000sq metres. The Hilton hotel chain plans to build a hotel beside it.
Finally the long overdue redevelopment of the city’s waterfront area looks to be in full swing. A truly exciting time for Dundonians as well as for Scotland as a whole.
ART MAGAZINE ART
First in a series of seminars that will explore different aspects of publishing in relation to art practice and research, this event marks the end of MAP’s two-year residency at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design. Three leading art magazines come together to discuss approaches and futures. Speakers include Rob Hamelijnck and Nienke Terpsma (Fucking Good Art), Caroline Woodley (Afterall), Alice Bain and Steven Cairns (MAP), and Tracy Mackenna (artist and Associate Dean Art & Media DJCAD)
Read the rest of this entry »
DISCPARC EXPERIMENT 001
Obscure Desire of the Bourgeoisie
Jonathan Adam
‘discparc’ is a space for experimentation with a new focus on supporting creative collaborations from audio artists that work across disciplinary boundaries. Our first experiment is a meeting between Obscure Desire of the Bourgeoisie and DJCAD graduate Jonathan Adam, who have the gallery space for a fortnight to discuss and develop their work within. Read the rest of this entry »
The Edinburgh Mela Festival has kicked off and well under way. Running from the 25th to the 31st of August the festival features a myriad of theatre, dance and music in Scotland’s capital city.
The Festival is Scotland’s leading celebration of cultural diversity through the arts, having been founded in 1995 by members of the city’s minority ethnic communities.
We do this through the form of a Mela, a South Asian festival and a Sanskrit word meaning gathering. In Edinburgh each year we gather some of the finest talent from across Scotland and the UK as well as international artists and present them in a vibrant and exciting environment with interactive opportunities for children and families and a food and craft market.
The event is held beside Ocean Terminal, Leith.
Stars of British Asian music Tariq Khan and Rishi Rich will make an appearance and there is an an outdoor screening of Indian Oscar-nominated Mother India with a new soundtrack performed live.[1]
For more information on performances check out the online programmes.
Glasgow has been named a United Nations City of Music. The award has prompted the creation of a new group called Glasgow City of Music to help the city’s music community reach greater heights. Glasgow becomes only the 11th city to become part of the Creative Cities Network which was launched by the UN in 2004.
Seville and Bologna are the only two other European cities to share the title. Scotland now has two world cities, with Edinburgh being the other after being named as the first UNESCO City of Literature, in 2004.