Romsey Art Festival 2015

Romsey Art Festival 2015

The Romsey Art Festival aims to generate opportunities that improve cohesion and a sense of community through creativity.

Hosting, promoting and participating in around 25 varied activities representing the range of performing and visual arts, the Romsey Art Festival 2015 reached out to whole families across East Cambridge with five weeks of family arts events running throughout the summer and early autumn of 2015

One of the festival’s strengths is its role as an umbrella for family friendly arts activities, raising awareness of grassroots creative activities available to the local people and encouraging collaborations between artists and community groups and local businesses who host arts activities in venues within the local community. Partners and collaborators included The Cambridge Junction, Turtle Dove, FoodCycle and Blue Smile, with media support from Cambridge Edition and Slate the Disco. Supported by funding from Cambridge City Council, our Volunteer Co-ordinator My Linh trained 15 volunteers from a range of backgrounds, giving them experience in events, marketing, administration. Abbey based resident Victor-Manuel Ibanez says:

“Volunteering over the last couple of years at the Romsey Art Festival, has enabled me to not just have à wider understanding of the wide range of issues the community needs but also brought me into contact with à diverse group of people I would not have necessarily met. There’s à huge diverse community needing exposure and nurturing. Plus on another personal level the experience has enabled me to witness an extraordinary amount of talent reaching out into the local needs. It’s an event that generates positive civic and creative outcomes.”

Festival Highlights

We were delighted to be involved in Cambridge’s first ever Baby Rave, held at the Cambridge Junction on Sunday 6 September. Baby Rave, which creator Mary Downham was keen to point out is emphatically not a baby disco, is an opportunity to enjoy an afternoon of dance music in a club-like atmosphere – a rare event for many new families! As well as helping to promote the event, volunteers from Romsey Art Festival were at the rave providing art workshops to create more pearls of wisdom. The event was a sell out and it is hoped that more will take place in 2016.

Romsey Art Festival enjoys good relationships with community groups and works to extend these relationships. This year, we helped to facilitate a collaboration between local artist Jill Eastland and FoodCycle in Cambridge. FoodCycle is national volunteer project that works with organisations and businesses to reduce food poverty and social isolation by serving tasty, nutritious meals to vulnerable people. Families from Barnwell attended the Rubbish Food workshop to learn about sustainable sources of food, create foraged food-inspired artwork and learn to prepare exciting, nutritious and economic meals. Participants were encouraged to stay on and share the meal as part of the regular FoodCycle community meal.

Throughout the summer, Romsey Art Festival volunteers worked with the local social enterprise Turtle Dove Cambridge to bring together young and old in an intergenerational arts collaboration called ‘Pearls of Wisdom’. Workshops took place at community events such as a local street party, where children were invited to create ‘a pearl’ and an older family member added some words of wisdom.

The culmination of the ‘Pearls of Wisdom’ project was the Enchanted Tea Dance at Ditchburn Place, a sheltered housing scheme for older people, on Saturday 10th October. An exhibition of the ‘pearls’ formed the backdrop to an afternoon of dancing, Christmas card making (with children’s mental health charity, Blue Smile) and traditional afternoon tea and cake.

Festival activities attracted visits from the Mayor of Cambridge (to Ditchburn Place) and Cambridge MP Daniel Zeichner. Daniel went along to the Cambridge Art Salon studio on 2 October to celebrate Romsey Art Festival’s new initiative EastSide Creates with volunteers, artists and makers at Unit 13.

The biggest event of the festival was the Masquerade Fundraiser an evening of short films, poetry performance, prizes, art auction and live music, held on Friday, 9 October and which raised over £700. The success of the auction means we are able to fund community arts activity in East Cambridge, for example Abbey’s Winter Lights, and make them accessible to people on low incomes.

Exhibitions and events

Whilst our focus is on participation, we also encourage access to view, listen and watch, as part of an audience, particularly the work of artists who relish exhibiting in non-traditional, public spaces. These include the bathtub pond by Cambridge artist, Kirsten Lavers, an exhibition by the highly regarded Indian photographer Mala Mukerjee which helped raise money for the NSPCC in Cambridgeshire at the Six Bells. An exhibition of mixed media works by Manuela Hübner at The Geldart; a flower display in The Old Chemist Antique Shop and a very busy ‘Poetry Takeaway’ on a Saturday afternoon at the Black Cat café.

“What really enrichens your life is joining in and taking part and getting to know people – that’s what makes things like the Romsey Art Festival happen”.  Zoe Chamberlain, public artiss and lead on  the Thresholds Project, of which the Barnwell Treasure Keys was a part.