We just returned from our annual trip to the Goat Milk Festival, in Bela Rechka, Bulgaria after having the time our lives and making a very beautiful intervention in response to this year’s theme ‘abandonment’. Abandonment is something that affects everyone, one way or another, and was a great subject to [...]
We just returned from our annual trip to the Goat Milk Festival, in Bela Rechka, Bulgaria after having the time our lives and making a very beautiful intervention in response to this year’s theme ‘abandonment’. Abandonment is something that affects everyone, one way or another, and was a great subject to respond to. In context, in a tiny, possibly dying village in the North West of Bulgaria, it is something that is perhaps more evident than ever. Someone told me that the average age of the inhabitants was 70, after having met several 90+ years olds and only 2 people under 16, I believed it. Like many countries, particularly on the edges of Europe, Bulgaria is suffering from the effects of rural emigration. The young flee the villages in search of opportunities, leaving behind an ageing population and rapidly-decaying infrastructure. In Bela Rechka it seems every third house is a crumbling ruin, and the sense of abandonment is palpable.
So, how to describe Goat Milk? It’s a unique festival, kind of the anti-Biennale. You’re not there to show off. You’re not there to sell anything. You’re there to meet other artists, thinkers, poets, photographers, musicians, you name it, and to participate together. There’s not that much ‘art’ on show, there’s a linear programme of workshops, talks, discussions, film screenings (followed by more discussions), and a very long dinner queue at the only place to get food, staffed by incompetent, hungover Bulgarian local lads. I guess I’m not selling it well, because I think it’s the best art festival I’ve ever been to. It’s all about the conversations. Artists from all over the World gather there, unpaid for the most part, so engage in such a wonderfully open and uncompetitive way (for the most part) that the experience becomes a great source of energy, a revitaliser. Our friend Murat, a drummer and activist from Turkey put it best, ‘we all come together from our different ‘war fields’ and we rest and talk, and realise we are not alone, then we go back, energised, to continue’. He is pretty dramatic sometimes, particularly after a few rakias, but you get the picture.
So we went over mob-handed, accompanied by Si Walker, as always, Nicky Getgood and her ‘man’, Carl along with Soesen Edan. We’d decided before we went that we’d try to make an artwork of some kind and had been considering the abandoned houses which were the focus of the festival this year. We hooked up quickly with Iranian artist Gita, who had a microphone permanently clamped in her hand and was recording everything, and with our friend Antina who grew up locally and had made a beautiful installation, mapping the abandoned houses and interviewing locals to find out their stories.
We looked for a house to respond to and settled pretty quickly on a pretty dangerous looking blue house, which was due to be demolished in a month for safety reasons. Sandra and myself designed a process for the group to respond to the house. Working in silence, we would investigate the house, inside or outside. We would respond to a set series of themes, using our sense of smell and touch, noticing patterns and movements. We would then go and have lunch, without talking about the experience, letting it sit for a few hours, before coming back together to feedback to the group. It’s harder than you think, you really want to go ‘did you notice, so and so?’ and the resultant feedback sessions produced a series of amusingly arm waving pixelations. So, much discussion about the house, and the context ensued. One of the things we had found was a ‘necrolok’ – a poster with a photograph of a deceased person, displayed annually on bus shelters, lamposts, walls, in an effort to remember the dead – we also found the original photograph. I should say at this point that there was much debate on the voyeuristic nature of what we were doing – ‘going through someone’s knicker draw’, as it were, but we trusted ourselves to take a respectful approach and to replace everything where we found it. At times the house felt like a museum, at others like a mausoleum, and this related directly to the issue at hand.
Bulgarians, we were told, particularly the old, fear being forgotten more than they fear death. As long as they are remembered, they are somehow still alive, and the necroloks are an obvious example of this. And here we were in a village, with a population of the old, surrounded by decaying and crumbling houses, all at risk of being forgotten. We started to formulate a response, a way to commemorate the situation, and an intervention began to take shape.
We made a series of announcements around the festival – ‘look for a sign at 9.45, and bring something to leave behind’, we told people. There was soon a sense of intrigue, particularly amongst the more adventurous festival goers – though some people clearly wanted to know what was going to happen. So at 9.45, some of our group gathered with Murat, the drummer, near the Kazan (rakia house – ‘party central’ at the festival) and began to lead an impromptu procession up the lane towards the house. Swinging lights and lanterns, drumming and dancing, a party atmosphere developed, as we passed the ‘pub’ (the only bar in the village) a bunch of local people joined, to see what all the fuss was about. As we reached the house Murat’s drumming became softer and the whole ‘audience’, turned to look up at the house. We’d lit a single window in which we had placed the necrolok poster, the original photograph and a jar of preserved peaches we had found inside the house. After a while, one of our group stepped forward and laid an object down into a small circle of stones we had made in front of the house. Then stood up and looked at the house for a while. The audience needed no more instruction and for the next ten minutes object after object was placed in the circle, each audience or group member then paying their respects to the house, and it’s history. When the final object had been placed in the circle, the eight members of the group, until then part of the audience,turned around, made eye contact with someone in the audience, then walked towards them slowly, before cupping their face with their hands and leaning forward to kiss them and whisper the word ‘goodbye’, then disappearing into the darkness. The audience were left with the house to make their own way back.
So that was our response, a simple, beautiful act, yet interrogated constantly over the 30 hour development period in the most complex way. We made an intervention that respected and responded to the theme, whilst giving ‘entry points’ for the audience to ask their own questions. We don’t proscribe what these questions may be, and rarely provide ‘interpretation’ or artist statements to explain what the work is about – it’s either obvious, or there’s enough going on that telling people what it is would seem limiting. This unnamed intervention worked incredibly well – more than one audience member was in tears (we had to administer rakia to one young lady, for medicinal purposes) – in fact, when I demonstrated ‘the kiss’ to our group, out of context, one of our group began to cry uncontrollably. Everyone understands abandonment, or has been abandoned at some point in their lives, so the theme resonates with us all. In Bulgaria, the fear of being forgotten is so real that people try and get remembered through leaving traces of themselves. Our experience in Bela Rechka taught us that we need to remember what has gone before, but perhaps sometimes, we need to learn to let go more readily.
Will post some photos when we get the time.
And in other news
This Friday 3rd of June at the Edge, it’s Sonic Asylum 4 – whoopee! The usual triple bill of live musical performances, weird stuff, sonic installations and cake. And a return visit from – The Auctioneer! From 8pm, 3 quid on the door.
Thursday at the The Edge, Fierce are showcasing work from the Platinum programme, set up to develop live artists in the region.
We are beavering away all week to install our exhibition ‘To You from Super Me’, at the Public. We’re dead excited about this, it”s a video triptych featuring life size projections of 8 of the young people with autism we’ve been working with for almost a year now. We love working with these extraordinary young people and wanted to find a way to share what we have learned working with them, so image-maker Chris Keenan, Marvel comics artist John Macrae and ourselves have put together this fantastic installation. Show opens this Friday and runs for a few weeks in the lower gallery at the Public in West Bromwich, try and make it over.
We’ve been working hard on our3 Minute Heroes (3MH) project, and we’re very proud of what that work has achieved. Si, Soes, Sanj and the team have been working with some great people to find out who inspires them, to reveal the extraordinary in the ordinary. Please go to 3 Minute Heroes and take a [...]
We’ve been working hard on our3 Minute Heroes (3MH) project, and we’re very proud of what that work has achieved. Si, Soes, Sanj and the team have been working with some great people to find out who inspires them, to reveal the extraordinary in the ordinary. Please go to 3 Minute Heroes and take a look at some of the material they’ve created and feel free to nominate your own hero. The stories people have told us have ranged from the heartwarming to the heartbreaking and we have responded to them in a whole variety of ways.
On Saturday 16th April, at the Edge, we will be launching 3 Minute Heroes with an exhibition made in response to the stories we have collected through the project. To help to celebrate the unsung, a series of sonic installations, projections, performances and sculpture have been created by a team of artists using the stories and voices of the people we have worked with as inspiration. We’ve worked with extremely diverse groups on the project and it’s been wonderful hearing their tales of the people who inspire them, local heroes and people in their lives who make a difference. You’ll see in the exhibition just how extraordinary the ordinary is, the hidden gems that you walk by everyday – and that everybody can be somebody’s hero. Now, how did that song go? ‘You’ve got to search for the hero inside yourself’.
See you there or on the website
There’s loads coming up over the next couple of weeks, here at the Edge. While we at Friction recover from a triumphant Sonic Asylum (gory details soon) and work hard on 3MinuteHeroes and From You To Super Me, there’s festival madness on the horizon.
Firstly, a return visit from our friends The Nomadic Academy of Fools, [...]
There’s loads coming up over the next couple of weeks, here at the Edge. While we at Friction recover from a triumphant Sonic Asylum (gory details soon) and work hard on 3MinuteHeroes and From You To Super Me, there’s festival madness on the horizon.
Firstly, a return visit from our friends The Nomadic Academy of Fools, who’ll be presenting a veritable Festival of Foolishness -
Fools
And if that isn’t enough, Flatpack Festival are presenting two events on Friday 25th, Ra, Ra, Ra, an audio-visual celebration of the life and works of the late Sun Ra, and on Sunday 27th Brazilian keyboard wizard Gilberto Mauro will be accompanying some of his father’s film ( precursor event for ‘Espirito Brum’ – more exciting news about that, soon).
All these events are not directly connected to Friction, we are merely their humble hosts, but by hosting them, they get our seal of approval and we urge you to attend any or all of them.
See you at the Edge, then
So, while we deal with a number of technical issues around our promised podcast, in the meantime we’d like to let you know of some great stuff coming up at the Edge for March.
Firstly our next Sonic Asylum event, with another great International lineup:
We’re really excited about this one – particularly for us getting the [...]
So, while we deal with a number of technical issues around our promised podcast, in the meantime we’d like to let you know of some great stuff coming up at the Edge for March.
Firstly our next Sonic Asylum event, with another great International lineup:

We’re really excited about this one – particularly for us getting the Rev (‘The man they couldn’t corrupt’) out of semi-retirement will be a real pleasure – the man has been a great influence on us over the years, and we’re stoked that he’s coming to play his musical mind-games at the Edge. Coupled with a great lineup of music and sonic madness this promises to be the gig of the year (so far – wait until the next Sonic Asylum for us to top it).
After that we’ve got a return visit from our beloved Nomadic Academy of Fools from the 18th to the 28th of March – there’ll be workshops over both weekends, and performances in between, watch this space or check their site for details of what and when.
And we’re also hosting a couple of events during Flatpack Festival – confirmed for Friday 25th is Ra Ra Ra! – a celebration of music and film relating to the late, great Sun Ra and his orchestra – again check the Flatpack site for more details.
Put the 16th of April in your diaries while you’re here, we’ll be hosting the launch event of our 3 Minute Heroes project, which we’re doing as part of Hello Digital’s public participatory programme.
Phew! That’ll do for now, need to go and get the piano tuned!
Stay safe
Sort of. And second post of the day, weeee!
If you’re from the cultural industries or the public sector and you’re interested in projects that focus on particpation and engagement, intercultural dialogue or legacy, or an artist interested in international work or how interventions can work in differing cultures, then this is an event you should [...]
Sort of. And second post of the day, weeee!
If you’re from the cultural industries or the public sector and you’re interested in projects that focus on particpation and engagement, intercultural dialogue or legacy, or an artist interested in international work or how interventions can work in differing cultures, then this is an event you should not miss. As usual, the event is free (and unfunded, feel free to donate), refreshments will be available, and there’ll be a big, fat Q+A at the end which will go on for as long as the audience require, then retiring to the annexe (the Anchor public house and real ale emporium), for a ‘debrief’.
RSVP if you would like to attend, there’s a limited capacity and a lot of interest, first come, first served!
See you there.
Edit: We’ve just confirmed a visit by Diana Ivanova (Bulgaria) and Babak Salari (Iran), to present their project ‘My Street’, where they have been working in Cuba, documenting stories on the streets of that unique country – top recommendation from Friction, a great project, from some fantastic artists. My Streets will be presented at the Edge on 27th of Februaury, 2010 – full details next week.
And don’t forget to block out your diaries for our resident fools - from the 19th to 28th of March, Jonathan Kay and the Nomadic Academy of Fools will be in residence at the Edge for a series of workshops, performances and foolishness. This is the only appearance by the fools in the region this year, and so is not to be missed! Again we’ll be posting full details, workshop and performance times next week.
And a happy New Year to all our friends. As we rush headlong into another year, it’s always a good time to take stock, to reflect on the year before and how we build on our successes, and learn from our mistakes. 2009 was a landmark year for us, starting with one great project, and [...]
And a happy New Year to all our friends. As we rush headlong into another year, it’s always a good time to take stock, to reflect on the year before and how we build on our successes, and learn from our mistakes. 2009 was a landmark year for us, starting with one great project, and ending on another. This time last year, (2009 is already the past), we were putting the finishing touches to ‘I-land life’, installing our demi-boat into the Edge and working with the young people on the performance. We moved on to developing our Echoes from the Edge partnership with US artist Shannon Flattery, which was a great success, both because we made a really great piece of work together, but also because we learned a lot about working in a new way. Autumn saw our residency in South Africa, another great project and a learning curve like the north face of the Eiger, which we successfully conquered. In between we developed a number of smaller scale projects, interventions and performances, regular ‘Happy Artist’ social clubs at the Edge, and a very successful community arts apprenticeship scheme through Creative Alliance.
Here’s the postcards we made during our residency in Johannesburg – available at £3.50 a pack of five + P+P (all proceeds to George Khosi’s Boxing Club in Hillbrow, Johannesburg
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A busy year, for a change, but a good one.
So, what’s in store for 2010? We’re developing the next stage of our heritage project, continuing to map and archive oral histories in the areas of Digbeth, Deritend and Highgate, surrounding ‘HQ’, including undergoing formal oral history training – we’re interested in other, local people getting involved, so if you would like free training in the recording and archiving of oral histories, and would be prepared to volunteer some time in return, please contact us for further information.
We’re further developing the Edge as a venue, and have now put a steering group together and are currently seeking support and resources to enable a full programme of work to emerge. In March we are hosting Jonathan Kay and the Nomadic Academy of Fools who will be producing performances at the Edge, of their Richard II adaptation, as well as some of Mr Kays incredible, interactive performances. If you have ever experienced any of Jonathan’s work (he ‘does’ a mega show at Glastonbury every year), you’ll make sure you attend at least one of the shows (they’re all different and worth going again and again). As well as the shows, the Academy will be holding a number of workshops – having attended workshops with Jonathan years ago, the techniques and approaches he taught still very much come out in our work – I urge anyone interested in performance and improvisation to attend. Entrance to shows and workshop fees are by donation, but worth digging deep and spending big for, you are unlikely to feel ripped off whatever you pay! So as you can see, we like the fools and are very pleased to be hosting them. If you would like further information go to the Fool’s site and contact them directly.
Later in the year we’ll be announcing further projects, workshops and events at the Edge – as well as the new website where you’ll be able to keep up with all Edge-related shenanigans. We’ll be announcing more international adventures later in the year, starting in the Spring with a visit to Bulgaria including the Goat Milk Festival and another residency further afield in the Autumn, watch this space for further details.
Finally I’d just like to thank all the people who helped make 2009 such a momentous year for us, and wish them everything they wish for themselves in 2010 – in no particular order: Bev, Mark, Nicky, Nicola, Mitra, Sanj, Babis, Harry, Si, Ben, Rachel, Shannon, Anthea, Kyla, Zara, John, Noel, Shan, Magogo, Rhonda, Rob, Lester, Thomas and everyone we’ve worked with, played with, eaten with and hung out with during the year, thank you for being you, and, in the words of Ken Campbell, Skyward Ho!
We’re delirious (in more ways than one) to announce a forthcoming exhibition at the Edge as part of our ‘Close to the Edge’ programme. PHD will feature work from the Darknosis project. In their own words:
Peter Harry and Diane (PhD) will bring their varied talents to this project.Diane and Harry, both from a fine art [...]
We’re delirious (in more ways than one) to announce a forthcoming exhibition at the Edge as part of our ‘Close to the Edge’ programme. PHD will feature work from the Darknosis project. In their own words:
Peter Harry and Diane (PhD) will bring their varied talents to this project.Diane and Harry, both from a fine art background will do a bit of that.
Peter will move a lot of furniture about. Diane is a brilliant drawer so there’s going to be brilliant drawings. Harry is a well established (misplaced) humorous performance artist, so there will be curious performance artistry.
Peter will do something.
Diane has a firm grasp of her brief, so expect some of that.
- phd
Check out their website for further details, but be sure that they’re not lying when they say it won’t be just another art show, see you there.
So a very busy and emotional weekend here at the Edge, with serious highs and one massive low:
First up, we held our inaugral ‘Happy Artist’ social club on Friday. Happy Artist is our attempt to create a place for artists and their friends to meet and have fun -without any art in the mix! We [...]
So a very busy and emotional weekend here at the Edge, with serious highs and one massive low:
First up, we held our inaugral ‘Happy Artist’ social club on Friday. Happy Artist is our attempt to create a place for artists and their friends to meet and have fun -without any art in the mix! We liken it to the working men’s clubs of old – but obviously in our own way. A place to hang out, to socialise with other people who ‘get it’ and just to let your hair down with no agenda. We realised that a lot of the socialising we were doing with other artists happened at art launches or ‘private views’ (hate that term, so old fashioned), and we thought, would it not be nice just to meet up and hang out, without ignoring someone’s artwork in the process – so Happy Artist was born.

Hanging out with happy artists
Well, we had a scream! Highlights included Harry Palmer’s electropop disco (it’s always ‘Hammertime’), impromptu semaphore dancing workshops, Lee losing his mind (and trousers), Justin from the Culture Corporation awarding Ben Waddington his Happiest Artist Award (a hastily improvised Anthony Gormless sculpture), Harry’s Michael Jackson moonwalking tribute, and the sheer joy of a roomful of rictus-like grins plastered on everyone’s face. It really was ‘like it used to be’ (and can be again!). Next Happy Artist Social Club is Friday 28th August – see you there.

And so to the low. As we hope you are aware, the Edge is situated on Cheapside, an industrial street in deepest Digbeth. For hundreds of years the area has been home to artisans, makers and engineers, creating a host of objects to go from the ‘Toyshop of the world’ out to the rest of the planet. The area has been a hotbed of manufacturing and creativity, giving the world a host of new inventions and products from the felt tip pen to eggless custard. Many of these inventions, and the creativity behind them, have been nurtured, not in large factories with corporate backing, but from small workshops, little two or three-man operations, working in tandem and sharing IPR – all stuff our inward-looking creative industries could learn from.
On Saturday, our neighbours, RW Cresswells, closed their doors for the final time after thirty years in the unit, and several generations of engineers working in Digbeth. Victims of the recession, they were unable to continue in the current financial climate. This is a tragedy, for us (they were great neighbours), but also for Birmingham, its heritage and history – their like will never be seen again. This opens up all kinds of questions about the future – who will retain those engineering skills, what will Birmingham’s economy actually produce in the future, what happens when all the stuff we have breaks down and there is nobody left to fix it?
We’re extremely sad to see them leave, but have organised regular meetings where we will meet and record some of the myriad stories they have about the city and it’s engineering industries. We’ve also agreed to take on John’s task of feeding the feral cats in the area! John and Terry, we’re sad to see you go and wish you all the best in the future.
Babak in action
We had a fantastic visit by photographer Babak Salari at the weekend. On Saturday he showed some of his photographs on the big screen at the Edge, and gave a very inspiring talk alongside. It was great to see work with such strong political content and much lively debate was sparked. Babak showed [...]

Babak in action
We had a fantastic visit by photographer Babak Salari at the weekend. On Saturday he showed some of his photographs on the big screen at the Edge, and gave a very inspiring talk alongside. It was great to see work with such strong political content and much lively debate was sparked. Babak showed two series of photographs, portraits of gay and transvestite Cubans and of Afghani people displaced by thirty years of war. The work is very powerful, I feel, partly because the images are almost matter of fact and you know you are looking at something real. Babak told stories of meeting a mother who was forced to sell a child to prevent her other children from starving, and of fifty year olds who turned out to be thirty. Rhonda Wilson spoke at the end, obviously moved by the work, and talked passionately about the need for political content in art, and the current dearth of politically motivated artwork on the scene. I have to say I heartily agree, we’ve been in a long-lasting bubble of apolitical art, where it seems that artists egos and bank balances seem of more importance than commenting, reflecting and, hopefullly, influencing the cultural and social landscape. A lot of the art I see these days is quite nice, and often well presented, but doesn’t really say a lot, often clever, rarely intelligent. I always feel that experiencing a genuine piece of art you come away from it changed in some way. Be honest, when did that last happen to you? Anyway, I digress, but would like to thank Rhonda for her always valuable input to the evening and urge you all to check out the wonderful Rhubarb festival of the image this weekend. We’d also like to thank Babak hugely for taking the time to come and visit with us, I certainly felt changed by seeing his incredibly moving images and look forward to more Babak in the future. We had a great time and whizzed him all over Brum in the 48 hours he spent with us, taking in the Obamas People exhibition, seeing Vanley Burkes images and giving him the full ‘curry and chips’ tour of Brum.
We also want to thank the audience for coming along at such short notice (we only had a week’s warning of Babak’s visit). As usual the audience was rather more ‘lively’, shall we say than one might expect at an artist’s talk and included the usual hugely diverse group ranging from 1 year old to 70, and including our only canine member Ed!
For those of you ‘in the know’, don’t forget Happy Artist social club at the Edge this Friday…
"@krishgm because he's morally bankrupt?"16 hours ago"@SarahABGee V.gd thanks stonkin' coupla years ahead, do u fancy a coffee and view from our wonderful roof top 'Edge'? great plans afoot..x"yesterday"@getgood @TalkAboutLocal @karenstrunks you've the same photo face I make when photo-ing people Karen! miss you Nicky. Sandra x"yesterdayProject Links
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