Posts with the label arts
Showing posts with label arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arts. Show all posts
Tuesday, 5 November 2024
Wales Millennium Centre Launches Digital-First Venue to Revolutionise Creative Arts in Wales
Celebrating its 20th anniversary, Wales Millennium Centre (WMC) has unveiled plans for a pioneering digital-first performance venue, set to transform Wales' digital and immersive arts landscape. This new 550-seat venue will be WMC's first stand-alone addition since its 2004 opening by Queen Elizabeth II, reinforcing its role as a landmark for the creative industries. Located opposite WMC in Cardiff Bay, this cutting-edge space will feature production, rehearsal, and training facilities, empowering artists to explore storytelling through innovative technology.
Over the next five years, the venue aims to engage over 10,000 participants in creative training and expand WMC’s youth programs, offering young people invaluable opportunities to develop skills in digital and immersive arts. The strategic placement of the venue is part of the "Cardiff Live" development, which will incorporate community areas, exhibition halls, and new offices for Cardiff Council, making it a central hub for digital arts in Wales and a leading venue in the UK.
Graeme Farrow, WMC’s Chief Creative and Content Officer, emphasised the venue’s impact:
This new space will continue our work at the intersection of technology and the arts... allowing artists to explore and experiment with multimedia approaches to storytelling. Its flexibility ensures artists will always have access to the cutting-edge resources they need to push boundaries.”
WMC’s latest venture builds on its success with Bocs, an immersive XR (extended reality) venue launched in 2022 that attracted over 31,000 visitors and featured award-winning immersive experiences. From virtual rave scenes to powerful narratives like Colored: The Unsung Life of Claudette Colvin, Bocs showcased how digital arts can engage and inspire diverse audiences. WMC also recently showcased Invisible Ocean, an immersive production that attracted 7,500 attendees in just six weeks, highlighting the growing demand for digital storytelling.
As the official Welsh partner in the UK-wide Immersive Arts consortium, WMC will further research emerging technologies such as motion capture and virtual reality tools. Through this partnership, WMC will help distribute £3.6 million in grant funding to UK-based artists, breaking down barriers for those keen to explore immersive storytelling. Additionally, WMC will launch an artist award in early 2025, granting a year-long development opportunity to an artist with an exceptional vision for digital arts.
As a cornerstone of Welsh culture since its founding, WMC has hosted 23 million visitors, generated £218 million in ticket sales, and staged 7,800 performances, including Hamilton, Nye, and the annual Llais arts festival. Each year, WMC provides free creative programs for 4,000 young people and has supported 60 technical apprentices. Its ongoing transformation is a testament to the belief that creativity is essential to the well-being and prosperity of everyone in Wales.
Cllr Russell Goodway from Cardiff Council says:
This project is a big part of our ambition for Cardiff Live... It epitomises our approach of supporting production as well as performance, allowing us to develop our cultural offerings for Cardiff’s communities.”
Cardiff Council has awarded the build contract to Goldbeck Construction, and the venue is expected to open as a central feature of Cardiff Bay’s cultural expansion.
Friday, 8 April 2022
Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear | Victoria and Albert Museum | Review
Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear
Victoria and Albert Museum
Reviewed on Thursday 7th April 2022 by Olivia Mitchell
★★★★
In its current exhibition, the Victoria and Albert Museum celebrates the growth and evolution of male aesthetics with Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear. A vast collection of outfits from throughout history and interspersed with paintings, photographs, sculptures and video clips to offer up a look at how masculine fashion has changed and moved with the times. It looks at the times when the 'traditional' or 'accepted' view of masculinity has been challenged and how these deviations have paved the way for move fluidity and freedom in fashion.
The exhibition is displayed in a fairly structure free way, allowing you to make your own path and experience it however you wish. The loose structure is organised by trends and themes, much like the fashion industry itself. Of course we know that trends repeat themselves but it's interesting to see it laid out physically before you. As you enter you are greeted with naked bodies, specifically those of Apollo and Hercules, the original male ideals of beauty. The section points out how anatomical research and a desire to look a certain way, led to the understanding of wearing more tightly fitting or tailored pieces to showcase the body.
As mentioned, the showcased cyclical nature of fashion is key to this exhibition with almost every style returning in some way, at some point. It's interesting how the original, puffy shirt worn during the regency era has yet to make a comeback despite corsets coming back with a vengeance; perhaps the new season of Bridgerton will take us back to those roots!
It's also great to see how small changes and reinterpretations to a classic outfit can have such a huge impact. For example: the suit. A staple in wardrobes for most people, the way in which celebrities have elevated it is well showcased. The addition of leather trousers may seems simple but when you see it in the context of Fashioning Masculinities it's quite amazing how it set off a domino for development and freedom.
The main aspect of the exhibition is how men's fashion is evolving so much now in terms of gender fluidity, with some of the most eye-catching outfits being those from the brilliant designer Harris Reed as well as those at the very end: Billy Porter's tuxedo dress worn at the 2019 Oscars and the iconic blue Gucci dress worn by Harry Styles on the cover of US Vogue. Both these outfits sparked many conversations, even for those who don't follow either the stars or the fashion.
Sponsored by Gucci, a lot of the exhibition is indulgent and luxurious but it's a real eye opener on how high street fashion keeps up with trends and how deviations in the norm can have effects which reach all of us eventually without us even realising. Fashioning Masculinities is by no means an exhaustive exploration but it certainly whets your appetite to find out more and shines light on how diversity and uniqueness can be captured through male clothing.
Fashioning Masculinities: The Art of Menswear runs at the V&A Museum until 6th November 2022
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