AUGUST – DECEMBER 2009
AUGUST 21: LAUNCH EVENT – OUTDOOR CYCLE-POWERED CINEMA
ANNEXINEMA in collaboration with THE MAGNIFICENT REVOLUTION will present an outdoor cycle-powered-cinema beside the River Trent underneath Clifton Bridge. Visitors will encounter a late summer evening of artist’s films, performance and projections. Film Programme includes: George Barber, Tony Hill, Emily Richardson, John Smith and Margaret Tait.
REBECCA BEINART presents ‘Field Kitchen’, a mobile project commissioned to investigate the botanical locale of Nottingham. In a series of trips on foot, by bike and aboard a narrowboat-turned-floating-kitchen, participants will experience the techniques of a forager and prepare a meal from Nottingham's trees and hedgerows.
S MARK GUBB presents ‘Pura Vida’, inspired by the Costa Rican phrase meaning ‘Good Life’. A series of writings by K Punk (AKA Mark Fisher), Colin Perry and Chris Fite-Wassilak will be featured on city centre billboards and accompanied by texts created by 30 members of the Nottingham community, distributed throughout the city on flyers. This work will be available for sale as a limited edition box set of prints comprising all 3 texts and 30 flyers.
JOHN NEWLING presents ‘The Clearing,’ a project where he will collate significant historical and political documents relating to the history of the hinterlands of the city and reproduce them to become fodder to feed hydroponically grown Beech trees. Visitors will be able to visit the laboratory to see the artist’s experiment first hand.
MARK HARASIMOWICZ creates small-scale drawings, postcards and collages that explore and combine the appropriation of architectural forms with flora and fauna through geometrically aligned fragile sketches and semi-abstracted forms. Harasimowicz will re-interpret the Hinterland visual identity by drawing on inspiration from cycling trips beside the River Trent. These works will be available for sale as a set of limited edition prints, as a commissioned Hinterland bag and in the Hinterland Publication.
Inspired by two 16mm films made in 1978 by renowned British filmmaker Peter Greenaway, visitors are invited to take part in a walk through the Attenborough Nature Reserve with an Ornithology expert followed by a screening of Greenaway’s films ‘A Walk Through H’ and ‘Water Wrackets’.
The evolving relationships between artists, the changing climate and new responsibilities will be held at Broadway Media Centre, Nottingham. RICHARD GRAYSON (artist, writer, curator), JONATHAN GRIFFIN (Frieze Magazine), LATITUDES (Max Andrews & Mariana Cánepa Luna), WALLACE HEIM (www.social-sculpture.org) and JOY SLEEMAN (writer and curator) have been invited to question the responsibilities of artists when creating work in the public realm.
To co-inside with the Hinterland Symposium, a film exploring contemporary and abandoned industrial spaces by MARK HARASIMOWICZ & TRISTAN HESSING and commissioned by Hinterland, will be screened at One Thoresby Street.
THE READING ROOM is a regular evening event for individuals interested in discussing short texts and pieces of writing that inform and enhance the understanding of Contemporary art. To accompany the current Hinterland commissions, events will cover texts by ROBERT SMITHSON, LUCY LIPPARD, MARTIN HEIDEGGER, MIWON KWON and CLAIRE BISHOP.
Please see website for dates and details.
Hinterland will be releasing 3 Publications that document previous Hinterland events and exhibitions since 2006 featuring; Nicholas Alfrey, Neil Cummings, Mark Excell, Peter Greenaway, S Mark Gubb, Mark Harasimowicz, Sophie Hope, John Newling, Sian Stammers, Rob Sweere, and Jonathan Willett.
Hinterland is funded by Arts Council of England. Recent projects have been evolved through consultation with The Big Track, Greater Nottingham Partnership and Nottingham Contemporary director Alex Farquharson. Artist consultants included Neil Cummings, Sophie Hope, John Newling and Marcus Coates.
Phone: +44 (0) 7786 257213
Email: [email protected]
Event Bookings: +44 (0) 7914 504660












































Comments