May 21 2009
Birmingham has a new Cabinet member of the Council for Culture – Cllr Martin Mullaney from the Lib Dems, who began his post this Monday, 18 May 2009. So on Wednesday, we met at the Museum and Art Gallery and I took him round the show. So far the project has raised almost £100k in PR for the City of Birmingham, BMAG, all the sponsors, Rhubarb and Flowers and of course Nadav… Not bad for a project done in record time on the smallest imaginable amount of money and a group of supporters who generously gave time and services. And so far, in circulation figures, the newspapers and magazines its been published in have gone to six million people…. Never mind the internet….
Cllr Mullaney is an interesting fish. He runs a comedy club, rides a Lambretta, owns a Parka and has set up a club for young people who are tagged and use grafitti as a form of communication. More, he listens to what people are telling him. So what way will the arts go now, in terms of what is and isn’t supported by the Council. Watch this space and other Birmingham blogs for more on what he’s up to.
May 21 2009
As Lorna-Mary was missing her plane, I was firstly the gallery guide for some of the students visiting the show before attending the talk, and then transformed myself into saleswoman for last minute ticket buyers, whilst having fascinating conversations with gallery visitors. Matthew Flowers saved me and we set up a laptop in the reception of the Art School at BIAD, in Margaret Street, to look at the work of some upcoming and potentially huge talented photographers from the West Midlands. Whilst directing people to the toilets and the cafe…. Nadav, Zoe and Ed our intern, who had made the rather wonderful slide show for the talk, began transforming the lecture theatre into a stills cinema, all dark and mysterious, where the audience could see us but we couldn’t see them, only able to see one another. So for two rather wonderful hours, we just sat and talked our way through Nadav’s early years, his incredible portraits, self generated projects – which I called Quiet and Unease, and of course the Obama series. Since we have had a couple of requests to do it again in other parts of the country…. On that day Ed and I said goodbye to Zoe and Nadav at the station and set off for refreshments at Eat. It was a bit of a sad moment for us all, but we know that this is only the beginning of a relationship which will continue forever.
May 21 2009
Of course, it had to happen. The post reception party at Must in Newhall Street was enjoyed by all, with amazing Dim Sum and the biggest wine glasses in the world. All that adrenalin and energy, mixed up with the rather wonderful wine, saw some pretty extraordinary sights as people got a bit fuzzy around the edges. But also some quite extraordinary conversations took place as the Brummies met the Londoners and enchanted one another. Some people said amazing things about the project – Francis Hodgson, Art Critic for the Financial Times, told us that the show was one of the most significant of the decade…. We left as the effects of the combined stimuli became obvious, and as Lorna-Mary had to get a plan to Krakow at 5 am the next morning, which of course she missed….. The party continued at the Radisson until the early hours and everyone but everyone was destined for some kind of hangover the next day…. Just in time for the In Conversation event….
May 21 2009
Around a hundred people gathered together with the Obama portraits at the Artists Reception for Nadav on Thursday 14 May. I can honestly say that everyone was smiling for most of the time and I have never before enjoyed such generosity of spirit between so many different people. Lorna-Mary hosted Cllr Ray Hassall and Director of the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery – Rita McLean, for their welcoming speeches. I had the honour of introducing Matthew Flowers and Nadav Kander and then I went on for a bit about the collective will behind this project. More than any other project I’ve ever worked on, there has been an enthusiastic and growing support from a broad range of people, all wishing us well. To be amidst that sort of energy has been the driving force behind the success of the show, which is packed out everyday, with people going into the Marketing Birmingham Information office at the Rotunda, asking for Obama flyers and the way to the Museum and Art Gallery. Everyday we have notes or calls about the show. The sponsors, partners and individual patrons were all there, along with all those people who willed this to happen. And my Mom and Dad, the Rhubarb, Flowers and Kander teams. It was magical. And then…..
May 21 2009
Well we know that it has arrived as we sent it with some tracking device which allows you to follow its journey. So now of course we want to know where it is in the White House and who in fact has read it. Though it was addressed to Eugene Kang, we hope that by now its been read by President Obama and that soon we will have a reply…. Its still as exciting as when we sent it but of course we know he is busy so it could be months before that letter drops through the Rhubarb letterbox.
May 21 2009
Dreadful I know but haven’t blogged since Nadav visited and berating myself for being slack. I now realise why its done on pretty much a daily basis as its hard now to remember all those small things that have happened since 9 May. Of course the bigger things will be developed in the following posts so that people following this blog can catch up with the latest on the things outstanding.
May 03 2009
As if by magic, the arrival of Nadav and his wife Nicole, on Thursday 30 April, at Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, coincided with the 100 days of Obama… It also coincided with a large group of students from Matthew Boulton, a photographer from the Birmingham Post, 40 schoolchildren and some foul weather. So we all found ourselves answering questions about the show and the portraits and then went out and dodged the rain as we all ran around the city, doing the things we had to do whilst Nadav was in town, stopping for some shopping at the Custard Factory and a lunch in two parts at the Ikon gallery. In the brief moment we had a ten minute break, on arriving back at BMAG to await BBC Asian Network, we all became briefly obsessed with imitating the portraits and did our own photoshoot, some of which will be revealed a little later in this story. We did of course, end the day with Nadav and Nicole, in a curry house on the Ladypool Road….
The verdict from Nadav was good, he enjoyed seeing his show, and his picture of him almost as Eugene Kang was published in the Birmingham Post on Friday 1st May. Watch for the same paper on Tuesday next, when Arts Editor Terry Grimley tells us what he thinks of Obama’s People….