Fancy Your Own Studio In Somerset House? Applications Open To Artists

Somerset House,Artists studios

Somerset House Studios is a new experimental workspace within Somerset House connecting around 300 artists, makers, and thinkers with audiences.  Located inside the former Inland Revenue offices, the Studios are a platform for the development of new creative projects and collaboration, promoting work that pushes bold ideas, engages with urgent issues and pioneers new technologies. The Studios are also home to Makerversity, Europe’s most exciting community of emergent makers.  

Somerset House studios are today launching Somerset House Studios, a new artist space available to 25 emerging artists and makers. Located inside Somerset House’s former Inland Revenue offices, it aims to meet the changing creative needs of today’s artists and address the acute shortage of affordable and secure studio space, which has seen an accelerating exodus of artists from London due to high cost of rents in the city.

36,000 sq ft of space located in former Inland Revenue offices will assist 35 shared and solo occupancy studio, rehearsal and project spaces, which will accommodate around 100 artists. Somerset House Studios is also home to Makerversity, a workspace for professional makers with cutting-edge workshops, which was born in 2013 with backing from Somerset House. In total, the initiative will enable the work of over 300 artists, makers and thinkers in the heart of one of the world’s most creative cities. Reflecting Somerset House as a centre of contemporary culture with a focus on cross-disciplinary work, the residents will cover all forms, including visual art, music and composition, performance, dance and live art, fiction and non-fiction, fashion, film and those working at the intersection of art and technology.  A pilot scheme over the past few months has established the project and now a further 25 will be selected through an open application process, launching on 26 October 2016. applications available on the website.

So far fashion designers Gareth Pugh and Charles Jeffrey, musicians Anna Meredith and LoneLady, visual artists Christian Marclay, Katie Paterson and Larry Achiampong, Internet artist LaTurbo Avedon, experimental architecture studio Minimaforms, performance artists Project O, writer Juliet Jacques and Forest Fringe co-director Deborah Pearson. They will be joined by up to 25 new arrivals in 2017, who will be

In addition, 8 dedicated event and exhibition rooms will host a new strand of programming driven by the Studios, including work produced on site, to some of the 3.2 million people who already visit Somerset House every year.

Jonathan Reekie, Director of Somerset House, said: “We believe that by giving over space to some of the best artists, makers, and thinkers in the centre of the city, we will be doing three vitally important things. “Firstly, we will be making a new kind of space that is needed to support the practice of today’s artists, who are thinking and working in very different ways across artistic disciplines. Secondly, we feel strongly that artistic talent should not be marginalised and driven out of the city, but has a place in one of London’s iconic buildings. Thirdly we want the brightest new creative voices to be experienced by a bigger audience. “We want Somerset House Studios to be a vital and vibrant landmark for Somerset House and London’s artists and audiences.”

Offering residencies for a focused period of artistic and professional development of up to two and a half years, it will champion a diverse community who pioneer experimentation, provocation, and collaboration, and fully represent the arts in the UK today. The Studios rental will be calculated using a base rent equivalent to the London average for artist workspace rate, as identified by the Mayor of London in 2014. With a commitment to invest in the future of the UK’s leading artists, Somerset House’s subsidies and long lease on the site will provide security to the Studios residents.

To celebrate the launch of Somerset House Studios, a free exhibition will feature work by some of the first Studios residents. Open to the public from 27th October to 6th November, Studio 01 will explore the practices and concerns of some the UK’s brightest creative talent who are now based on site at Somerset House. Covering themes of behaviour, identity, and construction in the virtual and physical world, highlights include artist avatar LaTurbo Avedon’s virtual nightclub and fashion designer Gareth Pugh’s sculptural installation of The Tempest’s Sycorax to mark the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare’s death.

Inés Cámara Leret, an artist who turns DNA into tangible objects, will show her Memory Stone imprinted with participants’ breathes, and design practice Superflux will present a fictional court case Dynamic Genetics vs. Mann, whose suite of evidence set in a laboratory imagines the implications posed by a world of mandatory health insurance, genetic risk profiling and backstreet gene-fixing. Studio 01 will additionally comprise works from Larry Achiampong, Memo Akten, Charles Jeffrey Loverboy, Minimaforms, Deborah Pearson, Erica Scourti and Werkflow. Further details of the Somerset House Studios public programme will be announced in November 2016. Somerset House Trust is grateful to supporters of the Studios including Westminster City Council, Garfield Weston Foundation, Foyle Foundation and Sir Siegmund Warburg’s Voluntary Settlement.

Somerset House Studios residents currently include: Aisha Zia,Anna Meredith,Buckley Williams, Caroline Williams, Charles Jeffrey, Chloe Lamford,Christian Marclay,Deborah Pearson, Eloise Hawser,Erica Scourti,Estela Oliva, Gareth Pugh, Graham Dunning, Inés Cámara  Leret, Jennifer Walshe, Jessica Rinland,  Juliet Jacque,  Katie Paterson, Larry Achiampong, LaTurbo Avedon, LoneLady, Makerversity, Matthew Plummer,Fernandez,Mel Brimfield, Memo Akten, Mind the Film, Minimaforms, Paul Purgas, Phoebe Boswell, Project O, Strange Telemetry, Superflux, Unmade, Workflow.

Visit Rodin and Dance: The Essence of Movement at The Courtauld Gallery until 20 January 2017

 

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