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By: Art Not Oil
Date: Fri, 05/08/2011 - 1:00am

http://blog.platformlondon.org/content/coming-soon-tate-tate-audio-tour

29 July 2011 - For Immediate release 

Selected artists for guerrilla sound art commission announced
 ‘Tate a Tate’ an audio tour in response to BP-sponsorship of Tate to be launched in Autumn 2011
 
The artists that will be creating a major new sound installation inside Tate institutions have been announced. ‘Tate a Tate’ is a site-specific audio tour in three parts that addresses the increasingly controversial issue of BP-sponsorship of UK’s premier arts institution. The three conceptually different works are being designed to be experienced in Tate Britain, Tate Modern and on the Tate riverboat that transports people between the two institutions.
 
The artists that will be working on the project are:
 

Ansuman Biswas (Tate Britain)
Phil England and Jim Welton (Tate Modern)
Isa Suarez, Mark McGowan and Mae Martin (Tate riverboat)

 
The announcement of the new work comes at a time when Tate is coming under increasing amounts of criticism for its sponsorship links with the oil giant, with art-interventions on the subject being featured in 2011 on Channel 4 News, the Guardian and on the front page of the Financial Times.
 
Kevin Smith from arts/activist/research group PLATFORM said:
 
 “The rooms full of amazing art in Tate galleries are creating a disconnect between the discrete little BP sunflower logos, and the horrific impacts that the company has on the climate, and communities and ecosystems around the world. This unsanctioned sound installation inside Tate galleries will provide visitors with a new experience of the presence of BP within those spaces.”
Sheena Swain from art-interventionists Liberate Tate said:
 
“BP has embarked on its first major advertising campaign since the Gulf of Mexico catastrophe, and it has chosen to feature its sponsorship programme in these adverts instead of its primary product. They are now focusing on advertising their own sponsorship. In the adverts sportspeople are seen in galleries and museums and in one case one of Britain's top athletes is seen running on a pristine beach. BP’s sponsorship of arts institutions like Tate is clearly not an act of philanthropy, it’s a very cheap piece of PR to detract attention away from the devastation it is causing around the world.”  
 
The audio tour, which will be launched in Autumn, will be downloadable from a website onto MP3 players and smart phones. Listeners will be able to move about the Tate galleries and hear this alternative tour. The completion of ‘Tate a Tate’ will be celebrated in a special Liberate Tate performance of the sound works.
 
The work has been commissioned by the groups PLATFORM, Art Not Oil and Liberate Tate, and has been supported through a crowd funding initiative, through the Artists Project Earth and Network for Social Change foundations and through Arts Council England.
 
For more info/comment, call 07847 830164 or email kevin@platformlondon.org
 
***** ENDS ******
 
Notes to the editors
 
PLATFORM (www.platformlondon.org) works across disciplines for social and ecological justice. It combines the transformatory power of art with the tangible goals of campaigning, the rigour of in-depth research with the vision to promote alternative futures. Contact: info@platformlondon.org
 
Liberate Tate (http://liberatetate.wordpress.com/) is an art collective exploring the role of creative intervention in social change dedicated to taking creative disobedience against Tate until it drops its oil company funding. Contact: liberatetate@gmail.com
 
Art Not Oil (www.artnotoil.org.uk) encourages artists – and would-be artists – to create work that explores the damage that companies like BP and Shell are doing to the planet, and the role art can play in counteracting that damage. Contact info@artnotoil.org.uk.
 

Ansuman Biswas was born in Calcutta and trained in the UK. He has an international practice encompassing music, film, live art, installation, writing and theatre. He is interested in hybridity and interdisciplinarity – often working between science, art and industry, for instance, or between music, dance and visual art. Ansuman has worked with the Royal Opera House and the National Theatre as well the Guangddong Museum of Modern Dance and the India International Centre. He has shown work at Tate Modern, The South London Gallery, The Whitechapel Gallery, the ICA, the Edinburgh Festival, and also in Johannesburg,  San Francisco, New York, Delhi, Rangoon, The Amazon, and even in zero gravity!

 www.ansuman.com

 Environmental and current affairs journalist Phil England writes for The Independent, New Internationalist, The Ecologist and Variant. Between 2003 and 2009 he produced over 70 hours of radio about climate change for Resonance FM and numerous other radio stations around the globe (archived at www.climateradio.org).  Throughout the 1990s he worked for London Musicians Collective where, in 1998, he co-founded the UK's first arts radio station Resonance FM as part of John Peel's Meltdown Festival at the South Bank Centre.
Sound and radio artist Jim Welton has been commissioned by Austrian and Dutch national broadcasters and was selected as artist-in-residence for the Deep Wireless Festival in Toronto in 2007. He has been engaged as a sound designer by The Burns Museum and the Science Museum. He produced a weekly half hour show for Resonance FM entitled The Harmon E Phraisyar Show that ran for five years. Welton is the subject of a documentary by Luke Fowler entitled, “The Way Out”. His musical work - under aliases such as Amos, L Voag and Xentos "Fray" Bentos - includes work with The Homosexuals, Amos & Sarah, Milk From Cheltenham and Die Trip Computer Die.
 
Isa Suarez is a composer, songwriter, performer and sound-artist. Her work addresses socio-political issues and suggests feelings and atmospheres. Her recent film soundtracks include: Carpe Diem/Canada; Paths Through Utopias/France/UK; Ollie Kepler’s Expanding Purple World/U.K. She has exhibited at The Whitechapel Art Gallery, Tate Britain, South London Gallery, Barbican Arts Centre and shown public and site-specific works in U.K and worldwide: Taxi Voices/Cape 09 Art Biennale/South Africa; Río Platense/Europe, USA, Argentina; And While London Burns, The Human Rights Jukebox, The De-normalize Cell/U.K. She has collaborated with Amnesty International, Etoy, Creative Routes, Transglobal Underground, The Revolutionary Dub Warriors.


www.isasuarez.com
 
Mae Martin is an award-winning Canadian stand-up comedian. Her work is a unique blend of songs and stand up comedy that mines her neurotic visions of the impending apocalypse, her extremely strong feelings about certain celebrities, and her adventures in androgyny. NOW Magazine recently praised her “smart, deadpan observations”, and Xtra Magazine called her “witty and wickedly funny.”

www.maemartin.com
 

Mark McGowan aka The Artist Taxi Driver, is a British artist working in the expanding field of art and is an associate lecturer at Chelsea College of Art and Design

"McGowan’s work takes the ghost of performance art and uses it to haunt the mass media, and the art world, with their own bad faith." JJ Charlesworth

"Mark McGowan is the pre-eminent performance artist working in Britain today." Will Self.

http://markmcgowan.org/

Tags: Archive
By: Art Not Oil
Date: Fri, 05/08/2011 - 1:00am

Spotted out and about in London town this week:

Tags: Archive
By: Art Not Oil
Date: Fri, 22/07/2011 - 1:00am

All photos by Peter Marshall: http://mylondondiary.co.uk

This from the UK Tar Sands Network:

'Dearest brethren,Monday saw extraordinary scenes as we joined Reverend Billy and the Church of Earthalujah to exorcise the beast that is BP from the Tate Modern Turbine Hall. Filling the huge space inside the former power station with singing, clapping and chanting, crowds of people joined the Rev in a piece of protest performance art that was at times sombre, at times raucous, at times oily – and ultimately incredibly powerful. Watch the film (above) to find out what the hell we’re talking about.'

www.no-tar-sands.org

************

This from Rev central:

'At the Tate Modern in London, British Petroleum seeks to capture our imagination by hitching its BP sunflower logo to the Miro exhibit. The artistic experience is then reduced to a dangerously passive consumerism. Only the Earth itself, a kind of freak storm inside, can free us from such a damaging lie.

We tried to let all the victimized life of BP come through us on Monday. We prayed, screamed, circle-danced, rubbed out the logo as the police mused.... Amen! May the fossil fuel companies find our interruptions are weekly, daily, hourly -- as constant as fabulous bad weather!'

www.revbilly.com

(NB. It's true that BP doesn't directly sponsor the Miro exhibition, but it supports the Tate brand, so therein lies the connection...)

And in more caffeinous detail:

http://www.revbilly.com/chatter/blog/2011/26/the-exorcism-of-tate-modern-caffeinated-at-40000-ft

Some media...

Evening Standard:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/culture/2011/jul/19/arts-diary-bp-tate-malick

See also: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/blog/2011/jul/19/reverend-billy-tate-modern-bp


Reverend Billy and The Church of Earthalujah invite you to a service at the Tate Modern Turbine Hall on Monday 18 July, 5.30.

An exorcism of the evil spirit of BP, brought to you by Liberate Tate, UK Tar Sands Network, Rising Tide, Art Not Oil and Climate Rush...

Brothers and sisters, a dark beast lurks within the bosom of one of our most cherished arts institutions. While good-hearted, god-fearing, gallery goers glory in the miracle of art, the beast below is encircling the planet with its oily tentacles, destroying righteous communities, poisoning God’s beauteous creations, and bringing us all ever closer to the climate apocalypse.

And the name of that beast is BP. For 20 long years, BP has embedded its foulness deep within the Tate, using the fair face of the arts to mask the stench of its true nature.

On Monday 18 July, join Reverend Billy and & The Church of Earthalujah, as we lay hands on the Tate Modern, and cast out the evil demon of BP’s oil sponsorship.

The Reverend Billy & The Church of Earthalujah will also be performing in London on the Sunday evening at Conway Hall

Info here: http://revbilly.com/events/earthalujah-tour/london

*Reverend Billy and The Church of Earthalujah *

THE CHURCH OF EARTHALUJAH featuring Reverend Billy and the 35-voice Stop Shopping Gospel Choir is part theater piece, part church service, part performance art and wholly inspirational. Family friendly but big bank deadly, The Church of Earthalujah condemns the corporate exploiters and polluters of the world to the Lake of Hellfire - especially the ones that spew CO2 through mountaintop removal, hydro-fracking, super malls and shipping sweatshop products long distances with with fossil fuel-burning engines. We believe that the fires and droughts and quakes and typhoons are not natural disasters, but shout-outs from this big living thing we’re a part of. The message is loud and clear when we learn to put our ears to the dirt:

www.revbilly.com

Rev. Billy Tate Modern London 18th July 2011
Reverend Billy leads mass exorcism in Tate Modern Turbine Hall over 'taint' of BP sponsorship
Tags: Archive