The Marcus Project has been an opportunity for one member of the Project of the Stars team to use a MediaBox bursary to build a team of film makers at his school. They have written, directed, filmed and edited a short film about power and corruption. This has been good progression for Cameron, who had the support of Mat Johns again, but took on more responsibility for the direction of the film. He and the others, Matt and Dom, are now working towards their Silver Arts Award.
Full Arts Programme
Our arts programme f has the following priorities:
Arts and Well-being:
Participatory arts projects with disabled adults; people with long-term medical conditions; people experiencing mental distress; elders in community and residential settings.
For more details click on Project eARTh and Creative Wellbeing.
Youth Arts Programme:
Projects to find new opportunities for young people to get involved in creative activity across the High Peak.
For more details about our current
“Youth Arts” projects click here
Children and Families:
Projects that arise out of changing and emerging local and community needs.
This includes our yurt based projects summer, and a current early years project, ‘For The Love of Books’.
For more details about our current
community projects click here
Please contact us if you are interested to hear more about about our current projects.
Either email mail@highpeakarts.org
or phone 01663 744516
Magazine Project
Our NEW Magazine project has just finished and we will be publishing the printed and online edition of the Magazine soon.
Watch this space !
Summer Stroll CD
Art work to enjoy
We have made an oak bench and living willow arbour in the new wildlife garden at Granby Road Park, Fairfield, for all to use. A second bench is in the Glossop Mental Health Project Garden for their members and their neighbours’ use.
To listen to our delightful Summer Stroll CD of music and poetry,
click on the image to the right.
For your own copy, call Alison on 01663 744516.
Click here for more details about our human sundial project that we completed in July 2011.
Hope Valley Music Making
Following a successful bid to the Foundation for Youth Music, Hope Valley College worked with High Peak Community Arts on a two year programme inspired by the celebration of the school’s 50th anniversary.
Phase 1 ran from January to May 2009 and worked collaboratively with a grant given by Performing Rights Society Foundation to commission Ornette Clennon in a new composition to celebrate the school’s 50th Anniversary. He worked with the Choir and Big Band to develop a work of three movements, which uses their ideas and allows for key parts to improvise sections of their input. The piece, “Tell me wha’ gwan, blood”, was performed at the National Schools Competition, 3rd April and the school’s 50th Anniversary Concert, 22nd May 2009.
Phase 2 identified a number of pupils from across the school who were interested in learning to lead groups themselves. Initially there was a taster day in June 2009 for anyone interested to find out more about the training. This was followed by three full training days to explore the techniques for leading groups, the creative content to be used and how to address practically the issues of the Code of Practice, promoted by Youth Music. From this training there emerged two lead trainees and up to nine assistant trainees, who formed two teams going out to the Primary Schools of the feeding cluster.
Phase 3 started around Christmas 2009 when the teams ran after school sessions in three primary schools; Edale, Eyam and Great Hucklow. At first they taught songs to the groups and then use tools and activities to generate new music. The trainee teams then took the ideas generated and worked them into a final composition which they took back into the schools to teach for the big performance on 25th May 2010. It was an exciting time for those taking part, and with such a spread of age groups there is real opportunity for the programme to have a lasting legacy at the school.
In tandem with phase 3 there were 4 modules of new activity going on at Hope Valley College. These were designed as open sessions to encourage more of the college’s pupils to access extra curricula music activity at the school. The modules were: Music Production; MCing and lyric writing; West African Drumming and VJing. They joined forces with the primary schools’ teams to perform together on 25th May.
The performance showed the energy of a highly creative project, driven by the young people involved.
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 30
- 31
- 32