Onwards, Upwards and Backwards…

A Sunday walk through Newport with Andy Podmore.
We meet at Noon outside the Vacara chip shop on Llanarth Street for a quick coffee and to get tied up,,,literally. Fifteen of us are bound together with orange and blue rope before we embark on our tour which requires us to step in a backward single file formation. Our walk quickly becomes a Spectacle and people passing by do a double take, look bemused, laugh, and one lady will later tell us we are ‘simple’…and I think she may have thrown a ‘ stupid’ in as well. Let’s just say, she wasn’t happy.
As we navigate our way backwards through space, time, and indeed, history, Andy tells us that the idea to walk backwards comes from a book by Spike Milligan he was given one Christmas by his parents. The rest of that Christmas, he and his brother spent doing everything backwards, thus ruining his parents YuleTide. It is in this manner that we learn of Newport’s mixed history, in no particular order I add ( as Andy has dropped his notes and not had time to put them back into the original order)…but the ‘new order’ is delivered in a totally comprehensive way, taking in philosophy, consequences of action, and trains of thought…and because of this we are shown that the reality of history does not materialise in the neat order of events that the custodians of history and the history books would have us believe for convenience sake, rather it is Chaotic ; events collide and clash and at points, seep into each-other.
( oh if only History could have been taught in this way at school and all teachers were like Andy Podmore ).
We navigate our way over used needles and broken glass and pause for some wonderful bananna bread (made by Ellen) in the old Sainsburys car park – aka Tarkovsky’s StalKer Zone- next to the river. The same car park we visited on the first NiA walk. The budlia and other wild vegetation which have pushed through the concrete parking areas have since been cut down and the ground looks set to become primed for another housing development to be crawled over by crepuscular ( lovely word ) moss like life forms, thus rendering the new builds victims of damp. Nice.
Our fantasies of a community garden will have to take seed somewhere else..
Onwards again, this time in a forward motion ( which feels oddly difficult after spending near on an hour travelling backwards ). ( Just a note on walking backwards… you walk slower therefore it slows your breathing down…..and you can see where you have been – Gotta be good for you ! rather than always heading front first into the unknown at great speed and forgetting where you have come from ).
We cross the UsK whose tide is escaping the Port at this time of day, over Clarence Bridge-that incidently bears some relation to the bridge in Rouen that straddles the Seine. Nice to think that we are somehow related to that fine city in Northern France made famous by Monet’s many paintings of the Cathedral.
Down the road that runs parallel with the river and into Rodney Parade. A game is about to start and a man appears from nowhere with a Huge glass of beer and disappears again. Our reason for coming down this road is to visit Coln Street, made famous by being published in The Argus, but more famously for its residents refusing to move under orders from the new development scheme. The residents won their case and the community of Coln Street kept their homes.
It is on this note that I will sign off. This happy note I add, because situations like that of Coln Street don’t always have a happy outcome. Not for the residents anyway.
The final word goes in the direction of Andy Podmore.
ThanK You Andy, for a WonderFuLL, thought provoking, fun day out inThe PorT.

Marega.

Programme of Free Events

These are our winter warming walks, talks and workshops. Some of the activity is adult only so do check the FLIGHT LOG on the link above for more details on all of these events.

22nd Nov. – Artist Talk – Marega Palser and Dino Rovaretti

6th Dec – Artist Talk – Gareth Clark (limited capacity)

23rd Jan – Artist Talk – Carrie Reichardt and Stephanie Roberts

7th Feb – Workshop – Photojournalism with Jo Haycock

8th Feb – Artist Walk – Andy Podmore

14th Feb – Workshop – Making Performance with Gareth Clark

new date TBC – Artist Walk – Jez Hattosh-Nemeth

21st Feb – Workshop – Movement and Mark Making with Marega Palser

21st Feb – Artist Walk – Tin Shed Theatre Company

22nd Feb – Artist Walk – Dino Rovaretti

Meet The Artist event kicks off new NIA programme

We are delighted that NIA co-founder Marega Palser and emerging artist Dino Rovaretti will discuss, demonstrate and describe their work on 22nd November at The Project Space in Newport. We will also announce our new programme of guest speakers, walks and more. There will be a little wine and music. First talk starts at 7.30pm … come and reclaim a Saturday night.

AS LONG AS I’M WALKING…

NIA Walk #2 led by JeZ Hattosh-Nemeth described by Marega Palser

Instructions:

Meet outside Newport Train Station at 12 mid- day, Saturday 22nd March.
Walk and document – using digital cameras- every shop and space the entire length of Commercial Street finishing off by The Transporter Bridge.
Divide the group in to two, one half photographing the South side of the street, the other half, the North side. Do this in a relay team style so each person overlaps the
other. Photograph the lower part of the building in a landscape format. And finally…

Ask yourself… Why am I doing this?

Response from one part of the North facing team.
First, this task we have been set sounds relatively simple, but within seconds of starting I realise that this is not going to be a clear-cut exercise. Our team (there are three of us at this stage, we later grow to four) seems to fall apart almost immediately. We each have a different perception of where and when to start, and without an overall surveyor of the situation telling us at what point we should photograph and at what point to move on, it becomes apparent that this exercise in manoeuvres is going to be open to interpretation, very improvised, have its own dynamic…and may take some time.
One of my first impressions of being outside, standing in a street which is now a thoroughfare for busses, is the amount of information we are absorbing in a split second – it is immense! With the task in mind, there is the overview of the building that is in front of you, then there are the details-the design, the stains, the buddleia that has taken root in some of the roofs. There is the signage on the building, the traffic and pedestrian information signs; the sounds, the smells, the flow of traffic and people activity that accompany this… and then naturally, there is the banter between us. (We haven’t even bumped into anyone yet… that will come later).
At this point this writing could go one of two ways, but rather that going down the road of describing the many styles and flavours that Commercial Street has to offer (I’m hoping that the photos will do that) I would like to come back to Jez’s final instruction…
” Ask yourself, why am I doing this? ”
Good Question! – And it is one that will be asked en route, which is why it helps to be semi- prepared for a quick easy answer, (but we know life is not like that …full of quick easy answers that is)…

So why am I / are we doing this?
Again, to answer this, two trains of thought immediately open up.
1. I like walking. Walking is a good way to see and feel the world that is around me /us. Walking can help alter perceptions. We can walk ourselves from one state of being to another. Walking is liberating. By walking, you come across unexpected treasures, situations, and people. Walking is good for you, and what’s more – Walking is Free!!!
2. My explanation as to ‘ why are you photographing buildings…’ The ‘easiest’ answer I give when asked by two young men, one with a pram and fag between tattooed knuckles resting on said pram (I don’t even notice the baby), is that we are documenting Commercial Street as it is now, today. The response to this, and it is quite a common response when engaging in conversation about Newport is, “Why d’you want to do that for? … It’s all shit! “. My natural response when the word ‘shit’ is used as a descriptive word is one of optimism, i.e. out of shit, grows roses and many other floral and edible wonders. When I say this to Pram man, he doesn’t seem at all impressed, and is not having any of it. ” Its all shit “, he repeats once again, ” they should knock it all down”, (which if anyone reading this has not been to Newport Centre for a while, there is a fair attempt at knocking down what was John Frost Square – fondly once known as ‘The Piazza ‘ in some circles, and the row of shops that once ran behind the bus station…it is not what you would describe as a pretty vista for the eye balls…) but I digress in both subject and geographically I have wandered off the ‘main drag’ or gone ‘off piste ‘. This could be looked at as a good example of how easy it is to digress and get sidetracked on a walk. How easy it is to lose ourselves both in thoughts and in our orientation, unless we are head down and on a mission going from A to B. as quickly as possible.
(By the way, Pram man and I agreed to differ, laughed, as I think we both enjoyed the interaction and short debate, and went on our separate ways).
To try and draw this to a “Pause” rather than an end, as this walk is one of many that will follow, we did complete our task, and I managed to resist the temptation not to take any close up photos of rust, mould and any other interesting looking stains. Our collective journey finished in Fanny’s Café, opposite the Transporter Bridge, where we filled our bellies and learned more about each other and where we had started our journeys from that day. Starting points incidentally included Cardiff, Penarth and Bristol. Unbeknownst to us, Jez had very casually placed recorders on the tables in amongst the bottles of vinegar and brown and red sauce and the quite spectacular medley of salt and pepper pots.
A short edited film will follow at some point of a speeded up journey through the eyes of ten people ( of varying heights ) accompanied by a soundtrack of conversations that followed the walk-in normal time.
Over&Out for the now
Marega.

I will leave you with a list inspired by Francis Alys.
You can create your own…

AS LONG AS I’M WALKING, I’M NOT SMOKING
“.      “.        “.    “.        “.             I’M NOT HIDING
“.      “.        “.    “.        “.             I’M NOT THINKING
“.      “.        “.    “.        “.             I’M NOT …
I’M NOT …
I’M NOT …

Research and Development

We’ve just started something new in Newport. With the support of Arts Council Wales, National Theatre Wales TEAM and Newport City Council we have begun a new arts collective called Newport International Airspace. You may well ask where that name comes from or even what it might mean but to us it epitomised our intentions as a collective.  N.I.A. was established off the back of The Meeting, a project procured and produced by local artists keen to change an empty high street space into a pop up arts centre last November. The Meeting was a reaction, a reflection even, to the words from the local community about the present state of Newport. Artists and performers were challenged to use these words to create an exhibition, a tour of the city and a performance that inspired some contemplation, debate and, in this case, further action.

Newport has not faired well in recent years and as a collective we wanted to reflect not only on the city but the actions of its artists. In ‘The Reenchantment of Art’, Suzi Gablik considers the role of the arts and the artist in accelerating movements towards changes needed to bring human beings back into balance with their ecosystem. With specific reference to social issues, Gablik argued that art is a catalyst for change which could in turn help us to ‘heal’. In difficult financial times Newport Council has been forced to close one of the most innovative visual art spaces in the museum, the temporary exhibition space, with the loss of its experienced and proactive curator. This may well seem to many as a sensible solution to a budget that will not meet the needs of the services provided across the city but we firmly believe that the arts matter and in times of difficulty they are essential. John Tuso wrote exactly that. He said ‘The Arts matter because they embrace and define the soul of civilisation. A nation without arts would be a nation that stopped talking to itself.’

So we have begun to develop our own vision of what an arts collective could offer. We are just four at present, from varied and diverse backgrounds and with a commitment to share and develop our ideals. We began this with a week of sharing that included workshops in photographic storytelling, drawing and mapping, mosaic sculpture and devising theatre. These workshops have enabled us to share our practice and highlight our collective inspirations and objectives to connect what we do with a wider community.

Furthermore as a collective we are aiming to explore the City in a number of ways including walks and talks with community groups and artists alike. We are just beginning and look forward to the journey ahead.

Gareth

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Walking and Talking through Newport

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It was a Sunday, it was tempestuous weather at times and it was an open and random plan that we had with no idea how long or how far we would walk. Ten mighty brave souls pitched up outside the Westgate Hotel and at 11.15am we followed Marega Palser towards an unknown destination located with in the city.

Marega had given us small stick-on eyes and told us that we should stick them on anything that caught our eye. I have to say that the first half mile took a long time as we all stopped constantly to gaze, comment and apply our eyes to the changing landscape behind Newport market and then down into the underpass. This was going to be a long day I thought to myself and I was not wrong. However the opportunity to stroll, reminisce and discover was really enjoyable and the company was excellent. Marega led us in silent single file to the old abandoned Sainsburys store near the river where we climbed through a hole in the fence to enter what felt like ‘the zone’ from Tarkovsky’s film Stalker. We were given Chinese paper flags to distribute around the vast, overgrown and erie space and we all wandered off to complete the task with a sense of solemnity. It was a wonderful start and impossible to describe beyond these words but the walk had a sense of unspoken purpose.

We set off and I led the group up the river to the park sharing tales of the riverbank. We were occupied by the pigeons for a moment and then found blackberries in abundance. We followed the road back towards the centre and through an underpass that offered shelter when the clouds broke abruptly causing a minor flood. We discovered an almost perfect theatre space beneath the roads and pondered midnight walk ideas before the rain eased enough to move on. Via the subway underneath the railway we climbed stow hill and then rounded the Cathedral before entering Bellevue park. I complained about the lack of facilities in this fine park only to discover the cafe was open so had to eat my words with a toasted sandwich. The views of the bridges were delightful, framed by the trees and the sky shifted from blue to dark grey to blue again before we headed off following our next guide.

Stephanie took us down Vicarage Hill after setting us a brain teaser based on the Chartist March of 1839. The hill offers spectacular views of Pill and the Transporter bridge and a short cut to the new square on Commercial Street. It was on this iconic straight road that we marveled at some fine regeneration schemes, got creative around burnt out buildings and  ate kulfi ice cream lollipops from Clares. We stretched ourselves into the shape of the letters of the city in a Tai Chi style exercise and then headed on to the old foundry.

Jo decided the best way into the site was through another hole in the fence despite some very open access on the other side. We strolled around this wreck of place fascinated by its scars and debris and rejoined the newly finished path and cycle route that leads back up the river towards our starting point.

This is the first walk-shop organised by the members of Newport International Airspace but I am sure it will not be the last despite the 6 hour duration. It was not all walking, there was a lot of chat, observation and inspiration and an hour sat in the Pavilion cafe but it was most definitely a creative journey and one we are all interested in developing. We have since met another group who do something similar and we are interested in finding people who would like to lead a walk and share something about the city. This activity was supported by NTW TEAM and we are grateful for the support and the wisdom in encouraging these type of events.

So until the next time…

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NIA -Broadcast

Making a difference within the local community through creative engagement. NIA is a new collective eager to collaborate with creative people in and around Newport. This site has been designed to broadcast our activity and ideas.