Creatives Collective – Taking Tablets in 2018

Creatives Collective – Taking Tablets in 2018

Thanks to the Foundation for Rural and Regional Renewal (FRRR) Small Grants for Rural Communities the artists-with-disability of Coonabarabran will have access to 3 Microsoft Surface Pro tablets.

Creatives Collective members will have the opportunity to borrow a tablet to take home and complete an online digital art course like those at CTRLPAINT. The ARI members will be using their to create and manipulate art for the end-of-year exhibition.

We would like to thank FRRR for their generosity, and for recognising the need and importance of digital tools in rural communities.

Arggh 1/12th of the year is gone already!

Arggh 1/12th of the year is gone already!

*screammmmmms*

January was a write off  – that’s not a bad thing all-in-all. Down time is good for the brain, but boy is it bad for the creative habit. Especially when there’s heat, and fire, and family emergencies and all the rest of the things that get n the way of being fabulous! Not to fear, we are back on board and getting that momentum going.

This month the Going Pro 2018 members will be attending the first professional workshop which will provide their website, training on how to use it, and marketing fundamentals.

Our Entries Officer, Crystal, has started the bum-kicking for the upcoming Coonabarabran Show.

We will be confirming our first professional artist trainer for a March workshop for our Going Pro 2018 project!.

We will also need to be putting in the hard yards to get things moving on the Articulate Festival.

Our new creative space,  the Coonabarabran Shire Hall, is working out fine (once we find the light switches and how to turn the air-con on). Great open quiet space with good light, even today when it was completely overcast. Some good art is going to be produced there.

Bring it on 2018!

 

 

 

Local Artists with Disability – Sign Up Now!

Local Artists with Disability – Sign Up Now!

Make 2018 the year you take your art practice to the next level – for FREE. Join the Creatives Collective Artist Run Initiative (ARI) and get a whole bunch of education, support, and promotion. Come and join us, it’s going to be AWESOME!

What is an ARI?

An artist run initiative is when a group of artists come together and formally agree to work towards a common goal. The Creatives Collective ARI is participating in 12 months of professional development, culminating in a exhibition of the ARI member’s work.

Does it cost anything?

You supply your art supplies and equipment – everything else is provided for FREE.

So what do you get if you join the ARI?

In no particular order –

  • Free website with ecommerce facilities
  • Free training on how to update website
  • Free training on how to promote yourself online
  • Free workshops run by professional artists with disability
  • Free promotion of your work by your fellow ARI artists
  • Warm, loving, support from your peers. This is a safe space.
  • Free mentorship by professional artist Paris Norton on how to curate and prepare for exhibition
  • Free promotion of your work and profile via local media
  • Free exhibition of your work at year’s end
  • and more!

What are the requirements to join?

The only requirements are that you make visual art, you can get to Coonabarabran for workshops, and that you identify as experiencing disability. FYI – Creatives Collective subscribes to the social model of disability – if you (or your carers) recognise you are disadvantaged because of external attitudes and environment to your physical/mental self, then you are one of us 🙂

Isn’t that discrimination against able people?

No. We aren’t disadvantaging anyone by having our own peer group ARI.

This sounds great! How do I sign up?

Send an email to info@creativescollective.org and tell us about you (hurry: there’s limited places) before February 14th, 2018.

Creatives Collective thanks the Regional Arts Fund for support this initiative

Regional Arts NSW Logo

 

 

But Why Inclusion?

But Why Inclusion?

It seems like a fairly simple concept doesn’t it? But for people who have never had to think about inclusion because they are automatically included, it can be puzzling. “Doesn’t it mean just letting everybody join us, doing what we do?” Nope, not quite.

You see, inclusion doesn’t only mean the minority being allowed to join the majority. It means that the minority can also have all of the privilege of the privileged. This is where, in the world of the privileged, things start to feel uncomfortable.

This journey of privilege is happening in lots of areas, right now – white people asking why is it OK for people of colour to call themselves certain words, but not white people – men demanding they get the same special attention that women get to improve their position – people with disability demanding the same access to everything as able bodied people – non-Indigenous people aggravated that Indigenous people have their own kinds of government support. These things are causing people of privilege to feel pain and loss. These feelings of loss are, of course, irrational, built from our society’s views towards people with lesser privilege and growing up conditioned to fear outsiders. “They” will take what we have, “they” are dangerous, “they” must be kept in their place.

Don’t think that the disabled or allies, are all self-aware saints in this arena. Ableism is as rife in the disabled community as the abled. Look at the difficulties people have with identifying that they experience discrimination because of who they are. Rocking the boat causes pain, and when you are already experiencing enough pain, adding to it is incredibly difficult. Not everyone is in a position yet to radically change their thinking, to even know they have a choice to be a full member of society because of years of decisions and assumptions being made for them.

We used the word inclusion in our three goals for Articulate Festival, (Art, Inclusion, Culture) because we think that we, as a group, could make positive change (or at least start the conversation) in our town. Some points that we want to make in that conversation are –

  • Firstly, that anyone can go ahead and fix an issue if they see the issue, it just takes hard work and getting involved with all the groups effected.
  • Two, change the idea that positive change for the minority has to come from the majority. Nope, the effected minorities can lead too, and minorities know best what needs to be changed in their area.
  • Lastly, that there’s a terrible amount of discrimination in our town, not only towards the disabled – towards indigenous people, towards people in poverty, towards people with issues of addiction, towards anyone trying to change the status-quo. As difficult as it is, we need to keep this in the light so things can change. We need to keep pushing that inclusion is not only having people be the way we think they should be, but accepting them as they are.

Inclusion is not just a warm fuzzy word, it brings with it the pains of conflict, and a fear that as groups of people are elevated, that somehow that takes away from those that already have a position at the top of the pile. If you experience the thought (and it is natural, we all do it every now and then) “but I feel excluded” when a group of people who have less power than you are claiming their position, then take a breath. Maybe try the Australia attitude of “good on yer mate” and cheer them on. Maybe explore if that pain is shame that you have been part of a system that discriminates, without realising the position of power you are in. Maybe lend a hand by freely and publicly acknowledging the rights of others to do their thing.

So, yeah why inclusion? Because it is worth working hard for.

 

 

Local Artists with Disability – Sign Up Now!

WANTED: NSW Teaching Artist with Disability

We are a group of visual artists with disability in Coonabarabran. We were awarded a RAF and a CASP grant for our 2018 program of professional improvement that will, amoungst other things, fund 3 quarterly workshops by professional artists to come and help us improve our skills, and to talk about your experience and learnings as an artist with disability. We do not mind what medium you work in as we are brave. Our impairments are mostly physical but we don’t let that get in the way when we create.

The funds will pay for your travel, accommodation and a per diem for meals – as well as your workshop fees.

We are committed to supporting artists with disability, and we will promote you and your work via our networks and online. In addition, the shire suffers from a lack of opportunity to engage in workshops with professional artists, so if you wanted to earn more pennies you could stay another day or two and also teach other paying artists in a separate workshop, we would promote that for you.

If this sounds like you (and we really hope it does) then please send us an email ASAP with your CV to info@creativescollective.org

[image: Black and white brushstroke in a lower case R, with the words Regional Arts NSW]

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