This September sees the 11th year of Great North Run Culture
get into full swing! Through our partnership with The
Great Run Company and with support from Arts Council England we have been able to commission artists working across genres and
disciplines to create art inspired by the Great North Run.
Over the years, our commissions have taken many forms from
a series of colourful portraits to writing and poetry commissions as well as our annual Moving Image Commission, which gives a chosen artist the opportunity
to create films that are informed by the run and the runners themselves.
This year, the annual Moving Image Commission was awarded to
artist Layla Curtis. Her work,
already featuring in collections including the Tate Collection, and the
Government Art Collection, is exhibited widely and her series of short films
for Great North Run Culture opens at The
Gallery at the Tyneside Cinema on Thursday
10 September and will screen daily until Sunday 4 October.
The multiscreen installation was filmed entirely using
thermal imaging cameras at last year’s Great North Run, entitled Heatscapes the
series of short films range in length from 1 minute to 6 minutes and trace the
race participants' journeys across Newcastle, Gateshead and South Shields. The
cameras make visible the normally invisible glowing heat generated by the
runners' bodies during their training, warm up and the race itself, and reveal
the temporary heat prints transferred from the runners onto the urban fabric as
they move through the city.
> read more about Heastscapes here | supported by Arts Council and Tyneside Cinema
And this year, as some 57,000 runners make new, invisible
heat prints across the 13.1 mile route they will be in the company of a pop-up
art installation entitled Onward, Together, As One. The sculptural installation
has been devised and developed by Fine Art graduates Hope Stebbing and Oliver
Perry as part of a Great North Run Culture partnership with Northumbria
University. It is designed to create a visual impact on the landscape and will
certainly do that as large sculpted letters spelling ‘onward’ ‘together’ and ‘as
one’ will be shown in three specific locations around the route of the run.
Appearing on the morning of Sunday 13 September and disappearing with the 57,000 runners after
the race, the artists’ have taken the idea of over fifty thousand individuals
moving through the course as though they were one.
> read more about Onward Together As One | supported by IdeasTap, Northumbria University and S and B EPS Limited
Finally, for those who fondly remember the GNR Million
Opening Ceremony on the banks of the Tyne last September, there’ll be a special event entitled GNR Million RE:WORK, a screening of the projections (which were mapped onto Sage Gateshead) at
Gateshead Old Town Hall on Saturday 12 September from 6:15pm. The evening will
showcase, for the first time, Tal Rosner’s moving image piece - which has been
reworked for the new venue. Culture award winning writer David Almond will
narrate the evening, reading from his poetic script And Let Us Run which was
commissioned in 2014 by Great North Run Culture. Tickets for the event are £5
(£3 concessions) and the event is scheduled early enough so as not to disturb
the sleeping patterns of the Great North Runners!
GNR Million RE:WORK, Saturday 12 September, 6:15pm - 7:45pm,
Gateshead Old Town Hall - BUY TICKETS | supported by Port of Tyne, Arts Council and Heritage Lottery Fund