Further funding for international cultural exchange and collaboration has been awarded to 39 new projects in a second round of the Four Nations International Fund

They bring together 60 partners from across the four UK nations and 50 international partners across 25 different countries, from Portugal to Lebanon; Norway to Nigeria; and Canada to Bosnia & Herzegovina. 

Appetite for working internationally across England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales remains strong as applications increased significantly in this new round of the fund.  This crucial investment of £315,765 from Creative Scotland, Arts Council England, Arts Council Northern Ireland and Arts Council of Wales/Wales Arts International enables individual artists and arts organisations, across the four UK nations and internationally, to share, connect and learn from each other in new ways.

The activity covers a wide range of artforms, backgrounds and geographies. Awards include: women of colour revolutionising nature writing, unearthing queer lives and histories across the isles, telling the stories of young people growing up in conflict, and d/Deaf and disabled artistic practices in minority languages, to name a few project themes.

 

The Wales led projects include:

Playwright and writer, Kaite O’Reilly in Wales, Ramesh Meyyappan in Scotland and Equal Voices Arts in Aotearoa, New Zealand, are creating international discussion and forming part of Equal Voices Arts’ accessible training programme for the Deaf community in Aotearoa.  Fully inclusive for d/Deaf people, it will allow them to access training in theatre, dance, physical storytelling, bilingual and bicultural performances, all accessible to d/Deaf and hearing audiences.  Taking place over several months of hybrid workshops, theatre maker Ramesh Meyyappan and Kaite O’Reilly will have the opportunity to connect culturally and linguistically both Māori and Pākehā Deaf contexts, and 

Equal Voices Arts’ approaches to bilingual and bicultural work from indigenous perspectives.

Equal Voices Arts’ Artistic Director, Laura Haughey said:

“We deeply appreciate this opportunity to bring together an international team of artists from across the globe for this important multi-layered and multi-directional exchange of knowledge and practice.  This innovative exchange will take place in intercultural contexts where much will be explored, shared and learnt from each other as well as together.”

 

  • Freya Beath, (Gwynedd, Wales) as lead with Nicholas Partridge (Kent, England), Ruben Campbell-Paine (Bristol, England) and Serene Quinn (Boston, USA) as partners.

An in-person, six day-long residency to develop an existing act into a show to take on tour. The six-minute long act currently involves three performers and is an aerial act that takes an original and creative approach to traditional Spanish Web. The current act inspires audience feedback that describes a feeling of cooperation, mutual understanding and care between the performers.

 

  • Literature Across Frontiers, CAWCS, University of Wales Trinity Saint David (Ceredigion, Wales) as lead with Juana Adcock (Glasgow, Scotland), Adrian Fisher & Luna Montenegro (London, England), Zoë Skoulding (Isle of Anglesey, Wales), Iestyn Tyne (Gwynedd, Wales), Kerala Literature Festival (KLF) and DC Residency (Kerala, India), Mathrubhumi International Festival of Letters (MBIFL) (Kerala, India) and Anitha Thampi (Kerala, India) as partners.

The planned project will bring together five poets and performers from the UK - Juana Adcock, Adrian Fisher, Luna Montenegro, Zoe Skoulding and Iestyn Tyne with the Malayalam poet Anitha Thampi to collaboratively create new multilingual work addressing the topic of climate change and of our relationship with nature from a perspective that will centre on the concept of climate justice and global inequalities exacerbated by the destruction of the environment. The project will inevitably explore UK's historical relationship with India, but also other colonial relationships relevant to the artists' backgrounds.

 

  • Tom Cardew (Cardiff, Wales) as lead with Aled Simons (Swansea, Wales), Divisions of Labour (Contemporary Gallery) (Greater Manchester, England) and Bláithín Mac Donnell (Dingle, Ireland) as partners.

Tom Cardew and Aled Simons (as Failures & Repetitions) will work with Bláithín Mac Donnell and Divisions and Labour in an initial phase of conversation and knowledge-sharing regarding sustainable and equitable approaches to a career in contemporary art, that then leads to the gradual production of new experimental, collaborative digital broadcasts: presenting audio works-in-progress, developmental research material, recorded online discussions between the practitioners, and developing new creative, professional relationships through practical exchange.

 

A selection of other projects receiving funding include:

Alycia Pirmohamed, recent winner of the Nan Shepherd Prize 2023, is leading Fieldnotes Collective from ScotlandConnecting with contemporaries in England and Germany including poet Alycia, author Jessica J. Lee, poet Pratyusha and writer Nina Mingya Powles, they’re looking to break new ground in the nature writing genre. 

Fieldnotes Collective said:

“As nature writers with similar interests, co-creating in different ways over the years, the four of us have long admired each other's work.  Receiving this funding provides us with an exciting opportunity to develop our writing in tandem, across borders and for new audiences, challenging us to reimagine what our creative practices can be.”

This will produce a series of online nature writing workshops as well as a collaborative work of inter-genre nonfiction and poetry reimagining the role of the narrator in environmental writing, traditionally associated with men, exploring how colonial histories have shaped ecological literature.

 

Based in Northern Ireland, Our Queer Isles: Unearthing the Ancestors, delves into queer histories within the isle nations of England, Northern Ireland and Republic of Ireland.  Three extraordinary artists, poet Cat Brogan, storyteller Rachel Rose Reid and musician Branwen Kavanagh will shine a light on the often-obscured queer narratives of the past, culminating in a live performance hosted at Strule Arts Centre in partnership with Omagh Pride.  Seamlessly blending their creative input across storytelling, poetry and music, they’ll encapsulate the legacy of queer lives who came before in a powerful narrative that will resonate with audiences, inspire conversations, creativity and a greater understanding of queer heritage.

Project lead, Cat Brogan said:

This grant will afford us the time and space to collaborate as multidisciplinary artists in a performance piece that blends music, storytelling, spoken word, myth, characters, research and reimagining to shed light on untold queer stories.  I am delighted to welcome Rachel and Branwen to my hometown in collaboration with Omagh Pride, centering new work with queer themes in a rural context.”

 

In England, theatre company Fake Escape will work with the War Childhood Museum in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Kabosh Theatre and MAC Theatre in Belfast, Northern Ireland, to explore the positive resilience of young people growing up in war and conflict for a documentary theatre work called Innocence Unbroken.  They will be exploring the parallels between children growing up in environments of conflict in Belfast during ‘The Troubles’ and in the 1992-95 Bosnian War. 

Fake Escape Artistic Director, David Shopland said:

“Fake Escape has been growing as an outward looking, international theatre company for the last several years, and this grant not only allows us to build networks and connections with international partners to tell these stories with authenticity and sensitivity, but also to explore a new way of making theatre for us; being led by a research gathering interview process as opposed to starting work with a finalised idea."

Immersing themselves in over 300 hours of oral history interviews as well as exhibits and the network of the War Childhood Museum, then taking this material to Belfast theatre companies, they’ll begin to build a theatrical piece emphasising a sense of play and innocence in the story of these young people.

 

Creative Scotland manages the fund’s application process for the four nations’ art councils and agencies. On the partnership’s behalf, Dana MacLeod, Executive Director of Arts, Communities and Inclusion at Creative Scotland said:

“This second round of the Four Nations International Fund has made possible some new and exciting initiatives for artists in the UK and around the world to connect, exchange and collaborate.

“The 39 projects demonstrate a strong diversity of cultures, practise and perspectives highlighting the positive effect arts and culture can have on communities globally.

“Coming together as agencies and funders to share resources and knowledge enables a much broader reach and impact for our artists and audiences.  We can also tackle important issues and challenges facing artists and practitioners around the world.”

ENDS

 

Notes to Editors:

The list of Four Nations International Fund recipients from Wales (both led by Wales and who have partners in Wales) is as follows:

Wales led collaborations:

Organisations

Partners

Amount

Freya Beath

(Gwynedd, Wales)

Nicholas Partridge (Kent, England)

 

Ruben Campbell-Paine (Bristol, England)

Serene Quinn (Boston, USA)

£7,500

Kaite O'Reilly

(Ceredigion, Wales)

Ramesh Meyyappan (Glasgow, Scotland)

 

Equal Voices Arts (Waikato, New Zealand)

£7,500

Literature Across Frontiers, CAWCS, University of Wales Trinity Saint David

(Ceredigion, Wales)

Juana Adcock (Glasgow, Scotland)

 

Adrian Fisher & Luna Montenegro (London, England)

 

Zoë Skoulding (Isle of Anglesey, Wales)

 

Iestyn Tyne (Gwynedd, Wales)

Kerala Literature Festival (KLF) and DC Residency (Kerala, India)

 

Mathrubhumi International Festival of Letters (MBIFL) (Kerala, India)

 

Anitha Thampi (Kerala, India)

£7,000

Tom Cardew

(Cardiff, Wales)

Aled Simons (Swansea, Wales)

 

Divisions of Labour (Contemporary Gallery) (Greater Manchester, England)

 

Bláithín Mac Donnell (Dingle, Ireland)

£7,500

 

Sub total

£29,500

 

Projects with a partner from Wales

 

Organisation

Partners

Amount

Isabelle Moore (Edinburgh, Scotland)

David Colwell (Powys, Wales)

 

Yuri Kobayashi (Maine, USA)

£7,500

BREAK MISSION (DONATE TO PARTICIPATE) CIC

(West Midlands, England)

Avant Cymru (Rhondda Cynon Taf, Wales)

 

ASD Uprock (Spaghetti Flava) (Mesagne, Italy)

£7,440

Ed Viney

(Dorset, England)

Noni Lewis (Monmouthshire, Wales)

 

Jerry Reilly (Newton, Massachusetts, USA)

£6,900

FROZEN LIGHT

(Norfolk, Germany)

Oshis World (Cardiff, Wales)

Sensorium Theatre (Perth, Australia)

£7,500

Neta Gracewell

(London, England)

Jenny Alderton (Neath Port Talbot, Wales)

 

Lou Sarabadzic (Warwickshire, England)

 

Foivi Psevdou (Athens, Greece)

 

Tricia Enns (Montreal, Quebec, Canada)

 

Rik Fisher (Berlin, Germany)

£7,500

STUDIO ABOVEandBELOW LTD

(London, England)

CULTVR (Cardiff, Wales)

 

Associazione Culturale Umanesimo Artificiale (UA) (Fano, Italy)

£7,500

 

Up to £7,500 was available to applicants from a budget of £320,000, including £28,000 allocated for Access Costs to support any accessibility requirements removing barriers to application.

 

Creative Scotland is the public body that supports the arts, screen and creative industries across all parts of Scotland distributing funding provided by the Scottish Government and The National Lottery. Further information at creativescotland.com. Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. Learn more about the value of art and creativity in Scotland and join in at www.ourcreativevoice.scot

 

Arts Council England is the national development agency for creativity and culture. We have set out our strategic vision in Let’s Create that by 2030 we want England to be a country in which the creativity of each of us is valued and given the chance to flourish and where everyone of us has access to a remarkable range of high quality cultural experiences. We invest public money from Government and The National Lottery to help support the sector and to deliver this vision. www.artscouncil.org.uk

Following the Covid-19 crisis, the Arts Council developed a £160 million Emergency Response Package, with nearly 90% coming from the National Lottery, for organisations and individuals needing support. We are also one of the bodies administering the Government’s unprecedented £1.96 billion Culture Recovery Funds. Find out more at www.artscouncil.org.uk/covid19.

 

The Arts Council of Northern Ireland is the lead funding and development agency for the Arts providing support to arts projects throughout the region, through its Treasury and The National Lottery funds.  Our funding enables artists and arts organisations to increase access to the arts across society and deliver great art that is within everyone’s reach.



Wales Arts International is the in-house international agency of the Arts Council of Wales, thepublic body responsible for funding and developing the arts in Wales. Further information at wai.org.ukand arts.wales. Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram

 

Image credit: EVA performers of Where Our Shadows Meet, photography by Michael Smith.

 

Media contacts:

Creative Scotland

Jacqueline Munro, Media Relations & PR Officer
Jacqueline.Munro@creativescotland.com
+44 (0) 7967 822 266

 

Arts Council England

Sarah Deen

Sarah.deen@artscouncil.org.uk 

 

Wales Arts International, Arts Council of Wales 

Siwan Dafydd

siwan.dafydd@wai.org.uk

 

Arts Council of Northern Ireland

Sarah Coburn

scoburn@artscouncil-ni.org