We heard from community members, businesses and stakeholders that what they wanted to see was something creative happening on the high street through the time of change / during building works. They wanted public art that would bring communities together through this disruption and enable positive activation and visible profiling of the local community. Ideal activity was described as including young people, celebrating history/local culture and community led storytelling.
As a producing team we purposefully wanted to commission artists to be in residence over a long period of time, as it takes time to get to know a community and involve them in co-creation. We were clear that ideas needed to emerge from collaborations with community and fought to put out
an open call that didn't have prescribed outcomes. We believed that outcomes needed to arise from genuine engagement with community members. We also took a bold approach to pool resources from across the scheme and ensure that is was joined up seeing the high street as a whole shared public space and not a series of designated build areas (e.g library, shops, cinema
etc).
We are thrilled with how the residency has manifested, with so much engagement and so many
ideas for ongoing activity. The team (KWMC and BCC arts) always imagined that this first year of activation would springboard more public art commissioning in the coming years - arising from
Filwood in Motion hopes, dreams and happenings. Watch this space
for more.