Tag: Arts Emergency Response Centre

  • Mayor ‘deeply shocked’ at plans to close the Cass

    Photograph: Steve Blunt
    Last May’s Arts Emergency Response exhibition at the Cass. Photograph: Steve Blunt

    More than 2,000 people have signed a petition against plans to close an art school with “deep roots” to East London.

    Last month London Metropolitan University approved plans to consolidate all teaching to its Holloway Road campus, allowing its buildings at Moorgate and Aldgate to be sold.

    The Cass Faculty of Art, Architecture and Design, on Commercial Street, described as the ‘Aldgate Bauhaus’ by artist Bob and Roberta Smith, will have to relocate to Holloway Road by September 2017.

    Mayor of Tower Hamlets John Biggs said he was “deeply shocked” at the decision to relocate the campuses.

    “The loss of all the student places in the Aldgate area is a blow, but the decision to relocate the Sir John Cass Department of Art, Media and Design is particularly upsetting,” the Mayor said.

    “The Cass through its predecessor institutions has deep roots in the East End and has a wonderful reputation for combining academic study and creative production.”

    But Professor John Raftery, Vice Chancellor of London Met, defended the decision, saying: “We are excited about this project, which aims to create a one campus, one community university.

    “We believe this will benefit our students, who will enjoy an enhanced student experience, and our staff, who will have more opportunities to collaborate.

    A change.org petition led by Cass Faculty Officer Amanda Marillier has already attracted over 2,000 signatures.

    “The proposed closure of The Cass and Moorgate campuses represents a massive attack on students, staff and access to education,” the petition states.

    “These cuts can potentially lead to courses being ‘discontinued’, staff losing their jobs, and prospective students losing the opportunity to study as the number of student places are reduced.”

  • Arts Emergency Response Centre turns election spotlight on creativity

    Patients await treatment at the Arts Emergency Response Centre. Photograph: Steve Blunt
    Right prescription: Patients await treatment at the Arts Emergency Response Centre. Photograph: Steve Blunt

    An immersive ‘arts hospital’ curated by artist Bob and Roberta Smith has opened, aiming to put the arts in the spotlight this General Election.

    ‘Patients’ can visit the Arts Emergency Response Centre at The Cass Bank gallery in Aldgate East and receive ‘treatment’ (knowledge and advice) from organisations advocating the arts.

    The exhibition confronts issues such as funding, privilege and class. Visitors enter a hospital ward and pick up a prescription from an ‘Arts Emergency Pharmacist’.

    They then pass on to a ‘waiting room’ where they can view art that considers the value of art in society. Patients then receive treatment in a series of clinics held by organisations such as Bow Arts and The Art Party.

    Over three weeks, the immersive exhibition will be dealing with the themes of democracy, health and diversity.

    Cass Professor and curator Bob and Roberta Smith (real name Patrick Brill) said: “Since the coalition agreement was signed in 2010 there has been concern that the arts are diminishing within the school curriculum and that the arts have suffered a disproportionate cut in Government funding.

    “We are bringing together many of the organisations who have actively engaged with this issue.”

    The exhibition is a collaboration with Arts Emergency, a charity founded by comedian Josie Long and Neil Griffiths which promotes the arts and humanities among low income teenagers.

    Griffiths added: “This show is a celebration of our collective creative response to the erosion of access, the reversal of genuine social mobility, and the entrenchment of privilege in the arts and humanities.”

    Until 3 May
    The Cass Bank Gallery, London Metropolitan University, 59–63 Whitechapel High Street, E1 7PF
    @TheCassArt #cassemergency