Reflections on an art and politics of social engagement

Loraine Leeson

2

I will discuss my practice that for over thirty-five years has explored ways in which art can be used to support social change. Central to this have been processes of collaboration and participation that have brought cultural dimensions to activism and community-based knowledge into the public domain. I will show how lessons learned from working alongside the trades union movement and the communities of London’s Docklands informed subsequent engagement with a range of groups, local organisations and individuals, drawing on new technologies as they emerged to enable their voices to be heard. Finally I will describe some recent and current projects. The Young Person’s Guide to East London involved hundreds of teenagers in identifying what they considered to be best in their neighbourhoods and of interest to their age group, leading to the production of a publicly accessible online resource that also offered a glimpse into what lay behind the gloss of Olympics hype. Meanwhile Active Energy is an ongoing project involving citizen-led innovation by older people that focuses on renewable energy. It has already led to a wind-driven lightwork for the roof of an AgeUK building, collaboration between seniors in the US and UK, a water-driven installation opposite the Houses of Parliament, and a working tidal turbine in process.

Biography

Loraine Leeson is a visual artist particularly known for her 1980’s cultural campaigning in support of the communities of London’s Docklands and subsequent participatory work in East London. In 2011 she was Fulbright Scholar in Residence at University of Washington and is currently Senior Research Fellow at University of Westminster and Senior Lecturer at Middlesex University. As director of the arts charity cSPACE her recent work has attracted a Media Trust Inspiring Voices award and Olympic Inspire Mark, while her public artwork The Catch was voted a London 2012 Landmark. She is currently working with older people on a project involving citizen-led innovation.

www.cspace.org.uk