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ARTS: THE CATALYST CRAIGMILLAR
Story of exhibition
City Arts Centre, Edinburgh, October to December 2004
This major exhibition explores the innovative
role that the arts have played in uniting a
community through artworks, songs,
theatre and testimonials.
Alongside works of art, there is over 150 archive objects relating
to The Gentle Giant sculpture by Jimmy Boyle; the Scottish film 'My Childhood'
by
Bill
Douglas, Stained glass windows by Sadie McLellan at Robins Chapel, The Thistle
Foundation; The John Maxwell Mural in Craigmillar Primary School; World Solution
banner; Newcraighall Mining Sculpture by Jake Harvey an archive of The Craigmillar
Festival Society.
Also featured is the current crop of art being produced in Craigmillar.
The exhibition outlines the international
interest in Craigmillar's approach to
community arts, which has been copied world-
wide. The exhibition has a 16 storyboard sequence which tells the story with
testimonials.
Arts the Catalyst in Craigmillar flowered in the early sixties, where many people realised that this creativity could change their environment and their lives. This transformed Craigmillar and the seed of creativity traveled the world and influenced many.
There is a catalogue; documentary entitled ' The peoples story'; new recordings of Community Musical songs; a songbook entitled 'Craigmillar Gold', Mining poetry book, Arts tours of Craigmillar, children's book and conference.


Main sponsors for the exhibition: The Craigmillar Partnership, Fort Kinnaird,
City of Edinburgh Council, East Local Development Committee
(Community Grants), 'Awards for All' Heritage Lottery Grant, Craigmillar
Capacity Building. With further support from: Scotland Unltd, Castle Rock Housing
Association, Dunedin Housing Association, Canmore Housing Association This exhibition
has been produced on a voluntary basis by The Craigmillar Communiversity.
This essay by David Harding was commissioned for the catalogue of the exhibition, 'Arts: The Catalyst - Craigmillar' at the City Arts Centre, Edinburgh. October 2004
CULTURAL DEMOCRACY - CRAIGMILLAR STYLE
There is an annual summer festival of music and drama with parades and a
pageant at the castle. It takes place in Edinburgh but it's not the one that
is internationally famous though this one did create international interest.
No, this one takes place in Craigmillar, a housing estate, often described
as one of the worst areas of multiple deprivation in Scotland. This exhibition
affords the opportunity to look back at an extraordinary story.
Looking back is important. Bertold Brecht advised, never go forward until
you first go back to check the direction. The widespread tokenism of the
government's policy of social inclusion, coupled with an often cynical 'tick
the boxes' attitude of some arts institutions and professionals, has discredited
an already suspect notion. It was always an ameliorating 'top down' policy
with not much ever percolating from the 'bottom up' and totally at odds with
the notion that the socially excluded may have something worthwhile to express
about culture. It was of course Paolo Friere who advised us long ago not
to impose our culture on the socially excluded but to enter into a dialogue
with them about their view AND ours. Governments never seem to learn. They
only ever seem to be interested in the new big idea and its slogan. Scottish
Ministers would have achieved more if they had ignored the New Labour policy
of social inclusion and taken the two-mile trip east to Craigmillar. Here
in the sixties and seventies evolved a model for using the arts as a catalyst
for social inclusion and progress which gained international fame. It was
to here that planners, sociologists, community workers, artists and politicians,
along with the great and the good, beat a path from all over the world to
witness this 'miracle', to learn from it and to apply it back home.
So how come we did not learn from it? How come that it is almost forgotten?
There is not the space here to attempt to analyse and present the reasons
for this dereliction but two points spring to mind. The biblical, 'can
anything good come out of Nazareth?', would surely be one but the other is
more dangerous
and it is this. Politicians and civil servants at the centre of power actually
fear it when people rise up and take power for themselves. For this is
what happened in Craigmillar. With the help of the local MP and the local
city
councillors, Craigmillar Festival Society became a strong political force
exerting some control over planning, building, social and cultural development
decisions. In 1976 it bypassed the then Scottish Office and went straight
to the EC and won poverty action funding of £750, 000. At its high
point it was responsible for initiating and running fifty seven neighbourhood
projects and employed 200 full-time and 500 part-time workers in works
ranging from landscaping, play area development, theatre and art works,
play groups,
social work and community development, and support. What the Festival Society
could not do however was to bring well paid, long-term employment to Craigmillar.
It was not equipped, and did not have the power, to do so.
Craigmillar Festival Society became a model for other similarly deprived
communities, particularly Easterhouse in Glasgow, which set up its own Festival
Society
and went on to win a Fringe First at the other Edinburgh Festival for a theatre
production written and performed by people from the estate. It commissioned
six artists to create, with local people , a 200 foot- long mosaic containing
decorative as well as highly political imagery. When I was in Chicago in
1984 I was asked by some artists if I had seen the Easterhouse Mosaic and
did I
have slides of it? Easterhouse to many people in Scotland meant crime, vandalism
and poverty while in Chicago they had only heard of its art. In 1982 it hosted
the biggest ever community arts conference in the UK attended by over 400
people from the here and abroad.
At the beginning of her book on the Craigmillar Festival Society, 'Let The
People Sing', Helen Crummy, organising secretary of the society since its inception,
uses a quote from an unknown source which strikes the note for which the society
stood; 'We can either react in fear or anger to the state of our world thus
becoming part of the problem, or respond creatively and become part of the
solution'. What is astonishing about the Craigmillar story is that, while incisive,
creative thinkers like Augusto Boal, Paolo Friere and Ivan Illich, among others,
were publishing their ideas on approaches to the issues of the poor and excluded,
intuitively the Festival Society was actually carrying them out. It had found
its own route to the notions that given respect, opportunity and a platform
for their own voices, the poor and excluded can achieve very special things.
This was 'cultural democracy' in action and not the democratisation of the
received, establishment culture that is at the very heart of the UK arts policies
and the basis of New Labour 'social inclusion'.
This is a story too about women in action for, as the founders and directors
of the Festival Society, it was their long-term commitment and belief in the
role that the arts could play in re-vitalising their housing estate that became
one of its unique features. While the broad range of activities was carried
on throughout the year, the annual summer festival was the focus and central
cultural event. It was launched each year by the performance of a piece of
political, musical theatre conceived and written by local people focussing
on a major issue affecting the community. It was performed by a cast of local,
non-professional musicians and actors accompanied by professionals. Some of
the former went on to professional careers and some of the latter, including
Bill Paterson, have become major figures in the acting world. Professional
artists, in all the art forms, were employed to work alongside local people,
crucially, on terms laid down by the Festival Society. This reversal of normal
practice mirrors Augusto Boal's injunction to artists, 'never go into a community
until it has articulated its need for you'. Many other opportunities were created
for the arts to flourish. In 1978 the Festival Society produced a major report
with 400 recommendations on how to improve life on the estate. The title of
the report, The Gentle Giant, was named after a 100 foot long land sculpture
of Gulliver conceived and designed by Jimmy Boyle while still a prisoner in
the Special Unit in Barlinnie Prison in Glasgow. It was formally dedicated
and unveiled by Billy Connolly in 1976. Environmental improvements were used
to include murals and play sculptures. With a certain cocky, native flair the
Community Art Team, under the direction of Rosie Gibson, invited New York artist
Pedro Silva to design and execute, with local people, a 60 foot long and 20
foot high sculpture of a mermaid covered in mosaic. Its location was strategic
and political. It was sited on the line of a proposed motorway which would
have cut the area in two. Reg Bolton, Neil Cameron, Mike Greenlaw, Stephanie
Knight, Chrissie Orr, Mike Rowan, Annie Stainer and Ken Wolverton were some
of the arts professionals who worked for several years with the people of Craigmillar.
All were affected by the very special conditions and ambience of the place
and which, thereafter, informed their own work.
There seems to be a fundamental, primitive need in all of us to make a mark
on and to shape the places where we live. Ivan Illich wrote, 'People do not
need only to obtain things, they need, above all, the freedom to make things
- things among which they can live, to give shape to them according to their
own feelings, their own tastes, their own imagination'. In towns and cities
human occupation subverts the formal and, even within the formal, as in neo-
classicism, rustication displays a need for the primitive. Roy Oxlade asserts
that , 'The primitive links all periods of art history as a profound source
of human response. It is what is enduring in art.' Craigmillar Festival Society
tapped into this fundamental need.
David Harding Sept.2004