Liverbird Safari Walking Tour

Meet at the School Lane entrance of Bluecoat.

Liverpool is famous for the birds on the magnificent Liver Building (the first ever skyscraper in the UK), but there are over 100 Liver Birds in the City. Join ArtsGroupie for a lively, fun two-hour walking tour ‘safari’ around the City Centre. The walk starts at Bluecoat, talking participants on a Liver Bird-spotting mission, learning about the history of Liverpool along the way. The tour finishes near the waterfront.

Bookers are asked to wear comfortable shoes, ensuring you visited restrooms before the tour commences. You are also advised to bring an umbrella or a waterproof, if rain is forecast (sun cream in the unlikely event of glorious weather in Oct!). Binoculars are a bonus (to see the birds up close and in intricate detail)!

This tour is suitable for any one with a good enough attention span -and mobility (or mobility support) to stay on the move for 2 hours.

Image © Suzi Dorey.

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Liverpool Irish Festival launch

Launch follow up: Adam Oronowicz kindly recorded some of the Festival launch, which can be viewed below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gPqhjq791Pg

Original listing
With opening speeches, music and a live preview of our newly adopted Festival theme song, our launch brings Festival friends together.

The Centre, our natural home, provides a convivial space in which to toast ‘Sláinte’ (health) to all those who join us, have helped us and will be with us for Festivals ahead. Book ahead to ensure you have the best seats!

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Attendance at the launch does not give you automatic attendance to The Old Time Sailors. You will need to book tickets seperately for this event.

We are proud to state this event is linked with Black History Month and the Cuture Liverpool programme.

Commuity invitation
Here at the Liverpool Irish Festival, we are very aware that representation has become a major part of our everyday work. We have had to find a voice to support our Irish communities against ignorance arising through Brexit; against general and systemic misunderstandings caused by assumptions about who the Irish in Britain are and the need to challenge the widely asserted by incorrect view that Irishness is white.

We know these things are wrong and that, often times, they echo what is happening to and in other communities.

We want to make our Festival open to Liverpool’s often overlooked communities and remind everyone that the Liverpool Irish Festival is for those with an Irish background -of any heritage- as well as those with no connection to Ireland at all! Arts and culture are for sharing; internally between those whom identify the culture as theirs and externally, so others can see why and how unique customs, creative exchanges and histories draw communities closer, drive them apart and/or help people with their identify.

This year’s Festival theme is exchange. Every event contains an exchange within it and we hope we can create exchanges with you. We welcome you -and the community you support- to our events and hope that you will share our specific invite to you widely. Parts of our programme this year involve individuals of Chinese Irish, Irish Caribbean and other Irish dual-heritages in a bid to start showing that Ireland’s people -it’s diaspora and communities abroad are a myriad of people, dreams and ambitions. We hope you will join us to celebrate some exceptional stories, art and history.

You can find everything you need to know about our events programme -and our Liverpool Irish Famine Trail project- at liverpoolirishfestival.com and you can follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram on @LivIrishFest. before signing off, I would encourage anyone that wanted to connect with our programme and the notifications coming out ahead of the Festival to sign up for our enewsletter – you can do that here: https://www.liverpoolirishfestival.com/sign-up/ This allows us to speak directly with you about the programme and community news updates.

Irish myth and legend (exhibition)

In 2020 Gael Linn and An tUltach partnered with the Liverpool Irish Festival to create a one-off creative commission to celebrates Irish language and folklore.

Selected for this commission, was storyteller and artist Nuala Monaghan. The resulting work tells five key stories from Irish myth and legend, each with an artwork to help communicate the power of the story. Shown among the Calderstones, that connect Liverpool with Ireland through thousands of years of use and symbolism, this exhibit helps to reveal the connections folklore continues to have on our modern world.

This exhibition was co-commissioned with Gael Linn and An tUltach. Gael Linn is a non-profit and non-governmental organisation focused on the promotion of the Irish language and the arts. An tUltach is Ireland’s oldest Irish language literary magazine, established in 1924.

Also see The Gods of Old; a Hallowe’en Storytelling listing, Sun 31 Oct.

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From London to Liverpool

Irish Film London is a not-for-profit organisation that promotes and supports the work of Irish filmmakers across all genres of film and television.

The organisation runs a year-round programme of screenings and events both online and in cinemas. Events are mostly in London, but also around the UK, and now -through our online platform- Irish Film From Home, they have a global reach.

This year, Irish Film London have partnered with the Festival to include a specially curated selection of short films that reflects this year’s theme of ‘exchange’ and, particularly, the challenges faced by the LGBTQI+ community. Through comedy, drama, animation and documentary, these short films delve into romantic love, overcoming fears and prejudices, family secrets and being open to life’s surprises. We hope you enjoy this exchange of visual storytelling, from the uniquely Irish perspectives of new and experienced filmmakers.
First Kiss (With a Girl)
A startlingly inventive experimental short that has the longest, sexiest kiss by confectionery you’ve ever seen! Yes, you read that right! The film explores that special sort of 11pm, tipsy, nightclub magic of late adolescence. This is a kitschy, low-fi, bubble-gum-sweet glance at queer intimacy.
Pogonophobia
In director Thomas Ryan’s award-winning short film, Pogonophobia, he addresses a little known -but truly debilitating- phobia: the fear of beards. In this comedy drama, his protagonist, Cyril, is a sufferer who hates leaving his flat. Forced out one evening, an act of homophobic bullying and a chance encounter at Grand Canal Dock, Dublin, will change that forever.
True
Shane Collins’ short drama, True, is about a grandfather’s struggles with his identity and his grandson’s homophobia. The film reflects Shane’s pride in his Irish heritage and intention to make films with truth and honesty at their core.
Becoming Cherrie
Award-winning short documentary from artist and filmmaker, Nicky Larkin, about actor and performer, Matthew Cavan, AKA Cherrie Ontop, Belfast’s beloved drag artist, who is living with HIV in a conservative Northern Irish society.
The Full Package
Trevor Kaneswaran’s debut short film The Full Package is light-touch comedy that challenges assumptions we make about those we meet, online and in person. It is about being open to unexpected opportunities.
Hold the Sausage
Hold the Sausage is a cross-generational comedy, set at the dinner table as ‘Nanny’ tries to grapple with her daughter and her granddaughter’s’ revelations and fears about what the neighbours will think. Chloe Muldoon plays all four parts to great comic effect.

Image from First Kiss (With a Girl), Clodagh Chapman

Cultural Connectedness Exchange #5

Event recording from 20 July 2021

Orginal event listing
The Cultural Connectedness Exchange Network introduces Irish and Northern Irish artists to Irish and Northern Irish cultural commissioners and providers (mainly in England).
Together we work to determine

the needs of Irish and Northern Irish artists, particularly those working in England (or with England-based organisations)
barriers faced within the arts sector, and in reference to specific issues such as Brexit or Covid-19
how cultural providers/commissioners can provide value/service for artists
how we can connect work and best represent Irish and Northern Irish artists.

We meet online in a bi-monthly meeting. These meetings advance our initial ideas, presented in this paper. We work together to create a positive, representational network to support and promote Irish and Northern Irish arts and culture in England (and Britain more widely).
This is a valuable network for any Irish or Northern Irish artist wanting to work in public art delivery. Additionally, it is a resource for cultural providers and commissioners who lead with and use Irish and Northern Irish work.
The network is still young and welcomes new additions. If you need any further information, please contact the Liverpool Irish Festival Director, Emma Smith, on emma@liverpoolirishfestival.com. You can find out more, here; where you can watch all of the previous sessions, download papers and see our membership details.

20 July (indicative) agenda
NB – this is an indicative agenda only; it is subject to review as we approach the meeting.

Introductions and work sharing
Identifying new barriers and solutions
Feedback from Arts Council England meeting, held between ACE, Liverpool Irish Festival and (Leeds) Irish Arts Foundation (14 June 2021)
Irish In Britain update on Irish APPG advances
Review our toolkits: what do we want to see and who can help build them?

The Struggle

Directed by Rachel Garfield, The Struggle is a video trilogy consisting of three single channel films.
The Trilogy
Each film reflects on the convergences and differences between peoples’ views in the late twentieth and early twenty-first century.  Looking at politics (The Straggle, 2012, 20 mins), the military (Opening Up, 2015, 11 mins) and religion (Glimpse, 2020, 15 mins), the films ask ‘what do we leave behind and what do we take forward in our lives?’.

Glimpse is the chief reason that Rachel made contact with us. As the final film in the trilogy, Glimpse is concerned with the relationship between religion -in this case Catholicism- and the individual. Liverpool’s Catholic tradition, closely associated with its relationship to Irish immigration (more here), is contextualised against the history of Catholicism in England. What are the legacies of that history in how people think about their relationship to Catholicism and Liverpool today?
Maker interests
Rachel’s primary interests focus on the complexities of peoples’ lived relationship with the world. To their ideals and to countering the simplistic understanding of attachments to place, history and community. The films take on aspects of society to think about the relationship between the individual, their context and wider society as an intergenerational conversation. Additionally, they investigate context and and community as an intergenerational conversation.
Maker biography
Rachel Garfield is an artist, writer and Fine Art teacher (University of Reading), who has exhibited at The Hatton Gallery, The Whitechapel Art Gallery, Focal Point Gallery and Beaconsfield Art Gallery among others. International exhibitions include Galerie du Presbytere (Romorantin-Lanthenay, France), Babylon Cinema (Berlin, Germany) and Arizona State University Museum (USA). For more on Rachel’s work, visit her website.
Watching
To access each of the films, please return to this page during the course of the Festival (from 10am Thurs 21-midnight Sun 31 Oct), where they will be operational during the Festival period. We recommend expanding the film frame to full screen, to maximise your enjoyment and to witness Rachel’s art at its richest. We are grateful to Rachel for sharing her work with the Festival.

The Struggle is commissioned by Beaconsfield Gallery Vauxhall (London).
The Straggle (Part I)

Opening Up (Part II)
Watcher notice: There are no overt or photographic images of acts of violence in this film, but there are sounds of gunfire and high pitched ringing, which some *may* find disturbing.

Glimpse (Part III)

Part I received support from Goldsmiths; Part II received support from Newcastle University and Part III received support from the University of Reading.

Have you enjoued these films. Perhaps you would like to leave us feedback? Click here.

In the Window: Sophie Longwill (exhibition)

Continuing our annual In the Window partnership, the Bluecoat Display Centre, Design and Crafts Council of Ireland (DCCI) and Liverpool Irish Festival selected emerging glass talent Sophie Longwill as the 2021featured artist.

This year’s ‘exchange’ brief provided one of the largest responses to our open call, set against the backdrop of Covid-19. What made Sophie’s work notable, was her exchange with Liverpool -via her sister- and this is embodied in the work. Below, Sophie explores the relationship between optical input and translation; materials and meaning; experience and storytelling. In her words, we travel to the heart of Sophie’s fragile work; it’s delicate, but fierce processes and the resulting representations that blend the ephemeral and untouchable with the creation of recognisable, tangible skies. In talking about the work, we visit her relationship with time and experience, central to many makers’ ability to bend materials to harness and communicate ideas.

This exhibition is run in partnership with Bluecoat Display Centre, with support from Design and Craft Council of Ireland.

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Look at the short interview Sam Rhodes (Bluecoat Display Centre) has run with artist Sophie Longwill:

The Art of Living: The Life and Times of Miss Amy June Furlong

The Art of Living: The Life and Times of Miss Amy June Furlong is a film.

It is part of a wider project, being run by The Sound Agents. In this part, they have documented the story of June Furlong, who -sadly- died in December 2020. It will premiere as part of the Liverpool Irish Festival’s contribution to the national St Brigid’s Day 2021 programme, marking one year since June appeared in a previous Festival commission: Liverpool Family Ties: The Irish Connection. St Brigid is prized for her commitment to the arts and to female empowerment – June embodies these elements in spades, thus the connection has been made.

June was a life model for 50 years modelling in Liverpool Art School, The Slade and the Royal Academy of Arts. Her story includes memories of friendships with Lucien Freud, Francis Bacon, Frank Auerbach and John Lennon, and the strict regime of working in art schools post WWII. Her resilience and charm led her to remember happy times and good people during lockdown, until her illness brought out a darker side of anger and resentment, towards the end of life.

June’s family migrated from Belfast to Liverpool and moved around the city, opening tea blending and grocery shops. Born in 1930, June followed the tradition of movement and went to live in London when she was 18. By sharing her story June wanted to encourage other people to reminisce and capture their heritage to pass on to younger generations. This film documents all of this.

A self-told story: Art with a Capital A
The following story was relayed to The Sound Agents, by June. It was read by Moira Kenny (one half of The Sound Agents) as June’s eulogy, at her funeral in December 2020. The story provides a flavour of June’s character, vocubulary and charm, which we thought would be welcome here:

“It seems to me, I have been in the professional art world forever! Certainly a very long time. When I was a little girl, I went to school at St Margaret of Antioch, I loved that school and this church. I went on to St Edmunds College on Devonshire Road.

“My grandfather Garrett came from Ireland; Belfast. My mother was born in Mount Street where my Granny ran a very successful business and they also had a business in Scotland Road. Granny was born in the Knightsbridge Club, Seel Street. Grandmother Furlong was a Florist and that is why I like flowers.

“My mother and father were married in Ireland and I was born in 1930. A time of terrific recession. At the top of the house, is a small back room, that was my bedroom all my life. My parents bedroom was next door. I was born in there.  They did want other children but it never happened so I was an only child. My uncle Len was a professional dancer. My mother was very much in to the Playhouse, she liked drama and used to go to classes. Mother was also an excellent Bridge player. My grandfather was Head of the Checking Department at Mersey Docks and Harbour. All of the professional classes lived around here.

“After leaving college I worked in an advertising agency in central Liverpool. The pay was poor but the experience was very good. At the same time, aged 17, I started to work in the drawing class at Liverpool School of Art, later the Polytechnic. I wanted to be an artist but my parents would not support me. They told me to go to work and pay my own way. It was inevitable that I would enter the art world in some shape or form.

“I became a full-time professional model at the age of 18 and was professionally associated with Arthur Ballard and Ron Scarland. The Surrealist artist, George Jardine was also one of the original staff at the Polytechnic. George became my life partner.

“Aged 21, I took off for London having secured myself a job at the very prestigious Slade School of Art. I do remember going to London having little or no money at all having spent quite a lot on a trip to France. Certainly this was a different world I had entered.

“Now I was on my own in an expensive city. I lived at 4 Belsize Park which is right opposite Abbey Road Studios. I was a big success at the Slade, the classes were always packed out and I began to know the artists. John Bratby had just got a place at the Slade, but decided to change over to the Royal College of Art – as did Frank Auerbach. I got to know Euan Uglow – he was a very hardworking student. I posed for everybody: Lucien Freud, Leon Kossoff, Sheila Fell, Carel Weight, Ruskin Spear to name a few. Peter Blake was also a student at that time.

“Jacob Epstein would spend hours talking to me at the Royal College of Art Sculpture Department and Augustus John wrote to me personally requesting that I pose for him.

“I posed weekends for Euan Uglow and a group of artists who paid me well and fed me. I loved my days at the Royal College and the Slade and all the big Art Schools.

“I then lived in Hampstead and I used to socialise with Lucien Freud and Francis Bacon and all of the film stars like John Gregson and David Poltangese; he was a film director. He used to say to me: “June you’re the only person who hasn’t asked me to put them in a film.” Well… I hadn’t thought of it at the time!

“My mother came to see me, she did not understand my way of life in London. I took her to lunch at the Royal College.  It was a different way of life.  I was asked to come back to Liverpool. My mother said: “They have always been decent to you June”, but really she wanted me back.

“One day I was sitting in the life room waiting for the students to turn up and the door flew open and in came John Lennon and he looked at me. I was in house robes and he said: “My name is John Lennon and I have enrolled here and part of my course is drawing from you is that alright?”.

“I said “Yeah of course it is”.

“John would come in and start telling stories which were quite funny and the students could draw and laugh. But not always, because if they had a drawing they needed to do, then, they needed to concentrate, you know. Unless you passed the life drawing you did not do your Intermediate Certificate and then couldn’t get on what you had chosen to do.

“Life was good, Adrian Henri, Josh Kirby, Dick Young, Sam Walsh all of the Liverpool artists and friends George Melly, Rob Riley all of them… life was good.

“When all the family died, there was just uncle Fred and I living in the house. When he got cancer he moved downstairs to the front room. I would fill my flask, see to Fred then rush to the Art College with my bag and my house coat. I worked on the top-floor of the Foundation Studies building and I got my pay docked for being 5 minutes late. There was no messing around at the Art College, you had to put in the hours. People who don’t mix in the Art world seem to think it is all very casual.

“I retired at 65 I wrote to the Art School and asked if I could stay on for longer, but I couldn’t

“The experience of working in the commercial advertising agency helped me many years later when I began presenting Art Exhibitions in most of the public places in and around Merseyside as well as Art Galleries. Arthur Ballard used to call me the Gertrude Stein of Liverpool because of all of the exhibitions I organised.

“It gave me great pleasure to present the exhibitions of Major Merseyside Artists, a tremendous amount of effort went into making the shows the success they undoubtedly were. The shows included a cross-section of the most original and interesting talents in the region, something for everyone regardless of art experience…. for the casual observer and the art connoisseur. To keep right up there is not easy, it’s like anybody… a star. What happens to a star on the stage? He is only as good as his next production. Know who you are, what you can do and what to leave alone.

“Now back to today.

“I did not have Coronovirus. It was weird, nobody my age in the street and no children.

“But what I did see in the street was nice young people on their bikes going down town and coming back with food in boxes on their backs. They would shout: “Do you want anything?”

“And I’d say, “No, it’s okay my friends look after me”.

“My life went full circle and I went in to Marmaduke Street Care Home – the same street that Granny lived in before they moved to Falkner Street.

“I spent my time telling the nurses my stories about my life partner George Jardine and the wonderful life I have led”.
Image credit: Ronald French (detail only).

This film was was commissioned with creative community funding, awarded by the Irish Government through its Emigrant Support Programme. In addition, it was supported by SpaceHive and Crowdfund Liverpool.
#CreativeCommunity

Since the onset of Covid-19, cultural organisations and artists have suffered a lack of creative opportunities because of restrictions on arts venues and engagements. #CreativeCommunity is a once-off initiative by the Embassy of Ireland to Great Britain, the Consulate General of Ireland (Cardiff), and the Consulate General of Ireland (Edinburgh) that provided creative opportunities for Irish artists living in Britain to produce cultural content, shared online. Through Creative Community, the Embassy of Ireland in London and the Consulates General in Edinburgh and Cardiff have supported arts and culture-focused projects with eight organisations, directly engaging with at least 40 Irish creatives across Britain to produce and show their work.

The artists Liverpool Irish Festival has commissioned using this programme, include: Cathy Carter / Andrew Connally / Edy Fung (via Art Arcadia) / Alison Little / Maz O’Connor / Ciara Ní É / The Sound Agents. The links will take you to the individual commissions.

Cultural Connectedness Exchange #3

Event recording from 23 March 2021:
(subtitles will be refreshed and updated before the end of the week). Please note, there are some sound glitches during the opening film, as people were admitted. Don’t adjust your set! These do pass.
https://youtu.be/PD1Flz_YH0E

Event information for 23 March meeting:
As part of the 2020 Liverpool Irish Festival, a Cultural Connectedness Exchange was held to introduce Irish and Northern Irish artists to Irish and Northern Irish cultural commissioners and providers (mainly in England), to determine
• the needs of Irish and Northern Irish artists (particularly those working in England or with England-based organisations)
• barriers they were facing post-Brexit and during Covid-19
• how cultural providers/commissioners could provide value/service in relation to Covid-19/Brexit.
This initial meeting has progressed to a (roughly) bi-monthly network meeting, which will advance ideas presented in this paper (LINK) and work together to create a positive, representational network that supports and promotes Irish and Northern Irish arts and Culture in England (and Britain more widely) using its membership.
We intend for this to become a valuable network to any Irish or Northern Irish artist wanting to work in public art delivery as well as to cultural providers and commissioners who focus -or could focus- on Irish and Northern Irish work.
The network is still young and welcomes new additions. If you need any further information, please contact the Liverpool Irish Festival Director, Emma Smith, on emma@liverpoolirishfestival.com
Future meeting dates are set for 25 May, 20 July, 26 Oct and 14 Dec 2021.

The last network session was held on 19 Jan 2021. The recording (including subtitles) of this event, is available here:

If you wish to download a  transcription of the subtitles, CCEN subtitles.
Use this link to watch Meeting #1.

 

Tony Birtill: A Hidden History

For those that may not know, we are sorry to report that Tony Birtill passed away, early on 21 Oct 2021. Tributes are being sent in to The Irish Post, via Fiona.Audley@irishpost.co.uk More infomation can be found here.

We hope this film shows something of Tony’s skill, ability and knowledge.He will be missed by many.

Original post
This event has now passed. A recording of it is available here:

NB: Subtitles for the English and Irish sections of this event have been generated and edited. Thanks for watching.

For a glowing review of Tony’s book and the details it features, direct from Belfast Media, click here.

Event details as originally listed:

The Liverpool accent is famous throughout the world.

It has been influenced by the many nationalities that have entered the busy seaport in the last 200 years. The Irish were the largest such grouping. In a new book, Liverpool-born Irish teacher and journalist, Tony Birtill examines the impact of their language on the local culture and accent known as Scouse.
The event
The Liverpool Irish Festival and Writing on the Wall are immensely proud to present the launch of Hidden History-The Irish Language in Liverpool/An Ghaeilge i Learpholl as part of the 2021 Year of Writing.  Written by Liverpool Irish Festival Board member Tony Birtill, the book is the product of extensive research in England and Ireland. It provides evidence that the Irish language was spoken by many thousands of people in Liverpool, up to the start of the last century, some of which inevitably entered into ‘Scouse’.
Providing a context for the book
Tony Birtill explains: ”‘Ter rar wack’ is usually regarded as a rather old-fashioned Liverpool-slang [for] farewell, but when written ‘tabhair aire, a mhac’, it makes perfect sense to an Irish speaker and is pronounced in a very similar way to the Scouse. It means: ‘take care, son’. The language of poorer, marginalised sections of the community is often viewed with distain by people who are better-off”.

The book describes how 24,000 Irish residents in Liverpool signed a petition to the Vatican, in 1842, requesting more Irish-speaking priests for the city, as they could not speak enough English to attend confession. But the language was not confined to Catholics. A Church of England vicar conducted a survey in the Vauxhall and St Stephens area, in 1850, which identified substantial numbers of Irish-speaking Protestants in the area, some with no English at all. “The Irish language persisted in Liverpool, especially after the Famine of 1845-52; so when the Gaelic revival movement began -at the end of the nineteenth century- Liverpool-born men and women, both Catholic and Protestant, made an outstanding contribution to the movement“, Tony adds.

Included amongst them was the artist Cesca Trench (a.k.a Cesca Chevenix, more here), who was born in Tuebrook, and Stephen McKenna, who was born in Walton and is mentioned in James Joyce’s novel Ulysses.
Where can you get yours?
Hidden History-The Irish Language in Liverpool/An Ghaeilge i Learpholl is available from News From Nowhere (Bold Street, Liverpool) for just £9 + P&P. LINK HERE.

About Tony Birtill
Tony Birtill was born in Walton, Liverpool, where he attended Blessed Sacrament Primary School. He is a member of the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) retired members branch and still makes contributions to Irish language television and radio programmes. He has written extensively in the Irish language.

His secondary education was with the Irish Christian Brothers at Cardinal Godfrey High School in Everton. He graduated in Economic History and Economics from the University of East Anglia before completing a PGCE at the University of London.

Tony taught for many years in further and higher education before working as a journalist. A fluent Irish speaker, he wrote extensively in the language, particularly for the online magazine, Beo. He teaches the language voluntarily at the Liverpool Irish Centre and leads hill walks (in Irish) at the Oideas Gael College in County Donegal, during the summer.