23rd November - 16th December, 2023
Open: Thursday - Saturday, 12 - 5pm
NCA CUrates
Tyne & Wear Music/Youth Collectivism from the 1980s and beyond…
This exhibition will explore the legacy of Tyne and Wear Youth Music Collectives that started in the 1980s, to identify engagement methods that can inform current and future practice. It will feature Archival material from DIY music collectives and venues: The Garage (Newcastle), The Station (Gateshead) and The Bunker (Sunderland), that grew out of the disenchantment of rapid de-industrialisation of the region, to create a space to explore the impact these collectives had on people's lives as part of our living cultural history.
Events
Saturday 18th November, 4 - 7pm: Opening Event
Saturday 25th November, 12 - 4pm: Discussion event - Youth / Music Collectives: Exploring the legacy
In the early 80's DIY music collectives formed in Sunderland (Sunderland Musicians Collective) and Gateshead (Gateshead Music Collective), both frustrated by the lack of space available for practicing, recording and playing live music. Both negotiated the use of buildings, The Bunker and The Station respectively.
These spaces were heavily indebted to punk and DIY with its emphasis on active participation in culture in contrast to the traditionally hierarchical division between performer and spectator. The GMC arose from those involved with the Garage venue in Newcastle (1980 -1981). A successful working model had been achieved upon its closure; the GMC / Station was the next step. Punk in the North East grew out of a lot of anger and disenchantment,as the rapid de-industrialisation of the area reduced opportunities for work for young people. Punk gave a sense of agency to resist systemic issues at the local level.
Having a space to practice and play gigs gave respite from the unrelenting socio-economic conditions of the time and opened participants to co-operative and collectivist structures, allowing them to explore ideological alternatives to the status quo.
This concept of DIY collectivism and participation is alive and well locally to this day, we can see this in practice at the collectively / volunteer run Star and Shadow Cinema / Venue (the current incarnation of local alternative cinema culture timeline stretching back to the 1960s). Through the continuing existence of the Bunker celebrating its 40th anniversary, as well as the more recently opened (2022) Lubber Fiend venue, there are no doubt many more examples we're missing here too..
An aim of this exhibition and associated events, 40 years on from our collectives formation, is to explore that legacy and the impact it has had on people's lives as part of our living cultural history, and as it says above 'to inform current and future practice'.