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Participants Sought to Help ‘Make the Future’ with Launch of €1.82m Cross-Border Cultural Programme

Participants Sought to Help ‘Make the Future’ with Launch of €1.82m Cross-Border Cultural Programme

The regional programme is being delivered by a consortium of leading cultural organisations including the Nerve Centre, National Museums NI, Public Record Office of Northern Ireland and Linen Hall Library, supported through €1.82m of EU funding under the PEACE IV Programme, managed by the Special EU Programmes Body (SEUPB).

Making the Future will use significant objects, collections and archives as a stimulus to pose challenging questions about the past, ‘take the temperature’ of where we are at currently as a society, and create a manifesto for our future.

Participants from different communities, cultural and religious backgrounds will have multiple opportunities to get involved, to have their voices heard, to tell stories relevant to their lives, to be creative and to gain new skills.

Stories and creative responses will be dynamically curated in shared spaces and places – including high profile exhibitions and events, digital content and social media channels – throughout the project.

 

Welcoming the project Gina McIntyre, CEO of the SEUPB said: 'Included within the PEACE Programme is funding with a specific objective of building positive relationships, and supports projects that have a regional-wide impact which will help challenge some of the misconceptions and prejudices that keep people apart.

'This cross border project will help deliver upon that objective by bringing people together, on a cross-community basis, and giving them unique access to archived documents, objects and records where they can gain a better understanding of the past. As a result the project will help to change perceptions, encourage the development of new and positive relationships and contribute towards the creation of a more cohesive society,' she continued.

Welcoming the funding from PEACE IV, David Lewis, Nerve Centre Project Lead, said: 'Making the Future is an exciting new programme which will see the Nerve Centre, National Museums NI, PRONI and the Linen Hall Library offering creative opportunities to people from all walks of life across Northern Ireland and the border counties. Participants will have a chance to make a positive contribution, changing themselves and hopefully society for the better along the way.'

The programme was launched in Nerve Visual Gallery with the Troubles Art exhibition. Drawn from the art collection at National Museums NI, the Troubles Art exhibition provides a broad representation of responses to the Troubles by artists from Northern Ireland and beyond. Troubles Art at Nerve Visual is also funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund and Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

Visitors will be able to view artwork from artists such as John Keane, Willie Doherty, Rita Duffy, Locky Morris, F.E. McWilliam, Ursula Burke, Donovan Wylie and Paul Seawright. The exhibition explores a range of themes which are universal to conflict – such as suffering and loss, violence and destruction, imprisonment, sectarianism, traditions, territory, and life in the midst of turmoil. The Troubles Art exhibition is accompanied by an events and community engagement programme and will run until April 28.

Image: BELUM.P2438 | Woman in Bomb Blast | 1974/1 (1974) | McWilliam, F.E. 1909-1992 | © F.E. McWilliam Estate | Collection Ulster Museum

 

William Blair, Director of Collections at National Museums NI, said: 'National Museums NI is delighted to be working with the Nerve Centre and our other partners on this fantastic project. The Troubles Art exhibition brings a selection of works from National Museums NI’s collections to the north west for the first time. Through the unique perspectives of artists, the exhibition offers opportunities to consider the Troubles and its effects and provide avenues for exploring the legacy of our past in new and engaging ways which we hope will better inform our future.'

Also coming up during 2019 are exhibitions at the Linen Hall Library and Public Record Office of Northern Ireland exploring Women in the Archives, as well as further exhibitions with National Museums NI around issues of culture and identity. After launching, exhibitions will tour to locations across Northern Ireland and border counties encouraging new communities to get involved.

Michael Willis, Director of PRONI said: 'PRONI has enjoyed a close relationship with the Nerve Centre, NMNI and the Linen Hall Library over recent years. We are delighted with the opportunity to continue to cooperate through the Making the Future partnership and to build upon recent successes.

'The three projects that we are contributing to include a thought provoking exhibition exploring the role of women in the archives. It will highlight and promote the experiences of ordinary women using their own words captured in diaries, letters and other records within PRONI’s unique collections. This will be accompanied by a programme of community engagement and two digital projects including 100 shared stories and the creation of an oral history archive.'

Julie Andrews, Director of the Linen Hall Library said: 'The Linen Hall Library is excited to be orchestrating the Women in the Archives strand of Making the Future. Comprehensive research into the female voice of Irish history will be undertaken and channeled through a variety of outputs such as workshops, exhibitions, walking tours and events. It will also empower participants from all communities and persuasions in basic skills such as research, journaling and story mapping. The initial stages of the project have already seen success and we look forward to rolling this out city-wide, province-wide and further afield.'

Match-funding for the Making the Future project has been provided by the Executive Office in Northern Ireland and the Department of Rural and Community Development in Ireland.

For more information on Making the Future and how to get involved visit www.makingthefuture.eu.