News
Electrofringe puts access on the program
A free interactive workshop showcasing accessible electronic music making is being presented at this year’s Electrofringe festival of electronic arts and culture, being held in Newcastle from 1 to 5 October 2009.
Randolf Reimann, founder of artist collective Tra La La Blip, will run a two-hour workshop using Ableton Live to kick off the festival. Tra La La Blip, based in the far north coast of NSW, produced Soundbeams Volume 1 in 2008 with groups of people who attend Multitask Disability Services. This compilation CD continues to receive publicity around the globe and has started creating income from iTunes.
Accessible Arts will contribute to the workshop by promoting its work to electronic arts practitioners to garner interest about access, inclusion and innovative projects that involve and engage people with disability.
When: 11:00 am to 1:00 pm Thursday 1 October 2009
Where: Staple Manor, 401 Hunter Street, Newcastle
Who: All welcome
Cost: Free
Access: Wheelchair accessible
More info: Jacqui O'Reilly, Communications Coordinator, Accessible Arts 0414 828 544 or info@aarts.net.au.
Website: www.electrofringe.net
Electrofringe coincides with Crack Theatre Festival, Critical Animals, National Young Writers Festival and Sound Summit, which all take place in Newcastle as part of This is Not Art.
Following the success of the audio-described Tactile Tour program in 2010, Sculpture by the Sea are partnering with Accessible Arts to offer people with vision impairment and people with intellectual disability the opportunity to engage with art in a hands-on guided experience.
Accessible Arts hosted the Festivals Forum in July 2011, to review access for people with disability at festival events throughout NSW. Representatives from fifteen festivals large and small, and supporting arts organisations, gathered at the Utzon Room at Sydney Opera House to attend the three hour forum.
As part of an agreement to support festivals to develop accessibility, Accessible Arts has provided training to Sculpture by the Sea staff for the third consecutive year. Twelve staff from all sections of the organisation attended three hours of Disability Awareness and Access training to further embed accessibility practices throughout their organisation.
Festivals are increasing in popularity and continue to give expression and exposure to innovative creative arts and culture, which in turn adds greater vibrancy to communities who share in these occasions. Accessible Arts will present a forum in July, to bring festival producers together to discuss the unique challenges they face when improving access to festival events.
Nastasia Campanella is a Sydney based freelance print, radio and online journalist who also happens to be blind. She recently attended one of the audio described tactile tours presented by Sculpture by the Sea in partnership with Accessible Arts and reported on the experience.