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New LGBTQ trail at Brighton Museum

Robert White and Kelly Boddington have been developing a higher profile for LGBTQ people in the Royal Pavilion and Brighton Museum. Robert explains what the pair have been up to.

Kelly Boddington and Robert White with the LGBTQ Trail leaflets
Kelly Boddington and Robert White with the LGBTQ Trail leaflets

I’ve worked for the Royal Pavilion & Museums for over seven years now in a number of roles, mostly customer service related, which although I have enjoyed they have not really allowed me to be creative or work with our collections. I studied Fine Art at the University of Brighton and so have always been keen to look for opportunities to get more involved with that side of working in Brighton Museum.

At the start of 2013 a temporary position came up to work with one of the curators on new interpretation and a public trail for the Museum based on the theme of ‘Colour’, I jumped at the chance along with my colleague and friend Kelly Boddington.

At this early stage we took the theme very literally and began looking at our displays and researching into the history of colours and pigments, I think it’s fair to say that at this stage both Kelly and I found the project rather dry!

During a meeting a few weeks into the project it was decided that we needed to look at the theme of colour more broadly to develop something more engaging. We discussed the museum’s lack of LGBTQ representation and how it doesn’t reflect Brighton as one of the biggest LGBTQ cities in the country.

This is a fact that has been brought up in visitor feedback for a considerable amount of time and is something the Museum is keen to develop. A decision was then made that having an LGBTQ trail would fit with the colour theme perfectly (rainbow flag!) and that this project provided a great opportunity to begin increasing that presence in Brighton Museum.

Over the next few months Kelly and I delved into the permanent collections in the Museum and looked for objects with LGBTQ links. We researched creators, artists, royalty and the history of Brighton and eventually ended up with far too much information for the trail.

The research stage was fantastic and we both found particular subjects that we connected with. Personally, Alexander McQueen was probably the most fascinating person to research. I have always admired his work but hadn’t ever explored much further than that.

Looking into the history of Brighton as a gay city was also interesting and very often quite amusing. Some of the personal stories that were revealed certainly gave an insight into gay life in the city two hundred years ago and also during the two world wars.

The leaflet, along with some YouTube videos we recorded to accompany each stop on the trail, went public in May 2013. At the time the Object Stories Trail (as it was then known) was only meant to be temporary as our leaflet print run was limited and a number of the objects on the trail were due to be moved for the next major exhibition, Subversive Design.

After five months and a public evening event in the museum called Out Late, the trail was taken down and it wasn’t until March 2014 that Kelly and I were asked to continue the work that the trail started.

We now had the funding to have the leaflet redesigned completely and printed with a view to it becoming a permanent feature of the Museum and also to put an event on linked with the trail over summer.

As part of this new set of work Kelly and I had the opportunity to attend the fantastic Un-straight Museum conference organised by Homotopia at the Museum of Liverpool – I recommend looking this up online if you’re interested in the LGBTQ side of museum collections. We were able to take ideas from this and start feeding them into our work at the Museum – for example, we have spoken at an Art teacher conference on the subject of LGBTQ issues in secondary schools and have started working closely with our Senior Learning Officer to improve some of our educational sessions.

Keith Vaughan: Two interlinked Figures, 1965  © The Estate of Keith Vaughan
Keith Vaughan: Two interlinked Figures, 1965
© The Estate of Keith Vaughan

The great, vibrant new leaflet design, created by Brighton-based EighthDay, has been out in Brighton Museum since the end of July. To celebrate the re-launch of the trail Kelly and I ran Hello Sailor! – a free public event also tied into our Keith Vaughan display (on until November 9th 2014) where visitors could participate in activities exploring the male form, including life drawing. We were really pleased with the turn out and have since received some positive feedback from visitors who have taken the new trail.

We are both really keen to carry on working to increase the LGBTQ presence in the Museum and will continue to work on other projects in the future. I think the trail is just the start of so much more that we could do and although it has taken a long time to happen, is starting to meet a public demand for the kind of content we display.

For any further information on the trail or other potential LGBTQ projects or events in the future email: visitor.services@brighton-hove.gov.uk

 

 

 

 

REVIEW: Matt Alber, Latest Bar

Matt Alber at Latest Bar Brighton on July 31 in association with Authentic Productions.

Matt Alber at Latest Bar
Matt Alber at Latest Bar

Sometimes all you need to hear is one bar before a singer gets to you.

I had never heard of Matt Alber before I saw his concert posted by a member of the Brighton Gay Men’s Chorus and was not sure what I was letting myself in for.

All I’d heard was that he was a Grammy award winning gay singer songwriter well known on the scene in the US, and who after a couple of tours had an increasing number of followers here in the UK. One bar is all it took to be captivated, and I’m not ashamed to say he brought a lump to my throat frequently throughout the night.

There is something strangely flexible about his voice. At times when Matt reached for what seemed to be his upper range he would suddenly power right through the highest note into a falsetto that was as rich and natural as his given voice. He had his audience in the palm of his hand with gentle good looks and his deceptively boyish charm and banter revealing at times a sharp intellect and tenderhearted appreciation that endeared him to me as a human being.

Most of the material was his own, the life-inspired stories of a truly talented musician with a sophisticated musical take on life. Songs you know included Dylan’s Make You Feel My Love and Houston’s I Wanna Dance With Somebody. At one point he performed an astounding a capella version of I’ll Be Loving You Always taking it to dizzy heights of jazz improvisation which I’m sure would blow Irving Berlin away along with the writers he dedicated his own tribute songs to, Billy Joel and David Bowie. I believe all those guys would have loved that performance.

He currently has an album out ‘Wind Sand Stars’. I think my favourite track on it is House on Fire, but seeing him live is a must. I can guarantee a great night.

REVIEW BY LOUIS LOIZOU:

 

September 10: World Suicide Prevention Day

Chief Constable of Sussex Police Giles York to speak at Grassroots Suicide Prevention event on September 10.

Grassroots Suicide PreventionThe event to mark World Suicide Prevention Day will be staged at The Brighthelm Centre starting from 9.30am.

Order of events:

9.30 am – 1.00 pm: Free suicide alertness training for community members

Grassroots Suicide Prevention will be offering 60 free places on safeTALK (Suicide Alertness For Everyone), thanks to donations from The Mucky Duck Pub and other local fundraisers.

For more information about the course and to book a place, CLICK HERE:   

1.00pm – 2.00 pm: A *free lunch* will be provided for people staying on for the afternoon’s workshops.

2.00pm – 3.15 pm: Free workshops open to everyone

RSVP to chris@prevent-suicide.org.uk if you would like to attend the afternoon workshops and/or public session which will include.

· Self Help and resources for someone at risk of suicide

· Developing suicide safer organisations and services

· Mindfulness session

3.30pm – 4.00 pm: Resources Marketplace in the auditorium

Grassroots Suicide Prevention will be taking pledge signatures, selling books, and giving out suicide prevention resources to the public. Other local services will be represented also. There is still room for 1 or 2 other local organisations to have a stand. To secure a stand, email: chris@prevent-suicide.org.uk

4.00pm – 6.00 pm: Public session

During the public session two significant suicide prevention innovations are being launched:

· The UK’s first suicide prevention app for smartphones and tablets

· The UK’s first suicide prevention tool for people with learning disabilities

Chief Constable of Sussex: Giles York
Chief Constable of Sussex: Giles York

Confirmed speakers for the public session include:

· Giles York (Chief Constable Sussex Police and Force lead for Diversity)

· Ian Stevens (Suicide Prevention Programme Manager for Network Rail)

· Lisa Rodrigues (former CEO of Sussex Partnership Foundation Trust and new Grassroots Trustees)

The theme for World Suicide Prevention this year is ‘Suicide Prevention: One World Connected’.

 

What: World Suicide Prevention Day event. Free Workshops and launch of UK’s First Suicide Prevention App

Where: The Brighthelm Centre, North Road, Brighton, East Sussex BN1 1YD

When: Wednesday, September 10

Time: Starting from 9.30am

If you would like to attend, EMAIL:

For more information, CLICK HERE: 

The Ultimate Guide to Addiction and Suicide by Paul Clarke at Ocean Recovery Centre.

REVIEW: Looking Glass: Paul Diello

Brighton-based singer/songwriter Paul Diello performed a  rousing set at Brighton Pride in time for the release of his second album, Looking Glass.

Paul DielloThe collection kicks off with the ‘80s-tinged single, ‘(I Am A) Voodoo Doll’, a creeping, almost hypnotic, track surely suitable for a late-night shimmy with the lights turned down low before settling into ‘Auto’ a crashing indie tune with evocative, and imaginative, sea-shanty vibes.

After a cracking opening, Paul, a multi-instrumentalist and vocalist, turns down the bass for the acoustic piano-heavy ‘Same’, a stirring ballad blanched in reverb, before turning it back up for the moody ‘Rock the Boat’ and ‘Amaryllis’, a song evoking Boy George, vocally at least, with fizzy keyboards replacing George’s lilting bass.

By the midway point things mellow out a bit with two slinky R&B-infused numbers that could be deemed as filler. While ‘Thick Skin’, the stronger of the two, showcases Paul’s vocals, and his falsetto in particular, which melds effortlessly with the orchestral backing, ‘Butterflies’ is just a little too anodyne to really take off.

R&B dalliances aside, the colossal Anthony and the Johnsons-esque epic Whenever You May Find Her, which clocks in at just shy of 7 minutes, finds Paul flexing his songwriting muscle, back behind the piano, retrained, controlled and subdued before the thunder of drums and multi-layered vocals lead it to its ultimate conclusion.

Looking Glass by Paul Diello is out in September.

For more information, CLICK HERE:  

 

Channel 4’s ‘Bodyshockers’ with Katie Piper wants you!

Do you regret your cosmetic surgery, tattoos, piercings, hair extensions or anything else?

Bodyshockers

Are you about to have an extreme piercing, buttock implants or a big and unusual tattoo or something else?

If so Channel 4 wants to hear from you.

To get in touch and tell your story, EMAIL: 

For more information about Bodyshockers, CLICK HERE:

 

 

PREVIEW: The Short & Girlie Show

Eight women, three acts, two hours. Are you ready for the Spreading the Love Tour?

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The UK’s longest running all-female comedy improv troupe present sketches and songs based on audience suggestions and feature:

•  The Short & Girlie Show IMPROVISATION www.shortandgirlie.com  

•  Hannah Brackenbury COMEDY SONGS www.brackers.co.uk 

•  Lara A King STAND-UP www.laraaking.co.uk 

Tour dates include:

Fri Sept 5: Halo Bar BRISTOL

Sat Sept 6: with special guests Greymatter, South Street Theatre READING

Tue Sept 9: Bar Wotever, Royal Vauxhall Tavern LONDON SE11

Fri Sept 12: Funny Girls, Caroline of Brunswick BRIGHTON, 8.15pm, £5/£4

Fri Sept 19: Hoopla Impro, Miller of Mansfield LONDON SE1

Fri Sept 26: MY Comedy, Memorial Hall, Kings Heath BIRMINGHAM

Sat Sept 27: MY Comedy, Ego Performance Company COVENTRY

Sun Sept 28: MY Comedy, Belmont Hotel LEICESTER

Fri Oct 3: The Dinner Ladies (venue tbc) PORTSMOUTH

Sat Oct 11: The Verdict, Edward Street, BRIGHTON, 8.30pm, £5 advance saver ticket, £7/£5 concs

Sun Oct 12: She Bar Soho LONDON W1D

Fri Oct 17: Lesbilicious Comedy, Canalhouse Bar NOTTINGHAM

Sat Oct 18: Women in Comedy Festival, Kings Arms, Salford MANCHESTER

Sun Oct 19: Lesbilicious Comedy, The Stand NEWCASTLE

For more information and to book tickets online, CLICK HERE:

 

Facebook: The Short and Girlie Show

Twitter: @shortandgirlie

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