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Local artist makes final four

A University of Brighton graduate is among four artists shortlisted for the BP Portrait Award at London’s National Gallery, considered one of the UK’s most prestigious art competitions.

CHARLIE Schaffer said his painting has not only proved successful but it also helped him and his subject recover from depression: “It became our therapies.”

Charlie, who graduated in Fine Art Painting BA(Hons) in 2014, is no stranger to success. He previously beat a field of 2,000 to win the Lynn Painter-Stainers title Young Artist Award and he later collected the Brian Botting Prize ‘for an outstanding representation of the human figure’ three times.

This time Charlie and his co-finalists were selected from 2,538 entries from 84 countries and were chosen anonymously by a panel which included writer and presenter Gaylenbe Gould, artist Gary Hume and curator Zoé Whitley.

This year is the Award’s 40th year at the National Portrait Gallery and 30th year of sponsorship by BP.

The award has a first prize of £35,000, making it one of the largest for any global arts competition. The winner also receives, at the Gallery’s discretion, a commission worth £7,000, agreed between the National Portrait Gallery and the artist. The second prize winner receives £12,000 and a third prize winner £10,000.

Imara
Imara

Charlie said of his nomination: “At first there was a sense of disbelief, and then I felt a massive wave of relief. I had been working on this painting, primarily the fur coat, in an incredibly intense manor leading up to the deadline. It was only after receiving the acceptance email that I realised how glad I was that the hard work had paid off.

“Finding out about being shortlisted was a strange experience – we found out almost a month ago, and the prize giving isn’t for another month, so it was a bizarre mix of being excited whilst simultaneously suppressing that excitement in order to ensure I could still carry on working undistracted.”

Charlie’s entry is a portrait of his close friend, Imara in her Winter Coat. The 27-year-old, originally from London, met Imara, an English Literature student, after he moved permanently to Brighton.

He said: “What I look for in sitters is essentially honesty, or a willingness to be open. Imara immediately strikes one as having these qualities. This painting took four months, three times a week for three hours at a time, and occurred during a time in which both of us were going through quite a severe depression. This painting became both of our therapies, our saviour, our reason to get up in the morning and carry on.”

Charlie described his time at the University as “golden”. He said: “The course was a fantastic one in my eyes. You were expected to go into the studio, with no brief and to just make work, teaching you the importance of self-motivation, something that is integral to one’s future life as an artist.”

Prize winners will be announced on June 10, 2019 and the BP Portrait Award 2019 exhibition will run at the National Portrait Gallery from June 13 to October 20, 2019.

Women only disco returns to Shoreham on June 8

Let’s Dance! Women only disco returns to the Shoreham Centre, West Sussex on Saturday, June 8 at 8pm – midnight.

A FUN evening for women over 18 who love to dance, hosted by DJ Maureen (Little Mo) and guest DJ Lynn.

There is free car parking at venue with easy public transport to/from Brighton area.

The licensed bar will close at 11.30pm.

The last 2 Lets Dance! events sold out, so book tickets early as their is no entry on the door.

Advance booking only (via eventbrite).


Event: Lets Dance! Women only disco

Where: The Shoreham Centre, 2 Pond Road, Shoreham by Sea, West Sussex, BN43 5WU

When: Saturday, June 8

Time: 8pm-midnight

Cost: £8.50 tickets in advance only. No entry on door

To book tickets online, click here:

Bongo’s bingo to launch Northern Pride Festival

Big prizes, pop tunes and a special guest performance will all feature at the opening night of one of the UK’s biggest free LGBT+ festivals.

ORGANISERS of the Northern Pride Festival have teamed up with club night favourite, Bongo’s Bingo, to host a one-off event at the launch night of this year’s festival on Friday 19 July.

And the evening will also feature a live show from MOBO award-winning group Big Brovaz and R&B group Booty Luv, best known for hit songs Baby Boy and Boogie 2nite.

The popular bingo club night – where singing along to favourite pop classics and dancing on the table mid-game is encouraged – first started in Liverpool and has now toured all over the UK and abroad.

Players will also be able to make the most of the fun fair and a range of food stalls and bars at the Pride event, which takes place at the Festival Arena at Newcastle’s Town Moor.

Ste Dunn
Ste Dunn

Ste Dunn, chair of Northern Pride, believes it is the perfect way to launch this year’s festival.

He said: “We’re so excited to be hosting the team at Bongo’s Bingo for the opening night of Pride and performances from Big Brovaz and Booty Luv are sure to make the evening something really special.” 

“Bongo’s Bingo injects new life into bingo and it’s not difficult to see why it has become so popular with adults of all ages.”

“I can’t think of a better way to launch the festival this year and it’s sure to be a fantastic night to remember.”

Jonny Bongo
Jonny Bongo

Bongo’s Bingo co-founder and host of the evening, Jonny Bongo, said: “We can’t wait to bring the ultimate Bongo’s Bingo to this year’s Northern Pride.

“We know for a fact that Newcastle is home to one of the wildest crowds in the UK and I can’t wait to see them in action.

“We’ll be bringing more confetti, more guilty-pleasure tunes and more amazing prizes than Newcastle will know what to do with.”

To purchase tickets starting at £18, click here:

All proceeds from ticket sales for the event will go towards helping the Northern Pride Festival weekend stay free.

Big Brovaz and Booty Luv
Big Brovaz and Booty Luv

The festival returns to Newcastle’s Town Moor and Exhibition Park from July 19 to 21, with a star-studded line-up including headliners Fleur East and Liberty X taking to the stage over the weekend.

This year’s event is spread across two locations, with the main stage, fun fair and bars at the Town Moor’s Festival Arena, while Exhibition Park will host the Community Village, with the Curious Arts Stage, Rainbow Village, Health and Wellbeing Zone and more.

The festival is free to attend but Platinum Passes are available to purchase for those who would like to secure a prime viewing position and access to a dedicated bar area and posh toilets.

HIV campaigner nominated for National Diversity Award

A man from Surbiton who defied the odds to recover from a late diagnosis of HIV and go on to fight for disability rights has been nominated for a national award.

ROLAND Chesters, who was given just two weeks to live at the time of his diagnosis, has suffered long term effects on his brain and motor skills because the virus was picked up and treated at a late stage.

He has overcome post-traumatic stress disorder, chronic ill health and discrimination to bring greater disability rights to the workplace and tackle the stigma surrounding HIV and AIDS.

Now Roland’s work has been recognised by The National Diversity Awards (NDA), whose supporters include Graham Norton, Katie Piper and Adam Hills.

Roland, who works as a disability development consultant at Luminate, said: “I am delighted to be nominated for such a prestigious award and hope it will raise awareness of the hidden disability that is HIV and AIDs.

“There is still a fear and ignorance about HIV, which puts people off getting tested. I want to spread the message that those on medication are undetectable and cannot pass it on.”

The NDA are the UK’s largest diversity awards, which recognises inspirational people in fields of diversity including age, disability, gender, race, faith, religion and sexual orientation.

Sir Lenny Henry CBE, a previously shortlisted nominee for the Celebrity of the Year gong said: “Diversity to me means involving everybody without any discrimination; its means having integrated groups in society, it means fairness and total inclusion and that’s what the National Diversity Awards are about. Congratulations to everyone who has been nominated, you’re all doing a fantastic job, rock on!”

Roland, 59, became a chair for the disabled staff network at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, where he previously worked as a language-testing specialist. He introduced a change of policy – enabling disabled staff to no longer have to regularly change jobs.

The Royal Holloway University of London graduate helps employers in various industries to create an inclusive workforce and for their employees to develop confidence in their role.

Roland supports a number of charities and community projects, such as the Terrence Higgins’ Trust Positive Voices, where he speaks about HIV at schools, colleges and workplaces in order to tackle existing stereotypes.

He has volunteered as a mentor with Positively UK, a charity which offers peer-led support. During this time, he has supported people who have been ostracised and attacked after they ‘came out’ with their diagnosis

One man, who was sexually assaulted and cannot be named for legal reasons, was afraid to leave his home until he worked with Roland.

The man has nominated Roland for the award, saying: “Roland took me under his wing and helped me to conquer my fears as I use to lock myself indoors. Roland helps me say ‘I have HIV.”

Roland, who was diagnosed in 2006, has also sat on a number of boards, including the National Long Term Survivors Group (NLTSG), which supports HIV Positive people, and the London AIDS Memorial Campaign and Disability Rights UK – where at the time he was the only gay, disabled person on the board.

Roland has widely shared his own story in order to break-down barriers. In 2018 he published Ripples from the Edge of Life, which is both a memoir and self-help book.

Roland, who continues to speak out at events and in the press, said: “I will not live in fear. I want to stand up for other people who may be more vulnerable or with less of a support network”.

“Until there are enough people living with the condition saying ‘this is who I am and I cannot pass on the infection the stigma will not go away.”

Roland lives with his partner, Richard, in Surbiton, Surrey. He enjoys opera, classical music, theatre and fashion.

The NDA receives over 25,000 nominations and votes each year. Founder and CEO Paul Sesay said: “We look to those who represent progress, spirit and resilience and I cannot wait to learn about the wonderful work being carried out this year.”

You can vote for Roland until May 31.

To vote online, click here:

Grants available for community and voluntary groups

Community and voluntary organisations throughout the city can apply for a share of a £363,000 council funding scheme.

THE Communities Fund aims to help the wide variety of voluntary organisations who make a big impact on the life of the city.

Groups can apply for money to help with running costs, the cost of organising a specific activity or event, or to buy small items of equipment.

Last year (2018/19) a total of 99 groups, who between them work with thousands of people across the city, benefited from the fund.

Organisations which received a share of the funds included, for example, Moulsecoomb Amateur Boxing Club, the Crew Club in Whitehawk, Sussex Bears Wheelchair Basketball Team, Benfield Wildlife and Conservation Group, and Brighton & Hove LGBT Switchboard.

How to apply
This year’s funding scheme is now open and the deadline for the first round of applications is May 24, 2019. There are also other opportunities to apply for money from the scheme throughout the year.

The main aims of the fund are:
♦ improving wellbeing
♦ building cohesion
♦ promoting fairness

These aims are supported through three funding streams.
♦ The Engagement Fund with awards up to £2,000;
♦ The Resilience Fund up to £10,000 and
♦ The Collaboration Fund up to £20,000 for partnership projects.

The fund is supported by the Phillip Hedgcock Bequest – a charitable trust fund administered by the Communities, Equality & Third Sector Team – with investment from the council’s Textile Recycling Fund.

For more information about the Communities Fund and how to apply on the council’s website, click here:

Or call: 01273 291114.

PREVIEW Brighton Fringe: Sass, Sex and Surrealness with King Sammy Silver

King Sammy Silver returns to Brighton Fringe with his award-winning (Pebble Trust Bursary 2018), delightfully queer comedy cabaret, ‘Sass, Sex and Surrealness’.

GO along and join the drag king bear cub as he navigates the highs and lows of the trans, queer experience through song, dance, comedy and much more!

Also his annoying sibling, Sally, may make an appearance or two, as they are never too keen on Sammy in the spotlight.


Event: Sass, Sex and Surrealness with King Sammy Silver

Where: The Warren: The Nest

When: May 23 and 24

Time: 10.40pm

Cost: Tickets £10, £9 NHS staff, £8 student, £8.50 Disability Job seeker allowance

To book online, click here:

Or telephone: 01273 987516

PREVIEW Brighton Fringe: Bright Raven @ONCA Gallery

HOAX return to Brighton Fringe, following their award-winning show Hysterical in 2016’s Fringe, staging Bright Raven at ONCA Gallery on Tuesday 14, Wednesday 15, Friday 16 and Saturday 18 May 2019.

“IF we can’t imagine a positive future, how on earth could we possibly create one?” – Lucy Neal

That’s the question posed by Bright Raven. And she’s here to stir things up. Part interactive TED Talk, part televangelist and part self-help guru, Bright Raven is a playful interactive theatre show which challenges us to think outside the familiar doomsday scenario to create new narratives for the future of the planet.

Bright Raven is starting a revolution. Shaking up these turbulent times. A storm in a teacup. A collective washing of the brain. A comedic induction into a New World Order. And she wants YOU to join.

Inspired by questions about the stories we’re always told and seeking new visions of the future unencumbered by what we ‘know’, Bright Raven is an interactive theatre-rite performed by award-winning HOAX’s Flavia Bertram in collaboration with the audience, accompanied by an electronic soundscape played on a Launchpad Mini device worn on her body.

“Young people are asking questions about their futures and the prospects for the earth which generations of politicians have failed to address,” says Bright Raven performer and creator Flavia. “This comedic piece seeks to open imaginative pathways – for the creators and audience alike – to new future narratives and possibilities.”

ONCA was specially chosen as the venue for the show for its commitment to social and ecological change and creative arts and learning projects which ask questions about the big issues for our times.

“There’s nothing new under the sun, but there are new suns”…..Octavia Butler


Event: BRIGHT RAVEN

Where: The Courtyard, ONCA Gallery, 14 St George’s Place, Brighton, BN1 4GB

When: Tuesday 14, Wednesday 15, Friday 17, Saturday, May 18, 2019

Time: 7.30pm

Cost: £9 / £7 Concession

To book tickets online, click here:

Or telephone: 01273 917272

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