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IMAGINE THE GREAT TRANSITION 22 JUNE 2013, TOYNBEE STUDIOS Artsadmin & LIFT in association with nef as part of Imagine 2020 Are we trapped in business-as-usual? Could the ‘less’ make us happier than the ‘more’? What do we really value? In 2009 nef (new economics foundation) published The Great Transition, “the first comprehensive blueprint for building an economy based on stability, sustainability and equality”. Now as part of Imagine 2020, a European network of eleven arts organisations engaged in arts and climate change, Artsadmin and LIFT present the first in a series of events across Europe imagining and initiating how the Great Transition might look. Imagine the Great Transition takes place on the final day of Artsadmin’s Two Degrees festival, a week of art events about climate, consumerism and community. Follow the conversation #greattransition @artsadm @LIFTfestival @imagine_2020 artsadmin.co.uk | liftfestival.com | imagine2020.eu | neweconomics.org PROGRAMME 11am-midday Toynbee Studios Theatre keynote lecture Seeking Goodland | Andrew Simms We keep being told there is no alternative. That we must accept the world and the economy as it is, divided and degraded. But what if the better world we dream of is already being invented here, now? What if pieces of quite other futures already exist? In this keynote lecture nef fellow and author of ‘Cancel the Apocalypse’, Andrew Simms goes in search of Goodland and invites us to imagine for ourselves other, better ways of living, that politicians insist cannot exist. And then to find them in the real world. Midday-2pm (15 mins) Toynbee Studios Theatre screening Imagine the Great Transition: Imagine2020 Film Commissions Inua Ellams, Gonçalo Tocha, Mels van Zutphen and XTNT Four new short films commissioned by the Imagine 2020 network. Artists Inua Ellams, Gonçalo Tocha, Mels van Zutphen and XTNT respond to the ideas in nef’s The Great Transition in their own diverse visual language. 12:30-1:30pm Ashbee Hall discussion Language of Transition, Transition of Language Panel including Inua Ellams and Michael Pinsky Do we need to learn the economist’s jargon? Should theory be made comprehensible to all for global change to happen? What role can artists play in reducing complexity and empowering the outsider? This panel discussion revolves around presentation and representation of economic research and why the language of transition matters. 2-2:30pm Toynbee Studios Courtyard performance Families in Transit The Institute for the Art and Practice of Dissent at Home A nuclear family rehearses excerpts from The Great Transition, inviting audiences to pick what they think will be the most effective bits to get other families on-board. What tone should the Great Transition take? Shall we keep it scary? Fun-filled? Serious? Rhetorical? Bombastic? Gentle? photograph by Ludovic Alussi (XTNT)

Imagine the Great Transition

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Are we trapped in business-as-usual? Could the ‘less’ make us happier than the ‘more’? What do we really value? For the concluding day of Two Degrees, Artsadmin and LIFT have joined forces with nef (new economics foundation). In 2009 nef published The Great Transition, “the first comprehensive blueprint for building an economy based on stability, sustainability and equality”. Now as part of Imagine 2020, a European network of 11 arts organisations engaged in arts and climate change, we present a day of performance, film and discussion imagining and initiating how the Great Transition might look.

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Page 1: Imagine the Great Transition

IMAGINE THE GREAT TRANSITION22 JUNE 2013, TOYNBEE STUDIOSArtsadmin & LIFT in association with nef as part of Imagine 2020

Are we trapped in business-as-usual? Could the ‘less’ make us happier than the ‘more’? What do we really value?

In 2009 nef (new economics foundation) published The Great Transition, “the first comprehensive blueprint for building an economy based on stability, sustainability and equality”. Now as part of Imagine 2020, a European network of eleven arts organisations engaged in arts and climate change, Artsadmin and LIFT present the first in a series of events across Europe imagining and initiating how the Great Transition might look.

Imagine the Great Transition takes place on the final day of Artsadmin’s Two Degrees festival, a week of art events about climate, consumerism and community.

Follow the conversation #greattransition @artsadm @LIFTfestival @imagine_2020artsadmin.co.uk | liftfestival.com | imagine2020.eu | neweconomics.org

PROGRAMME

11am-middayToynbee Studios Theatrekeynote lecture

Seeking Goodland | Andrew SimmsWe keep being told there is no alternative. That we must accept the world and the economy as it is, divided and degraded. But what if the better world we dream of is already being invented here, now? What if pieces of quite other futures already exist? In this keynote lecture nef fellow and author of ‘Cancel the Apocalypse’, Andrew Simms goes in search of Goodland and invites us to imagine for ourselves other, better ways of living, that politicians insist cannot exist. And then to find them in the real world.

Midday-2pm (15 mins)Toynbee Studios Theatrescreening

Imagine the Great Transition: Imagine2020 Film CommissionsInua Ellams, Gonçalo Tocha, Mels van Zutphen and XTNTFour new short films commissioned by the Imagine 2020 network. Artists Inua Ellams, Gonçalo Tocha, Mels van Zutphen and XTNT respond to the ideas in nef’s The Great Transition in their own diverse visual language.

12:30-1:30pmAshbee Halldiscussion

Language of Transition, Transition of LanguagePanel including Inua Ellams and Michael PinskyDo we need to learn the economist’s jargon? Should theory be made comprehensible to all for global change to happen? What role can artists play in reducing complexity and empowering the outsider? This panel discussion revolves around presentation and representation of economic research and why the language of transition matters.

2-2:30pmToynbee Studios Courtyardperformance

Families in TransitThe Institute for the Art and Practice of Dissent at HomeA nuclear family rehearses excerpts from The Great Transition, inviting audiences to pick what they think will be the most effective bits to get other families on-board. What tone should the Great Transition take? Shall we keep it scary? Fun-filled? Serious? Rhetorical? Bombastic? Gentle?

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Page 2: Imagine the Great Transition

2:30-3:30pmToynbee Studios Theatrediscussion

Nothing Like a Good Crisis...?Panel including David Greig and Andrew SimmsPublic and media discourse about climate change is often dominated by visions of an apocalyptic future. Can the term ‘climate crisis’ ever be a useful one, or do we need to mobilise society into action by using different messages? Are parallels between climate and other moments of crisis in history – from global responses to the recent financial crisis or the spirit of the ‘war effort’ during World War II – an effective means of demonstrating what we can achieve?

4-5pmToynbee Studios Theatrescreening

Steering Through DystopiaShort films by Ursula Biemann, The Otolith Group, Yorgos ZoisWith Casus Belli (2010), Yorgos Zois offers a powerful reflection on the dominance of financial economy over everyday life. Ursula Biemann’s Deep Weather (2013) takes oil and water as the primeval starting points to articulate the ecological destruction and changing life conditions of Delta communities. Concluding this film programme, the Otolith Group’s Hydra Decapita (2010) comments on capitalism, language and climate change through the imaginary world of Detroit based techno duo Drexciya.

5-6pmAshbee Halldiscussion

Staging the FuturePanel including Feimatta Conteh and Alison TickellAs well as the actions that need to be made by individuals, business and government, it is essential that the arts engages with the crucial issue of climate change, and how we can live, work and create within the limited means of our planet. In this discussion, artists and performing arts workers share their experiences and discuss imaginative and enticing ways to tackle this challenge.

6-7:15pmToynbee Studios Theatreperformance

The Roadless TripSarah Woods and Richard GottAn urgent and irresistible invitation to imagine and create a positive future, The Roadless Trip is a very human and often hilarious journey through time, mixing performance, film, audience interaction and the frenzy of the popular gameshow.

THROUGHOUT THE DAY

10am-8pm(20 mins minimum)Toynbee Studiosinstallation

WorktableKate McIntoshWorktable is a live installation, open to visitors to drop-in any time throughout the day. The installation takes place in a series of rooms at Toynbee Studios. You sign in to enter, and can stay as long as you like. Once inside you are given instructions, equipment and safety goggles. Sign in and get to work.

Midday-2:30pm &3:30pm-6pm (20 mins)Toynbee Studiosperformance

What We OweHarry GilesWhat We Owe is a highly unqualified debt counselling service. In a one-on-one session, Harry Giles will take you through an audit of what you owe – not just financially, but emotionally, socially and ecologically. In an economy driven by huge financial debts, What We Owe is a tragicomic glance at what we mean by debt and how we struggle to even begin to deal with it.

Midday-6pm (10 mins)Toynbee Studiosperformance

Island Masscurious directiveA hymn to an imagined future. Post-austerity, a world where a collective consciousness for climate change rises again. An intimate installation with dynamic design which responds to you, the viewer.

IMAGINE THE GREAT TRANSITIONArtsadmin & LIFT in association with nef as part of Imagine 2020