Art In Unusual Spaces is a scheme which allows independent curators, landlords, artists and businesses throughout the city to display art in a variety of, well, unusual places. Supported Arts Council England and the Arts and Regeneration department at Leeds City Council, it is an ongoing initiative which succeeds in providing local flavour and colour.
The aim of the scheme is to utilise empty shop units and spaces within the city centre, to enable artists to use the areas as a showcase for their art. The size and scale of the individual units seem to vary massively, from large shops which have closed down, to shop hoardings. The initiative is unable to pay the artists for their efforts, but the spaces are available without paying a fee, and it must serve as excellent exposure to promote their art.
When I was at University, I walked through the main entrance one particular day, and something managed to attract my attention. Nestling secretly in an oversized plant pot, was a small toy soldier, clutching a tiny envelope. The note inside explained that a fellow student on an art course thought it would be an interesting experiment to position various inanimate objects around the building, put their contact details on it, and ask the discoverer to answer a few probing questions via email.
It felt as though I had been allowed to be privy to a artistic secret, and that is similar to the feeling I experience when uncovering a venue within this project. Although I am pro-active in promoting this initiative, the art retains that personal touch in its deliverance.
The website is full of useful information, and there is a mailing list to be kept abreast of current or imminent exhibitions. There is a convenient and advantageous consequence to Art In Unusual Places. As well as providing Leeds with intriguing things to peruse, it also enables the recession to appear less severe.
Inevitably, various businesses have been forced to either cease trading completely or relocate, causing gaps in the high street similar to an eight year old's teeth. But this scheme provides the patient members of the public with areas of aesthetic relief during such testing times. Bravo! read more