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PRIVACY
Opinionopinion

How to curate a city like Birmingham

Gavin Wade: Eastside Projects is currently deep in the process of choosing an artist to get the most out of Birmingham.

Gavin Wade, centre, of Eastside Projects at the Digbeth gallery.(Image: Ashley Carr)

How do you choose an artist? What sort of artist does Birmingham deserve? What sort of artist wants to work in a place like Birmingham?

These are three of the many questions we have been asking ourselves at Eastside Projects recently when imagining a future version of our industrious city.

We have been thinking about 2018, 2025 and even 2050. I’ll only be 78 in 2050 and I would like Birmingham to be a surprising, fascinating, magnetic city of art and production for my great grandchildren and my twilight years!

What we will produce in 2050 I can only guess but if we put down strong, questioning and supportive layers of cultural and civic planning now we will give our city more of a chance in the future.

Along with all the masterplans, big city plans, strategic plans, cultural policies, local forums, BIDs, LEPs and government constraints, what we need to consider is the, much misused of late, concept of curating.

We need to work out how to curate a city – how to support multiple curators supporting multiple publics producing and exhibiting art as part of the fabric of the city, as part of the DNA of the city. To curate the city is to attempt to get the most out of artists and art, to get the best out of a city.

Eastside Projects is currently deep in the process of choosing an artist to get the most out of Birmingham – to make an artwork for the city in 2018 as part of the .

Last week we managed to produce a shortlist of ten artists to invite and be paid to make an outline idea of how they would approach making a major public artwork for Birmingham.