Helen Marriage: Public art that turns cities into playgrounds of the imagination
Helen Marriage cofounded a company that specializes in creating disruptive, whole-city arts events that surprise and delight everyone who comes across them. Full bio
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increasingly tyrannized by the screen,
by our televisions and our computers.
to a different kind of world,
tool that we have,
our physical surroundings,
forever how we feel
that we share the planet with.
which I cofounded in 2006,
and when we're on our deathbeds,
the daily commute to work
every day when we go to the shop.
when our kid took their first step
for the football team
moving, ephemeral moments
using the imagination of the artist
everyone is invited,
way back in the 1990s,
in the tiny British city of Salisbury.
and here's the nearby Stonehenge Monument,
for hundreds of years by the Church,
really love to observe the rules.
year in the city,
down a one-way street, late.
helpfully shouted at me,
I said, "Yeah, I know."
where I was in trouble.
everything I could deploy --
or a poetry reading,
street theater company
complete with handheld pyrotechnics.
stopped me in the street and said,
"I knew it wasn't for me.
these ideas to a larger stage
to do the same kind of thing to London.
to toil, trade and traffic.
to work on time and back,
the routines to be fixed
what's going to happen next.
could be turned into a stage,
transform people's lives?
It's always about winning things.
and a giant elephant
the public authorities
was something completely normal.
enjoying themselves,
this extraordinary artistic endeavor
company Royal de Luxe.
almost always men -- sitting in a room,
a little girl and this giant elephant,
to come and watch and play."
between France and England?
Are you trying to raise money?"
this extraordinary thing happened.
I'd been to for four years,
been talking about for such a long time,
that somebody else had said yes.
being asked to take responsibility,
was being asked to take responsibility
was being asked to close the roads,
being asked to sort out the Underground.
to do the thing that they could do
to take responsibility.
"Well, I'll take responsibility,"
a million people on the street.
the nature of the appreciation of culture,
not in an opera house,
for the broadest possible audience,
buy a ticket to see anything.
to produce work of this kind.
work is astonishing,
that permission was granted.
after terrible terrorist bombings
whether it was possible
in even more complicated circumstances.
to Northern Ireland,
depending on your point of view.
Scotland, Wales and Ireland,
it's been a place of conflict,
loyalist community --
for over 30 years.
there is a peace process,
Londonderry if you're a loyalist,
the community tribalism could be addressed
with effigies and insignia
on the other side.
from the loyalist community.
to the Nevada desert, to Burning Man,
different set of values.
and his extraordinary temples,
the Burning Man event
and his community to come,
of the political and religious divide:
normally come across each other
work rose a temple
that exist in the town,
where everyone told me nobody would come.
It sat between two communities.
"But it's got such a great view."
primary school children
by the head teacher,
to lose this opportunity.
65,000 of them,
their pain, their hope,
this is only about love.
that it was more than that --
whose father was shot when he was nine,
the elderly Protestant lady
we opened the temple to the public.
band of nonsectarian builders,
for this period of months
who would incinerate it.
on a dark, cold, March evening,
to put their enmity behind them,
to say the things that had been unsayable,
but I forgive you."
of this thing that was so beautiful,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Helen Marriage - Maverick producerHelen Marriage cofounded a company that specializes in creating disruptive, whole-city arts events that surprise and delight everyone who comes across them.
Why you should listen
Helen Marriage writes: "I am a producer of large-scale disruptive moments that place an artist's ideas in the heart of a city. I started life unsure of how to find a job and began helping a street theater company perform at the Edinburgh Festival. Only then did I realize that this could be a career. That was forty years ago. Since then, I've gone on to shut down central London and other cities with ephemeral events that transform people’s understanding of what a city is for and who controls it.
"I don't believe that cities are exclusively about shopping and traffic. Over the years I've developed a real sense of how artists can change the world, if only we make space for their vision. I guess that's my job -- to create a context in which the normal routines of daily life are disrupted for a moment to allow the public, especially those who know they’re not interested in anything the arts might have to say, to discover a new world we’d all like to live in."
Helen Marriage | Speaker | TED.com