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Community artists for 2025 Land of Lead and Silver project
Community artists for 2025 Land of Lead and Silver project
The North Pennines National Landscape team has appointed an artist-in-residence and awarded three community arts bursaries for 2025, as part of the Land of Lead and Silver project.
The project has been awarded funding from The National Lottery Heritage Fund, with thanks to National Lottery players, and Historic England and will run to December 2027, working with volunteers and local communities to unearth the stories of lead and silver mining in the North Pennines National Landscape and UNESCO Global Geopark.
The artist-in-residence, Jenny Brook, and the artists undertaking the bursaries, Amanda Drago, The Knotted Project, and Robin Webb, will offer workshops across the North Pennines National Landscape to take a new and exciting look at the lead and silver mining heritage of the area and engage people with the industrial heritage in creative and accessible ways.
Jenny Brook is a textile artist, creative practitioner and art educator based in the Eden Valley in Cumbria, who creates unique pieces using vintage and worn fabrics. She has been appointed artist-in-residence and will use her work, which is rooted in storytelling, to bring people’s stories relating to the lead and silver mining heritage of the North Pennines to life. Jenny likes to observe the everyday and translate it, along with each scrap of vintage fabric with its own history, into stitch. She also has a passion for puppetry and combines textiles and puppetry to create immersive storytelling experiences.
Amanda Drago graduated from Northern School of Contemporary Dance, Leeds and has had a varied career performing, teaching, choreographing and producing dance in the north east. An experienced teacher, she enjoys engaging people of all ages and abilities in arts, cultural and wellbeing activities. During the bursary, Amanda will deliver six sessions of folk song and seated dance workshops with Alston Ladies Social Group, supported by choir leader, Lindsay Hannon, and musician, Kit Haigh. Using traditional songs from the lead mining communities, the sessions will explore the mining heritage of the North Pennines through song and accessible dance.
The Knotted Project uses theatre and creativity to inspire and engage young people and their communities. They will use their bursary to start an inspiring intergenerational project, working with people of mixed ages across the North Pennines to remember stories of the past and celebrate the rich mining history of the region. These stories will be brought to life through theatre, working with creative young people to bring a fresh energy and perspective to the incredible stories of the past, and connecting local audiences to their history in a new way.
Robin Webb is an animation artist based in the north east of England who has been creating animated films with communities, schools and institutes for almost 25 years. He co-creates films by people of all abilities and all ages using animation as a tool for learning, entertainment and self-expression. For his bursary, he will explore the full spectrum of the mining story in the North Pennines region from the very minuscule building blocks of the actual minerals found in the ground up to the impact mining has had on people and the landscape. Through workshops using a variety of animation techniques, participants will create an educational film that will be fun to make, film, photograph, record and animate.
ENDS
Notes for editors
Contact the North Pennines National Landscape communications team for further information – communications@northpennines.org.uk
The Land of Lead and Silver project has been awarded funding from The National Lottery Heritage Fund and Historic England and will run to December 2027, working with volunteers and local communities to unearth the stories of lead and silver mining in the North Pennines National Landscape and UNESCO Global Geopark.
About The National Lottery Heritage Fund
As the largest dedicated funder of the UK’s heritage, The National Lottery Heritage Fund’s vision is for heritage to be valued, cared for and sustained for everyone, now and in the future as set out in our strategic plan, Heritage 2033.
Over the next ten years, the Heritage Fund aims to invest £3.6billion raised for good causes by National Lottery players to bring about benefits for people, places and the natural environment.
The Heritage Fund helps protect, transform and share the things from the past that people care about, from popular museums and historic places, our natural environment and fragile species, to the languages and cultural traditions that celebrate who we are.
The Heritage Fund is passionate about heritage and committed to driving innovation and collaboration to make a positive difference to people’s lives today, while leaving a lasting legacy for future generations to enjoy.
Follow @HeritageFundUK on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram and use #NationalLotteryHeritageFund www.heritagefund.org.uk.
About Historic England
We are Historic England, the public body that protects and brings life to the heritage that matters to us all, so it lives on and is loved for longer. From the extraordinary to the everyday, our historic places and spaces matter. From community centres to cathedrals, homes to high streets, markets to mills – there are special places we all choose to hold onto, the legacy we want to pass on and the stories we continue to tell. That’s why we work together with people across England to discover, protect and bring new life to our shared historic environment, providing advice, knowledge, support and services. Follow us on social media @HistoricEngland.