Demarco's Edinburgh (eBook)

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2023 | 1. Auflage
240 Seiten
Luath Press (Verlag)
978-1-80425-117-1 (ISBN)

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Demarco's Edinburgh -  Richard Demarco,  Roddy Martine
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The Edinburgh Festival of those days was a much more accessible village... The ground rules were well enough understood. Everything about it was containable. The Fringe was the seed bed for talent and ran happily in step with its established elders and betters. They both knew their place. But then something equally remarkable was about to take place in the New Town of the city I knew and loved... The same year, Roddy Martine is born. In 1963 when, at the age of sixteen, he interviewed Sir Yehudi Menuhin and David Frost for an Edinburgh Festival magazine he edited and the following year, met Marlene Dietrich. Both Richard and Roddy have unique perspectives on the most remarkable international festival of the arts the world has ever known. They have witnessed its evolution over the years and are passionate believers in the power of creativity within everyone. In this fascinating book, Richard - the 2013 UK recipient of the Citizen of Europe medal - explores the original world vision of Sir John Falconer and Rudolph Bing and, with Roddy, recalls the highs and lows of The Edinburgh International Festival, The Fringe, Art, Book, Jazz and Television Festivals, and The Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo. Now in its eighth decade, can the Edinburgh Festival survive? Where do we go from here?

RICHARD DEMARCO is an artist and patron of the visual and performing arts. He has been one of Scotland's most influential advocates for contemporary art through his work at the Richard Demarco Gallery and the Demarco European Art Foundation. He has attended every Edinburgh Festival since its inception in 1947, and he was a cofounder of the Traverse Theatre in Edinburgh in 1963. 

RICHARD DEMARCO has personally experienced every Edinburgh Festival since its inception in 1947, as well as contributing to its history and innumerable manifestations of the visual and performing arts, plus conferences, symposia and master classes, to underline the importance of introducing an academic dimension into official International and Fringe programmes so that they integrate completely and significantly as they did in the ’40s, ’50s, ’60s and into the ’70s.

The Eighties began with an inevitable confrontation between the ethos of The Demarco Gallery and the ethos of the Scottish Arts Council. Joseph Beuys believed that ‘everyone is an artist’. Did that include those criminals serving life imprisonment? The Scottish Arts Council believed that art was firmly controlled by the concept of an art industry, that, indeed, art was part of a leisure industry and that the Minister of Culture was also the Minister for Tourism.

Richard Demarco has always believed that art and education are two sides of the same coin and that is why the Arts Council of Scotland came to the conclusion, in 1980, that Richard Demarco had ‘brought dishonour to the meaning of art, brought dishonour to the meaning of art in Scotland, and brought dishonour to The Demarco Gallery’ and, for that reason, he did not deserve to be supported by annual central government funding.

Richard Demarco has also always believed, from his ten years of experience as a primary and secondary school teacher (1957–1967), that the use of the language of all the arts expresses the incontrovertible fact that, as Joseph Beuys maintained, every human being possesses a birthright to be creative.

All expressions of art, particularly on the highest level, are a gift and, indeed, ascend to the condition of prayer, in gratitude for the gift of Life. As a gift, it cannot be attached to a price tag. He acknowledges the fact that his experience of the Edinburgh Festival, from his boyhood to this troubled computerised world of the Third Millennium, is a blessing upon his life and, indeed, a blessing upon Edinburgh as the city of his birth.

The Edinburgh Festival came into being against all the odds when the pain endured by humanity in the aftermath of World War II seemed insufferable. A small group of friends were eager to support Rudolf Bing’s belief that Edinburgh could become an ideal British version of Austria’s pre-war Salzburg Festival. They took the language of art most seriously as the one language given to human beings which could begin the process of healing the wounds of global conflict. Ironically, therefore, without the suffering caused by the Second World War, the Edinburgh Festival could not have come into being. According to the Lord Provost, John Falconer, as the first Chairman in 1947, the Edinburgh Festival was an expression of ‘the flowering of the human spirit’ and therefore ‘it was in no way a commercial venture’.

When Richard Demarco asked Joseph Beuys to explain the quintessential nature of his art, Joseph Beuys replied succinctly ‘my art is my teaching’. In 1972, The Demarco Gallery’s experiment in education through all the arts was entitled with the use of two words – EDINBURGH ARTS. It was inspired by Black Mountain College, the American equivalent of the Bauhaus, and by Edinburgh as the world capital of all the arts.

From 1957 to 1967, Richard Demarco was the Art Master of Edinburgh’s Scotus Academy and worked closely with his colleague, Arthur Oldham, who was the Academy’s Music Master. Together, they firmly believed that every Scotus Academy boy was born to be creative. Richard Demarco extended his Scotus Academy art room to be identified with the Paperback Bookshop created by Jim Haynes in the late 1950s and early 1960s. From the year 1963 to 1967, Richard Demarco became the Vice-Chairman of what was in fact a slight enlargement of the Paperback Bookshop.

This came to be known as the Traverse Theatre Club and was housed in an 18th-century eight-storey tenement in Edinburgh’s Lawnmarket in close proximity to Edinburgh Castle on the historic Royal Mile. It was also, under Richard Demarco’s directorship, Scotland’s first art gallery focused completely on the international art world and the need for a powerful dialogue between Scotland and the European art world on both sides of the Iron Curtain.

As such, the Traverse Theatre Club established an international reputation for both the visual and performing arts. However, when Jim Haynes moved his concept of the Traverse to London, the Traverse spirit of internationalism continued to shine bright within the Edinburgh New Town house of what was to be known as The Richard Demarco Gallery. It was actually the Edinburgh version of Roland Penrose’s London-based Institute of Contemporary Art. It seemed inevitable that, in 1972, The Demarco Gallery should become a ‘university of all the arts’ in collaboration with Edinburgh University’s Schools of Scottish Studies and Extra-Mural Studies.

In 2013, Richard Demarco was invited to the European Parliament in Brussels. There, Martin Schulz, as President of the Parliament, awarded him a medal as a European Citizen of the Year. His European citizenship is well defined in the publication entitled Demarco 2020 as a celebration of his 90th birthday.

The Demarco Archive is a large-scale collaborative work of art – a unique Gesamtkunstwerk. It exists predominantly in nature. It could, therefore, be compared to Ian Hamilton Finlay’s Gesamtkunstwerk of Little Sparta. It exists in a farmscape known as ‘Stonypath’ in the landscape of Lanarkshire.

EDINBURGH ARTS linked the Edinburgh cityscape with the farmscape of Kinross-shire. Meikle Seggie is a working farm. It is a point of departure which leads to a journey through time and space to the Apennine farmscapes of Richard Demarco’s Roman ancestors around the town of Picinisco, near to the Abbey of Monte Cassino and the city of Cassino.

Picinisco existed in Roman times, close to the villa of Cicero. The citizens of this village are known as ‘Ciceroni’ – the children of Cicero. They have become famous as artists’ models as a direct result of their lifestyle as farmers and shepherds. In this world, mankind has related to the extreme forces of nature from pre-historic times. As proof of this thought-provoking fact, there exists pre-historic rock carvings of shepherds and their sheep in the mountainous wilderness around Picinisco.

By focusing on The Road to Meikle Seggie, Richard Demarco is responding to a need to celebrate his Roman forebears who once regarded Scotland as the north-western frontier of the Roman Empire. Richard Demarco regards himself as a teacher, mainly on primary and secondary levels, using the language of all the arts. This provides proof positive that Scotland remains, from its earliest history, a unique and important manifestation of the cultural heritage of Europe.

RODDY MARTINE was born in South East Asia but brought home to Scotland by his parents to be educated at Edinburgh Academy. From launching an Edinburgh Festival magazine in his schooldays, he has followed the progress of the Edinburgh International Festival, Edinburgh Fringe Festival and Edinburgh Military Tattoo for over 60 years. For four years, he was co-opted as a judge for the Edinburgh Festivals’ Cavalcade.

As a columnist with five major newspapers during the 1990s, and editor of a succession of Scottish lifestyle magazines, he has always regarded Edinburgh as his home and has published 30 books largely relating to Scottish lifestyle topics – history, biography, interiors, Scotch whisky, tartan and the supernatural. For his involvement in the Scotch Whisky Industry, he was made a Keeper of the Quaich in 1996, and a Master of the Quaich in 2006.

He was a Trustee of the Edinburgh International Festival during the 1970s, and served as a Trustee of The 369 Gallery of Contemporary Art throughout the 1980s. As a writer and photo journalist, he has attended The Grandfather Mountain Highland Games in North Carolina, and Tartan Week in New York and Washington, USA; the International Gathering of the Clans in Nova Scotia, and, in 2003, he was honoured as the Scottish Australian Heritage Council’s Guest from Scotland for Sydney Scottish Week.

He was an early supporter of the Traverse Theatre in the Lawnmarket and subsequently in the Grassmarket where, although almost 20 years younger than its founder members, he knew them well. He was a cheerleader for The Demarco Gallery from the moment it first opened its doors in its original manifestation in Melville Crescent.

For Roddy Martine, with all the personalities he befriended, and all of the comings and goings he has witnessed over the years, the enduring and challenging world of Demarco’s Edinburgh has always embodied the uplifting spirit of the Edinburgh Festivals.

DR CHARLIE ELLIS is a researcher and EFL teacher who writes on culture education and politics. He is a regular contributor to The Scottish Review and Modern English Teacher. He has authored several academic articles on politics and public intellectuals and is currently working on a book for Edinburgh University Press on British conservatism and culture.

TERRY ANN NEWMAN is an artist born in Wiltshire in 1944 and educated in Southampton, gaining a Diploma in Fine Art from the College of Art in 1987. Since meeting Richard Demarco in 1983, she has travelled extensively in Europe, particularly in Eastern Europe during the 1980s and 1990s with The Demarco Gallery’s EDINBURGH ARTS; she has been a director of the...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 4.8.2023
Verlagsort London
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Theater / Ballett
Sachbuch/Ratgeber Sport Tanzen / Tanzsport
Schlagworte Arts • Culture • edinburgh book festival • Edinburgh Festival • Edinburgh Fringe • Europe • Festivals • History • Performance • Scotland
ISBN-10 1-80425-117-8 / 1804251178
ISBN-13 978-1-80425-117-1 / 9781804251171
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