LIPA Community Arts Reunion: Celebrating Legacy and Growth in one Final Snapshot Countdown

The recent LIPA Community Arts Reunion celebrated over 30 ex-graduates and staff, reflecting on their journey through personal growth, creativity, and community impact. The event emphasized the course’s legacy in shaping artistic identities, fostering social connection, and promoting activism, leaving attendees inspired to continue their collective endeavors beyond the reunion.

Well, that is, as they say, a wrap. It. Finito. Done, dusted and stacked on IKEA Ding Dong shelving.   The Not-the-30th-reunion LIPA Community Arts Reunion reached its climax between the 8th and 10th August, with over 30 ex-graduates and staff meeting up in a flurry of drinking and eating, talking and walking, reflecting and inspecting across Liverpool. The weekend gave us a chance to produce a final snapshot for Adolonia (the anthology marking the event) which brought together our reflections on both the legacy of the Community Arts course at LIPA and its effects on us personally.  We heard about:

Personal Growth and Identity: how the course equipped us  with resilience, confidence and joy. It wasn’t just skills training; it helped you shape your identities and sense of agency. The course nurtured personal growth, self-awareness, and an enduring sense of privilege in being able to do this work.

Creativity and Artistic Identity: our identities as artists have been strengthened, with creativity seen as joyous, liberating, and essential to how we live. We celebrate the arts as both expressive and practical:  a vessel, a resource, even a survival mechanism. It’s both deeply serious and playfully irreverent.

Skills and Professional Pathways: how we’ve translated your training into diverse professional roles across health, education, social work, and youth settings with community arts practice providing as a practical toolkit for real-world impact. We’ve developed practical and relational skills: crisis management, facilitation and the ability to guide others while respecting boundaries.

Relationships and Connectivity: we see the work reinforcing the importance of human connection by building trust, valuing young people, and seeing relationships as central to practice.

Philosophy and Values: how the course instilled a values-based approach rooted in compassion, inclusivity, and respect for lived experience. Ubuntu philosophy (‘I am because we are’) ran through our reflections. Strong ethical commitments to empathy, fairness, and collective care are central to our practice.

Social and Political Impact: how we saw community arts practice as a form of activism and civic engagement:  politics not as parties and manifestos, but as everyday acts of empowerment and discourse. We’ve become attuned to wider social and political currents, using the arts to challenge, disrupt and stand for freedom and justice.

Community Development and Outreach: how we saw the practice tied to regeneration and outreach, embedding itself in communities at the most local level and working upwards.

Connection and Collaboration: how we’ve built networks that stretch across borders, finding ways to connect even digitally. LIPA became a launchpad for global and cross-cultural collaboration: and exposure to diversity has shaped an internationalist and inclusive outlook which embraces difference and learning across borders.

Overall, the course helped shape us into creative, ethical, empathetic practitioners who combine artistry with care, political awareness with positivity, and personal growth with collective responsibility. It was as much about becoming a better human as it was about becoming a better artist.  It has left behind more than a set of graduates: it has seeded a movement of practitioners who combine artistry with activism, care with creativity, and local practice with global connection. The legacy is joyful, political, and practical all at once: shaping lives, influencing sectors, and constantly fighting for its place in the world.

And finally… we sang:

As The Time Moves On

Chorus

And we’re here now, after all these years 

With our hopes and dreams and our worries and fears, 

What do we bring back to these this place 

as the time moves on, as the time moves on?

I came here to grasp the thistle

Learning samba from Lee’s gold whistle. 

I came here to the grasp of the thistle 

As the time moves on, as the time moves on.

 I came here to light some fires

 Young people’s theatre and community choirs,

I came here to light some fires 

As the time moves on, as the time moves on.

And we’re here now, after all these years 

With our hopes and dreams and our worries and fears 

What do we bring back to these this place 

as the time moves on, as the time moves on?

 I want to leave a legacy,

For people to have a community,

Along the shores of the great Mersey,

As the tide rolls on, as the tide rolls on. 

Times of frustration, moments of joy,

Out with friends, making lots of noise,

 Time for frustration, moments of joy,

as the time moves on, as the time moves on.

And we’re here now after all these years, 

With our hopes and dreams and our worries and fears,

What do we bring back to these this place

as the time moves on, as the time moves on?

I came here to change the world, 

Peace and justice,

Our power unfurled,

I came here to change the world,

as the time moves on, as the time moves on.

Our time at LIPA planted some seeds,

We spread our joy to those in need,

Our time at LIPA planted some seeds,

As the time moves on and the time moves on. 

And we’re here now, after all these years,

With our hopes and dreams and our worries and fears,

What do we bring back to these this place

as the time moves on, as the time moves on?

As the time moves on.

Or, in the true spirit of the Not-the-30th reunion, this is Not-the-End but just a temporary pause before we resume our collective endeavours, collectively. I’ve seen so much passion, joy, skill, intelligence and expertise in the room and online over the last 3 days, I’m thinking ‘what next?’ for us all and the people and communities we are part of? 

Because there will be – there has to be – something else, somewhere, somehow.

‘Community Arts’ may have reached an end in the institution where we all met; but communities and relationships will never end, the power of the arts to transform lives is a constant in this ever changing world and there will always be people like us to catalyse those transformations.

Out today! Adolonia and Other Escape Routes

Adolonia and Other Escape Routes celebrates the work of the Community Arts undergraduate degree programme at Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts after its ‘opening’ in 1995.

This anthology is intended as a vehicle to collect some of the memories, writings and work of those early years at LIPA and  provides snapshots of some of the work we taught, learned and performed together; postcards of the voices, ambitions and dreams that we had during those early formative years.

If you weren’t one of those who went through those years together with us, then I hope our anthology provides you with some interesting ideas on how you might develop your own interest and practice in that contested field which calls itself “Community Arts”…

Contents

  • Not-the-30th-Reunion Reunion: Why Here, Why Now? by Nick Owen
  • The Student Handbook 1995
  • The Gangster Girls and The Pathways Out with Caroline Murphy
  • Early Reunion Misgivings
  • Our First Sacking – The Induction Weekend
  • Is This the Way for the Actor’s Reunion?
  • The Dog Ate My Homework: Rewriting Your Dissertation 30 Years On
  • The Students and Staff Who Signed Up
  • The Poignancy of the Old School Photo Album
  • Level 1 Collaborative Performance Project: The Tin Drum
  • A Week in the Life by Roger Hill
  • Anyone up for a Harry Potter Community Drama workshop?
  • Trawling the LIPA Metaverse: Community Music, My LIPA, and Questions of Research and Scholarship by Lee Higgins
  • What is Art?  Reflections by Anissa Ladjemi
  • Improvisation and the Power for Social Change Reflections by Anissa Ladjemi
  • Emigrant (Masters of Our Own Destiny?)
  • Adolonia and Other Escape Routes
  • And what ever happened to… Jake Ryan?
  • Community Arts? What’s that going to be then?
  • Exit Down South by Claire French
  • Some Early… and Final Words from Julie Mayor

Poetry on the Hoof: Terraced? Semi? Detached? Year 7 plan their future homes.

You gotta decide the lighting,
It’s November, remember.
You gotta agree,
Sort it out reasonably.
You gotta think it out,
You’ve gotta act quick.
Silence hush descends.

You’ll need pools of light
You’ll need water, air, space.
Somewhere to park the car
When the days close in.
Can I get a red phone box?
Can I get an allotment?
Silence hush descends.

You’re gonna see nothing
With windows like that.
You’re gonna be a resident, remember.
You’re gonna freeze to death
With walls like that.
Are we gonna pretend?
That we have to pay mortgages an’ ‘owt?
Silence hush descends.

You gotta make a choice,
Or you’re gonna get stuck.
Best to say little,
If you’re not sure.
If you don’t wanna pay for ‘owt can we live in a toilet?
We could use our imagination.
Silence hush descends.

Everyone’s gotta live somewhere
Everyone’s gotta have a place
They can call their own.
But if you’re gonna want a family.
But if you’re gonna get you a mortgage,
You gotta be quick,
You gotta be sharp,
You gotta get rid of those ghosts that moved onto your land.
Silence hush descends.

Some responses by young people of Kingstone School, Barnsley to recent exhortations to a ‘Housing Revolution’. 

Available this week: Tabloid!!! a new(ish) musical by Gary Carpenter and Nick Owen

It was after the 1979 election that Margaret Thatcher was said to have mis-spoke the immortal lines of Francis of Assisi…

“Where there is peace, let there be strife,

Where there is love, let there be hate,

Where there is hunger, let there be greed,

Where there is knowledge, let there be ignorance,

Where there is life, let there be death”

… and whilst it would be naive to suggest that the state of Britain’s politics and civic life ever since has been entirely down to her, she certainly left her mark over the following decades.

Fast forward to 1995, and Liverpool was about to witness the birth of a significant new cultural educational presence: the Liverpool Institute of Performing Arts (LIPA). Paul McCartney’s fame school (as it rapidly was referred to) launched in a media storm at the time with international students arriving in the city and mixing it with local students and the city’s cultural moguls in sometimes easy, sometimes awkward alignments. But mix it they well and truly did, despite the building not being ready on time. Whilst this was especially awkward for those students who had flown across the planet to be there, many opportunities opened up for them and the resident staff of LIPA which allowed for some inspiring cultural experiences: with the additional benefit of not needing to be assessed by LIPA’s assessment protocols. Perhaps for the first and only time in LIPA’s history, we were able to produce art without having to measure the state of students’ learning outcomes.

One of these was a new musical written and produced by Gary Carpenter and Nick Owen: Tabloid!!! Gary and Nick had been Heads of Music and Community Arts at LIPA at the time and used the hiatus between students arriving and classes starting by producing the musical at Liverpool’s Unity Theatre. Its first performance was Friday 13 October 1995 so we think it’s fitting to celebrate the 29th birthday of the production by publishing the full script this week.

Tabloid!!! is based on the Guy De Maupassant novel, Bel Ami, which is set in Paris in the late 1880s. We transposed the story to the London of the late 1980s and found an easy equivalence between the challenges that the French ‘Bel Ami’ found on his return from the war in Algeria and our hero, Roy Bellamy and his return from the Falklands. We were, after all, dealing with a period when corruption in the press, in politics, in the economy was rife. We were in the dog days of ‘Greed is Good’ and ‘loadsamoney‘ attitudes and so the story lent itself to a timely interpretation and production.

Fast forward to 2024, and despite the hope of the new Labour administration following their election in July, an uneasy stench of corruption and sleaze is beginning to drift up out of the gutters again: the ‘effluence of affluence‘ (as Gary wrote in the opening number to the show) is making its mark again.

Tabloid!!! will be available through Nick Owen Publishing from 8pm, 13 October 2024. If you’d like a copy, just leave your details here:

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