To read this content please select one of the options below:

TESTT Space: groundwork and experiment in a complex arts organisation

Martyn Hudson (Department of Arts, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK)
Hazel Donkin (School of Education, Faculty of Social Sciences and Health, Durham University, Durham, UK)

Arts and the Market

ISSN: 2056-4945

Article publication date: 26 November 2019

Issue publication date: 26 November 2019

147

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to document and describe an omni-disciplinary ethnography of a complex arts and cultural regeneration organisation in Durham (TESTT Space). The organization and its art spaces are hybrid combination tools explicitly designed to test and experiment with ideas, social forms, human interactions and arts practice. Its ground or practice is a repurposed meanwhile space in a city centre embedded in a unique cultural landscape of local communities, a University and a World Heritage Site. The research attempted to understand its groundwork, its interactions and its civic mission and aspirations in a time of radical change and rupture.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors assumed an ethnographic approach, working with and within this organisation for a year, thinking of the research as embedded, intimate research and committed to social change. It was a work of co-production – working with studio-holders, curators, artists and facilitators using a range of triangulated qualitative research methods. These include structured interviews, auto-ethnography, ethnography of spaces, arts-led research, art as research and research as art.

Findings

TESTT Space has allowed both the retention of artists in the city and the propulsion of artists into the world. It has offered different ways of engaging in the complex lives of artists and curators, allowing them to test aesthetics and try out new social models. It has thought up its own network as a thinking practice, has developed its own politics, civics and imagined a set of new futures.

Originality/value

The paper documents interactions and aspirations, describing the lived phenomenological experience of being in this experimental space.

Keywords

Citation

Hudson, M. and Donkin, H. (2019), "TESTT Space: groundwork and experiment in a complex arts organisation", Arts and the Market, Vol. 9 No. 2, pp. 188-201. https://doi.org/10.1108/AAM-05-2019-0016

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles