The Wick Team, Author at The Wick https://thisisthewick.com/author/tomkihllococo/ A new media title dedicated to the creative spirit of Hackney Wick and surrounding neighbourhoods Tue, 18 Mar 2025 22:36:05 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://thisisthewick.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/cropped-The-Wick-stacked-32x32.jpg The Wick Team, Author at The Wick https://thisisthewick.com/author/tomkihllococo/ 32 32 Guest Editor: Kwame Safo, The British Council https://thisisthewick.com/education/guest-editor-kwame-safo-the-british-council/ Tue, 18 Mar 2025 22:33:40 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=2290 Taking things global from East London roots - my story

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Guest Editor: Kwame Safo, The British Council

East London is home to me. To be specific: Hackney. I grew up in Clapton, went to the local Lee Valley Ice skating rink, and played football for over a decade at the iconic Hackney Marshes – even today I feed my inner football champion at Mabley. East London has its own energy, and Newham holds a special place in my heart, too. I’ve spent 20 years DJing and producing electronic music, and it all started in Newham.

Stratford’s Westfield now marks the location of an iconic piece of underground music history – It was once the location of the legendary pirate radio station, Deja Vu FM. Run on top of a nightclub called EQ on Waterden Road, the area looked very different to what it does today, but the station was a prominent platform for so many of today’s music stars like Kano, Ghetts and Tinchy Stryder, who were all educated at schools in the borough.

I myself studied at Newham Sixth Form College in Plaistow, where I made friends for life with people from across a range of different communities. Back then, I didn’t consider, or perhaps fully understand the power of those informal and serendipitous relationships, not just within the college but also around the borough and in the community generally.

My formative years in Newham and Hackney typified something essential to the unique harmony that thrives in neighbouring communities where diaspora and diversity play a central role. At its core is a creative fusion, where Bengali friends know a few cheeky Yoruba words, and white English boys understand the steps to the latest Ghanaian dances. These connections, through movement, language, music and food build trust, and play an undervalued role in dispelling harmful myths and preconceived ideas. Experiences like these in my early days around here shaped my creativity, my work ethic, and even my approach to how I parent my three sons.

I started my first DJ residency in the borough at what was then a branch of pub chain Yates’s on Stratford Broadway, (now The Abbey Tap). The people I engaged with back then have all played a part in shaping my career. Over that time I felt nourished by the rich melting pot here in East London, which somehow felt more pronounced than anywhere else in the capital. To say my understanding of that connective bridge of cultural awareness has informed my career success would be an understatement. Although I’ve been to many places and pushed my creative limits, mainly through music, I’ve gravitated back to Newham, where I now work to build bridges of a different kind – across continents.

Today I work at the British Council, the UK’s international cultural relations organisation, which has its headquarters in E20. Our mission is to build trust, peace and prosperity between the UK and other countries through arts and culture, education and English language teaching. We’ve been doing that for 90 years.

Iraqi delegation on The British Council terrace - photo Genevieve Pace

The British Council is the most unusual place to work because this mission is so huge it can seem a bit abstract, but as a local, it all makes sense to me. We often host delegations and had one in particular, from Iraq, not too long ago.

There was a beautiful moment when the delegates requested to be photographed on the terrace of our office, with the Zaha Hadid Aquatic Centre in the background. From my perspective it’s simply an Olympic-sized swimming pool, but for them it was clearly so much more; a tribute to a renowned and talented British Iraqi architect, whose work stands proud in London’s Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park (see pic, above).

I work with our teams across other countries to help connect them to UK arts and culture, and in doing this I aim to strengthen connections, deepen curiosity, and sometimes bust a few myths. I’ve learnt so much about working mutually, in collaboration, and the importance of investing in relationships now, for the longer-term.

The variety of early relationships I developed here in Hackney and Newham shaped me, so in my job now as the British Council’s Relationship Manager Arts, I’m drawing on that knowledge to nurture diverse international relationships for others. My hope is that these, too, will last over time, and contribute to creativity and growth for everyone: from East London to the whole world.

Kwame Safo is Relationship Manager Arts at the British Council, where he works with the Music and Creative Economy teams. He is also co-founder of the UK’s first Black music export office, BLACMEX.

To learn more about the work of the British Council please visit britishcouncil.org

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Discover The Lighthouse & Gardens https://thisisthewick.com/environment/discover-the-lighthouse-gardens/ Mon, 17 Jun 2024 10:13:15 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=2194 an ambitious 'meanwhile' project that mixes wellness and community activities in a striking urban setting

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Discover The Lighthouse & Gardens

Approaching the little building flanked on either side by grassy verges and trees, I see through floor-to-ceiling windows the welcoming space known as The LightHouse.

What was a property marketing suite for 10 years has been reimagined as a community empowerment and wellness space; an incubator for ideas, and a place for people to connect. It includes a community garden on Celebration Avenue in Stratford, a ‘meanwhile’ project which seeks to provide support, collaboration and opportunities to the community.

Its joint managers and co-curators Gabby Briscoe and Su Winsbury joined forces many years ago to form The Heart to Heart Collective, a corporate wellbeing provider with a mission of bringing a new body of wisdom and health to the wider population. Both Gabby and Su started out as reflexology practitioners before teaming up over a broader definition of wellness that includes fun, laughter and creativity as much as physical and emotional health. And they are a formidable team, bringing almost 40 years of experience combined through their modalities as EFT (Emotional Freedom Technique) Practitioners and EAM (Energy Alignment Method) Mentors.

Over the last few years, we have suffered a collective trauma that has impacted every single one of us to a greater or lesser extent. “Even if people hadn’t identified big emotions prior to the pandemic, like fear, anxiety, loneliness, worry”, Gabby explains, “we’ve all collectively been there over the last few years.” The pandemic isolated and disconnected us, depriving many of us of valuable human connection. After a difficult few years, their hope is to bring people back together, to offer a sense of community. The LightHouse and Gardens is inclusive, open to all, and perhaps most importantly, a place that people can just ‘be’.

Together, Gabby and Su understand that wellness is about more than just nutrition and yoga. They don’t want to be prescriptive in their approach to wellness, “it’s not a one-size fits all approach,” explains Su. Instead, The LightHouse offers a wide range of activities, workshops and groups. On the schedule are QiGong, yoga classes, a men’s meditation group, drumming classes and Zumba.

Gabby explains that the vision is to continually ask questions and refine what is on offer to reflect the specific needs and wants in the area. This information is also fed back to site owners The Hadley Property Group to shape what will be there in the final build, for which planning meetings are underway.

The Gardens are open and free to access. They offer people an opportunity to learn things that they may not have had the confidence to do before, led by Jimmy Wheale of Nomadic Gardens, who loves to help people of all ages and abilities come together and learn skills like gardening and using tools. ‘Growing’ is a great metaphor, and Jimmy helps people to focus on and nurture something outside of themselves. In the first month alone, all the planters were occupied by local residents keen to grown their own vegetables. With plants and materials donated from The Chelsea Flower Show and Tate Modern, the garden continues to take shape and welcome new visitors. There is a public access pathway that runs through the middle of it all and is an important thoroughfare for local residents. A practitioners networking group, LightHouse Luminaries, is hosted once a month. Being a wellness practitioner can be quite a lonely existence, often lacking opportunities to work alongside others. The LightHouse wanted to create something nurturing and connecting that gives practitioners the chance to come together and organise events. They also want to provide support in the form of offering business skills and a platform to develop ideas. Many practitioners have been working over Zoom since lockdown, and Gabby is keen to encourage people to start working face to face again.
“Empowerment is an important theme at The LightHouse,” Su explains. They work with young people and local schools, providing tools and techniques to improve employability skills. Su thinks that people aged 16-25 have probably had the hardest time over the last few years. Many graduates have struggled to find work, and being stuck at home with your family can present all kinds of challenges. There is a focus on providing opportunities for the younger population of Newham, and plans to expand to include a maker’s yard with workshops and courses for all levels of experience.
As humans, it can be hard to embrace change easily. Su and Gabby’s purpose with The LightHouse is to steer people through change in a positive way. “We’re here to send light out – we’re not sending out rescue boats!” Gabby says. They want to plant the seeds for those who are ready to make lifestyle changes to support their wellness. This process takes time, so it’s great news that they’ve been given the space for at least two years. Hadley is in the early stages of working up proposals for a mixed-use development on this site, to be delivered over the coming years and informed by feedback on its current iteration. “Having the LightHouse and Gardens welcoming people to our IQL North site has given us the opportunity to show exactly what kind of development we’re aiming to deliver here – and also, hopefully, to illustrate our own values too,” says Hadley Property Group’s Matt Griffiths-Rimmer. “Meanwhile and pop-up uses have been an integral component of our development strategies for a number of years. Done properly, they can take you way out of the traditional cycles of public consultation and enable much more genuine, meaningful conversations to take place. You can’t hope to curate new neighbourhoods without understanding what makes a place tick – and the only voices that can really give you that detail are the ones who already live there.”
With the constant regeneration that characterises Stratford, Gabby and Su agree that it’s particularly important to keep a sense of history and continuity through the development. They are looking at gathering some of the stories that have come out of this project for a book. One lady tells of how she’d always grown things from seed, and when she was nursing her mum through dementia, she planted a lot of plants as a way of managing her stress. When her mother passed away, she donated all the plants to the garden for others to enjoy.

 

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Connection, Communication & Community Ownership https://thisisthewick.com/innovation/connection-communication-community-ownership/ Fri, 14 Jun 2024 15:17:43 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=2176 Creative Wick founder, William Chamberlain, on the steady growth of the Hackney Wick model of 'inside out' regeneration

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Connection, Communication & Community Ownership

GUEST EDITOR, Spring 2024: William Chamberlain is a solicitor, senior partner at Counterculture LLP and serial social entrepreneur who, since 2008, has co-founded Hackney Wicked CIC, founded Creative Wick and co-founded the HWFI Community Development Trust. He is a PhD researcher at Loughborough University London working on sustainable models of creative led regeneration.

I moved to Hackney Wick in 2008 to see how the Olympic legacy was being delivered. I was a sponsorship lawyer and had been part of the London 2012 bid team which made the promise that “the communities surrounding the Olympic Park would benefit from the Games”.

I’m not sure many of us on the bid appreciated just how many artists were living and working in Hackney Wick and Fish Island at the time, but a 2009 land use survey put the number of creative workspaces and studios at more than 600, making it one of the most densely populated artist communities in the world. And we all know what usually happens to artist communities when the developers arrive…

Inspired by the Hackney Wicked Art Festival, which launched that first summer as an artist-led grassroots celebration of “art for art’s sake”, I started a local creative business network – the Cultural Interest Group (CIG) – in 2010, which still meets monthly. The CIG represents all sectors of the local business community: entrepreneurs, SMEs, academics, elected councillors and local authority officers, the third sector, developers, cultural institutions, affordable creative workspace providers, funders, corporations, artists and residents. 

Its aim is to facilitate as many personal cross-sector relationships as possible through collaboration and the sharing of resources, experience, knowledge and opportunities. Membership is free, inclusive and open to anyone and the mix of attendees provides an innovation network with opportunities to collaborate with a range of different stakeholders.

It’s the members that turn up to meetings each month that make things happen, and we talk about ‘engineered serendipity’ – we never know who exactly is going to be there on the day. It was at one of these CIG meetings that a member asked the LLDC for Creative Enterprise Zone protection back in September 2013 – the GLA announced the initiative in 2017. 

It was members that lobbied over many years for the permanent protection of affordable creative workspace through changes to local authority and planning policy, and we now have Trowbridge Gardens and The Bath House being operated by local providers.

Meanwhile, Bow Arts Trust will soon open thousands of square feet of new, permanently affordable creative workspace in the Hackney Yards development surrounding the station. CIG members also started the first issue of The Wick newspaper in 2011 and the network is still where we source most of our stories today. 

CIG members initiated the Save Hackney Wick campaign against the part-demolition of Vittoria Wharf in 2016, that Outset Studiomakers supported. This then encouraged the London Creative Land Trust to make its first acquisition at Stone Studios, now operated by Mainyard Studios and Cell Projects, the original pre-development studio provider on the site. 

And it was four not-for-profit member organisations talking about setting up a community trust at a CIG in 2011 who eventually founded our local Community Development Trust in 2017. The CDT now has two meanwhile use sites (with Yodomo’s Textile Reuse Hub and The Loop circular economy hub on Wallis Road), and is in negotiations with developers on a number of long-term sites in the area.

I’m reassured by the role being played, and the social impact generated by, the many third sector organisations based here – good people doing good things in a good way – and there seems to be a knock-on effect that’s influencing some of the more commercial operators to behave in a more considerate, supportive and sustainable way.

In a place changing as quickly as ours, there are always tensions and bumps in the road. Mutually beneficial cross-sector relationships take time to build. Respect and trust has to be earned over a long period of time, but I think a replicable and transferrable model for permanent, sustainable creative placemaking is emerging here.

The idea is to encourage ‘inside-out’ regeneration ie. working with existing community assets. By working with the people that hold the soul of the place dear to their hearts, and ensuring that they have the chance to be part of its future, I hope that we can partially prevent the large-scale gentrification that often comes with development projects on this scale and retain the guardians of the heritage, history and –particularly here – the rebellious spirit of the place.

Despite the current global situation, cost of living crisis, rising rents and increasing levels of disadvantage, I’m hopeful about the future. We have the opportunity to prove that creativity really does make places better, and that a mutually supportive hyper-local business network can deliver opportunities for everyone, in a genuinely mixed use local economy, with an affordable price-point for all. 

Art, culture and the creative industries bring people together, facilitate positive relationships, increase levels of resilience, cohesion and wellbeing, encourage openness and innovation and collaboration rather than competition. 

In my opinion this model has the potential to tick all the Big Society, Corporate Social Responsibility and Environmental, Social and Governance boxes.

Creative Wick and The Loco, our partner on this paper, have recently been awarded a Westfield Creative Futures grant by the Foundation for Future London to develop the last piece of this social infrastructure model: a digital creative placemaking platform to complement the live monthly meetings, weekly email newsletter and monthly Wick Wednesdays. 

In the coming months we’ll be working with a range of local stakeholders representing young people, the voluntary sector and our world-class neighbours at Here East, East Bank, Stratford Cross and the wider Olympic Park area to co-design a platform that encourages circular economy principles and the use of local supply chains.

I hope that Hackney Wick’s three pillar model of Connection through a locally trusted network, Communication via a digital and print media platform and Community Ownership of land use, equitable access to space and affordable rents through a locally-operated trust has the potential to help deliver an innovative solution towards solving some of the problems facing world cities today.

This editor’s letter first appeared in the Spring 2024 edition of The Wick print edition. 

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All Points East 2024 – discover the artists https://thisisthewick.com/news/all-points-east-2024-discover-the-artists/ Tue, 23 Apr 2024 10:31:02 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=2156 The big summer music events in Victoria Park

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 NEWS

All Points East 2024 – discover the artists

The big summer music events in Victoria Park

As the countdown continues to this summer’s eagerly anticipated mega All Points East Festival in Victoria Park, we thought we’d do a deep dive into the headline artists across the full 10-day run.

We’ve added links to each of their Insta profiles so you can either get hyped for the event by connecting with your favourite bands, singers and DJs, or discover more about the ones you’ve not yet heard – but soon will.

We’ll continue to bring you updates on all the dates in the summer run, plus the free In The Neighbourhood weekday events especially put on by and for locals. 

 

LCD Soundsystem's James Murphy

Read all about it: look out for the spring print edition (available free locally from first week of May) of The Wick for more on All Points East this summer

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Local Business Fair returns https://thisisthewick.com/news/all-points-east-local-business-fair-2024/ Thu, 21 Mar 2024 10:42:26 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=2135 It's the place to find out how you can get involved in the big summer festival activity in Victoria Park

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 NEWS

Local Business Fair returns

It's the place to find out how you can get involved in the big summer festival activity in Victoria Park

This summer, Uber One presents All Points East festival returns to Victoria Park, and the organisers are calling all local business owners, community organisations and suppliers who want to get involved in this year’s IN THE NEIGHBOURHOOD.

That’s the 100% free midweek events run in collaboration with Tower Hamlets as a big ‘thank you’ to locals during the Festival’s summer run, featuring masses to see and do for all ages.

Find out all about how you can be a part of it at the 7th annual Local Business Fair, taking place on Tuesday 26th March, where you can learn about all the opportunities to get involved.

The fair provides a chance for businesses to engage directly with the festival organisers, to network with other local organisations and get involved with summer events that aim to bring joy to the entire local community.

 

Register for free and more details here

EVENT INFO:

📅 Tuesday 26th March
⌚ 4pm – 7pm
📍The Art Pavilion, Mile End Park @thepavilionsmileend

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Will Hackney’s new Mayor increase green transport initiatives? https://thisisthewick.com/news/will-hackneys-new-mayor-increase-green-transport/ Tue, 14 Nov 2023 20:15:01 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=2088 Cyclists want Caroline Woodley to make the borough even more friendly for two-wheeled travel

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 NEWS

Will Hackney’s new Mayor increase green transport initiatives?

Cyclists want Caroline Woodley to make the borough even more friendly for two-wheeled travel

Labour candidate Caroline Woodley was elected Mayor of Hackney last week, filling the vacant position that followed the resignation of Philip Glanville in his ‘error of judgement’ scandal.

She ruffled a few feathers in the run-up to the election by declining to appear at a hustings event put on by Hackney Cycling Campaign (HCC), but she has nevertheless assured residents that her agenda to create a ‘greener, fairer borough’.

HCC asked all mayoral candidates to commit to implementing five key measures to improve the safety and accessibility of travel in the borough, and it was good to see voters largely siding with those who have a clear bike-friendly agenda.

Woodley might want to get started by considering expanding the range of micromobility options available in the borough.

As part of an upcoming story about dockless bike hire and other tech-driven forms of urban transport, The Wick has been speaking to Caroline Seton, co-founder and Head of Growth at bike operator Forest.

Forest currently operate in Tower Hamlets where they are imminently expanding due to high demand, but despite a desire to serve Hackney, the company currently doesn’t have a licence with Hackney Council, meaning riders are unable to travel between neighbouring boroughs, often leading to a build-up of bikes at the borough borders.

It’s a quirk of London’s borough-by-borough approach to shared e-bike licencing that’s holding back the convenience and growth of important new transport options which are popular with users as well as good for the planet.

“With Hackney being one of London’s premier cycling boroughs, it would be a fantastic place to launch Forest eBikes. Seton tells us of Forest’s hopes for the incoming Mayor to demonstrate her pro-cycling stance on the matter. “We believe that Hackney can and should develop a shared rental scheme which reflects the diverse nature of the borough itself.”

“Hosting more than one operator in the borough will lead to better outcomes, including helping Hackney achieve its decarbonisation objectives and giving more residents access to Forest e-bikes which are renowned for being the most affordable and sustainable in the market.”

Would having more than just Lime bikes operating in the borough lead to healthy competition and a better service for residents? Let us know what you think.

Read all about it: look out for the winter print edition of The Wick (out Jan 2024) with a feature dedicated to the exciting developments in urban transport that are being pioneered here in East London

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My tips for starting your career in the creative industries https://thisisthewick.com/education/tips-for-creative-industries-jobs-andrea-stark/ Tue, 03 Oct 2023 14:37:30 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=1928 Andrea Stark of Creative UK and a veteran of many other culture sector roles tells us how she managed to make it - and how you can too

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My tips for starting your career in the creative industries

Is finding a career in the creative industries still all about who know you know, not what you know?

As a teenager way back in the 1980s, I wanted to work in the arts but didn’t know anyone who did. Schoolteachers laughed and told me to get real.

I went to the library on our estate to see if there was a book about it (there wasn’t), I went to the career’s office next to the job centre which didn’t keep information about arts careers as there was “no demand for it.”

I went back to that careers office many times to show there was a demand, and after several weeks they gave me a photocopied sheet with the name of one college to apply to – so I did. I studied hard, got top grades and still wasn’t in the know.

Meantime I worked as a play leader, sessional youth worker, early morning newsagent, fruit shop cashier, supervisor of lingerie in a Kensington High St department store, silver service waitress, barmaid, product demonstrator in shopping centres and a TV extra. I even managed a passenger ferry service.

Over those years, my three priories were to keep a roof over my head, pay my way and stay creative – somehow/anyhow. The idea of an unpaid internship within a professional arts organisation was beyond the realm of possibility, never mind affordability.

But what I learned during that time was that creativity is not something you switch on or off – it’s part of who you are as a person, and even though I felt I wasn’t doing proper creative jobs much of the time, my creativity tipped into whatever roles I did do.

Mine comes out as being agile, a good problem solver, an organiser, seeing new possibilities, a lateral thinker…and blagging – being able to persuade others to imagine a future they hadn’t previously considered. These qualities often come to the fore when I appear to be confronted by a brick wall of apathy, disinterest, hostility – or a combination of the three!

East London in 2023 – the creative industries are everywhere you turn, and a number of developments such as East Bank on the Olympic Park have been enabled with public funding. They aim to support local communities train and secure good work in a sector that continues to grow, but which remains predominantly white and middle class.

There is now a plethora of individual programmes and access schemes promoted online, I was frankly baffled – even though I’m now somewhat in the know. So what do you do if you want to pursue a career in one of London’s the biggest local industries?

Start by seeing it as a basic right to be supported with good advice and guidance. It is reasonable to expect your careers teachers, local college or uni careers service, council employment service, adult learning and libraries to personally assist you with navigating your way through the mass of information out there to find the next step that’s right for you.

You should also expect creative and cultural organisations benefiting from public investment to connect you to the range of jobs that exist and what training you need to pursue them.

And if these folk in the know don’t give you the time of day? Call it out. Make a complaint, raise the matter with your local councillor. They will want to know that the efforts and resources they’re putting in on behalf of their residents to open up the creative industries are really working.

Don’t be shy, if you don’t ask you don’t get.

Andrea Stark is a non-executive director of Creative UK, The Culture Trust Luton, Metal Culture and a Governor of London Metropolitan University. She has held senior roles in the cultural sector, funding bodies, local and as Director of Employment, Skills & Culture with the London Borough of Islington.

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Creative Careers: a letter from John Newbigin https://thisisthewick.com/education/creative-careers-john-newbigin/ Tue, 03 Oct 2023 14:12:58 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=1912 London's creative industry ambassador reveals why here and now is the best time to be pursuing a career in this exciting sector

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Creative Careers: a letter from John Newbigin

When people talk about London’s economy they usually go on about banks and finance, but what really powers London is its creative and cultural industries.

One in every six jobs in London is in the creative sector, earning more than £50billion a year for our economy. In fact, those jobs don’t just power London, they define it, because three out of every four visitors to London say they come here for its cultural life. And what makes London so special is that it has talented people and successful businesses in every part of the creative economy.

Hollywood does film, Milan does fashion, Liverpool does music – but London does it all – film, fashion, music, games, design, advertising, theatre, visual arts, architecture. These industries feed off each other and help drive each other. And skills from the creative industries are now spreading into many other areas of the city’s economy, too.

But there’s no guarantee that it’s always going to be like that unless all these businesses can keep attracting new talent with new skills and ideas. There are growing skills shortages in many creative industries which is a headache for the companies – but a huge opportunity for people with ideas and ambition.

In the past that constant need for new skills was often met by people from the rest of Europe coming to work here, because this was the hottest place for talent to flourish. Brexit has changed all that and now our creative industries are desperate to attract the young talent that’s already here.

And there’s another change happening, too. Jobs in the creative industries have often been handed out in a very informal way. Somebody has a son, a daughter, a friend, a relative who needs a job, and gets a job – whether or not they’re the best person to do it. Now businesses are waking up to the fact that not only is this wrong, it’s definitely not a clever way to do things in a city where there’s incredible talent and potential, if you only look for it. And they’re looking for it now.

I helped start a company called Creative England that invested in creative businesses and helped them grow. Our slogan was “talent is everywhere but opportunity is not” because so many creative people were struggling to get ahead and turn their dreams into businesses. Ten years later, that’s still true, but what’s changing in London is that there are now better signposts to help talent connect with opportunity, that can help you find what works for you and what skills you need to get there.

If you want to try to make it in film or games or music or fashion or any of the other creative industries that flourish in this part of London, now’s a good time to be doing it, and The Wick guide to creative career opportunities gives you a great start.

John Newbigin is a member of the Mayor’s ‘Cultural Leadership Board’ and Ambassador for the creative industries. He was previously a member of the ‘London Economic Action Partnership Board.’

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A tale of two Olympic legacies https://thisisthewick.com/culture/tale-two-olympic-legacies/ Sat, 29 Jul 2023 17:02:31 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=2070 As the driving force behind the 'Save Brick Lane' campaign, Saif Osmani fights for East London's marginalised voices. Here he argues that disaffection with the Olympic legacy has reinforced inequalities,
with the arts often used to cover-up social divide

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A tale of two Olympic legacies

New buildings on the Olympic Park site are deemed “iconic” before the opening ribbon has been cut. Culture and heritage is being retrofitted like a ‘pop up’ style Chinese or Middle Eastern city inside of London, a leading Western city that prides itself on its history for tourism and even exports. English heritage to reinforce its Britishness.

The newly dubbed Stratford City is postcode E20, resulting in Stratford’s better-known postcode E15 becoming its poorer cousin. I live in E15 and as an artist of British-Bangladeshi background the few creative opportunities that trickle-down have to be fought over. Public commissions often expect me to engage my own, presumed disengaged community which brings up ethical questions like prejudicial assumptions and access to resources for underserved communities.

I was artist-in-residence at a university located at Here East in E20 during which I took MA students, local artists and communities to explore the divide between postcodes E20 and E15 The resulting exhibition, called Connecting the two sides of Stratford, almost didn’t happen. Estate managers wanted to pull it at the last minute, but they had agreed to host the exhibition as part of Newham’s first Heritage Month in 2018, so it finally took place stretching outside on hoarding in the Here East yard.

Local communities from the surrounding areas attended because it was a reflection about their lived experiences. The following year the outdoor hoardings was covered up with acceptable graffiti showing Disney characters and my emails to managers were not being returned. Locals felt unwelcome here at Here East.

In E20 the arts are being used to underpin building development on steroids. Digital advertisement boards show a toxically positive environment where dreams are to be realised inside world-class cultural and media establishments yet to come. However change in the surrounding four boroughs is incremental with an ever increasing divide of widening social inequalities where culture and heritage is systematically being eroded.

For locals, the trickle-down economics of capitalism promises benefits resulting in increased house prices we’re told, but many families cannot afford to relocate having spent years building community networks, and with it a localised heritage.

Once the Olympics was announced the word Legacy came part and parcel. The International Olympics Committee delegates were shown a sea of financially poor black, Asian and working class white faces and within five years a mammoth £8.8bn funnelled into a two week-long event.

Local people complained that they were being denied access to the Games. Any critical voices were locked up for protesting, like Trenton Oldfield, founder of This Is Not A Gateway Festival whose public talks offered alternative viewpoints around the changes taking place. The Workshop Bar at the Theatre Royal Stratford East stocked up 30% extra goods but the footfall didn’t result in paying customers, instead losing 30%, with pick-up still remaining slow.

Creativity had been stretched too quickly here, and there were always going to be victims. Today there are no signs of any dissidence on the E15-E20 border, just disaffection, heritage-washing, zealots giving out free Bibles and Qurans and endless shop ’til you drop experiences.

During an early morning croissant-clad breakfast held inside a smelly fish factory on the border of Hackney, artists living in and near Vittoria Wharf (see p.6) complained that it was a case of survival or to leave London. Months later Vittoria Wharf was part demolished and replaced with a rustic new footbridge, brutally connecting the E20 site to Hackney. Biased consultations and subsequent demolitions are traumatic for embedded communities, resulting in a destruction of their collective memory and their own emergent legacies.

Around the same time Robin Hood Gardens in Tower Hamlets was demolished with a small section of the building kept like an object in a cabinet of curiosities for future intellectuals and voyeurs to ponder over at the V&A. The context was being removed from local people: the East End was ripe for looting, just like the historic actions of Imperialistic and colonial pursuits in Africa and Asia.

As local people and artists we feel inspired by spaces that aren’t the neoliberal places constructed by computer generated off-the-peg designs that try and tell us who we are through representations on large digital screens. Recently an artist displaced by the Olympics wanted to revisit 2012 but was at a loss: “I am still unsure what I feel about what happened” he said. In the decade-long narrative around the Olympics Legacy what’s telling is what has survived and what is still under threat in the manic movement of international financial capital into the poor and needy East End.

For the working-class, ethnic minority communities and for artists, successful places are where lived experiences create localised heritage and with it a genuine legacy starts to emerge – these people and places need to be nurtured and protected like the recent ‘Save Brick Lane’ campaign highlights.

The Greater Carpenters Estate Neighbourhood Plan shows that the Focus E15 Mothers can be accommodated locally and the longevity of Queen’s Market in Upton Park proves it can be refurbished without demolition, yet these struggles also highlight that the Olympic Legacy is only too willing to use the spectre of displacement against local embedded communities that has started a postcode war between E20 and its surrounding communities.

Saif Osmani is a visual artist and architectural designer living and working in East London and a graduate of UCL Bartlett. He is a co-founder of Bengali East End Heritage Society. Recent projects include Cockney Conversations Month 2022 and the ‘Save Brick Lane’ campaign. Follow him: @saifosmani

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Olympian Desiree Henry on her own London 2012 legacy https://thisisthewick.com/wellbeing/desiree-henry-personal-2012-legacy/ Sun, 19 Feb 2023 15:18:58 +0000 https://thisisthewick.com/?p=1479 Being asked to light the torch at the opening ceremony inspired a glittering career

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Olympian Desiree Henry on her own London 2012 legacy

It’s still a pinch me moment whenever I think about it – I really did it! Those dreams, late nights and hours of work were all for something and I’m beyond proud to call myself a World, European and Olympic Medalist. These achievements were not a story of overnight success, so let me break down the impact of London 2012 and how its legacy is something that should never be doubted.

At the time of the London 2012 Olympics, I was just a 15-year-old from North London who went to an all-girls school and had found athletics to be the first thing that made my life feel as though it had a purpose.

I was a newly crowned World Youth Champion, which for my first time representing Great Britain, I thought nothing could top. The Games were a matter of weeks away and I was really just excited at the thought that all my favorite athletes would soon be here competing in my home city.

I was invited to an event and my mum had informed me that the organizers wanted things to be kept extremely private as it was all top secret. And so, one morning, we were picked up by a black car covered in the 2012 Olympics logo with the words ‘inspire a generation’ below it. There were so many questions running through my mind from ‘are they going to ask me to compete?’ to ‘have I done something wrong?’!

If you’ve been in the car and approached east London from the north, you get to a point where you can see both the aquatics centre and the athletics stadium as clear as day in the middle of what felt like nowhere, and it was at this moment where I thought, oh my goodness, could we be going inside the newly built stadium?

This might sound dramatic to some, but for me it was honestly like being invited into the Willy Wonka Chocolate Factory. I was very aware of its existence and who would soon be competing in there, but you never imagine yourself suddenly being inside the place, especially when the games hadn’t even begun! I thought the closest I’d get to the Olympics was watch it on TV.

After arriving at the stadium and meeting six other young people – who were equally as confused as to why we were all brought here – Danny Boyle the movie director arrived, huddled us all into a circle and told us that it was us that he wanted to light the Olympic cauldron at the opening ceremony. 27th July 2012 therefore became the night I went from having a vague idea that I could possibly go to the Olympics one day, to believing that it’s my calling to be a world class athlete and Olympian.

Have you ever smiled so much that your cheeks start to hurt, and your lips are quivering? I believe on that night that it was the combination of adrenaline, excitement and the anxiousness of trying to contain this array of emotions whilst understanding that at this moment, the world was truly watching. From our Queen and the Royal Family, to heads of nations and so many of the athletes that I look up to, either in this stadium with me, or watching from the athletes village TV screens. There was a moment where we had to run past the athletes situated in the centre of the stadium to prepare for the official lighting of the cauldron. As I ran past, I just kept thinking to myself, I’m going to be like you guys one day: an Olympian.

The chosen few that have battled and competed to represent their home nations. Finding myself in a sea of those whose fate was to be Olympic Champions, World Record Holders and Champions of a Nation, well if there was ever a sign, ever a moment of right place at the right time, this was it for me. Even to this day it’s hard to believe that I share this moment of being one of the few to light an Olympic cauldron with the likes of Muhammed Ali.

By the time the 2016 Olympics in Rio came around I was in the best shape of my life. My confidence was high. Over that four-year period I believe that that was the hardest I’d ever worked in my life, as my only goal was to ensure that I was at the next Olympics representing my country. And I did. I not only represented Great Britain at my first Olympics in Rio, but at the age of 21 I came back with an Olympic Bronze medal, the first in over 32 years in the 4x100m women’s event.

Olympic legacy is not just something that’s created at one point in history only to be remembered every four years, it represents what happens when someone stays so focused and dares to not just dream but put in work to make their dream a reality – and bet on themselves to achieve great things.

Legacy is not what’s just left behind in the host cities infrastructure, but what has been ignited in the minds and memories. Legacy is understanding and studying what others have done before, and incorporating the lessons learned, the testimonies, the lows as well as highs, and combining it all with something great and powerful to guide you in your own future.

Legacy has the power to change lives, and to change our mentality. It has the power to change one from thinking ‘what if ?’ to ‘I CAN’. That’s what I believe London 2012 did for me. It took away the kind of doubt that usually holds us back, and through seeing hundreds of people from all around the world, from all different walks of life, competing at the highest level here in East London, I realised I could be just as special too.

Desiree is the third fastest woman in British history in the 100m. She won Bronze in the Rio 2016 Olympics for 4x100m relay, and then silver at the 2017 World Championships in London. She teaches fitness for all ages and is a regular on TV and radio. Find out more about her.

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