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Showing posts with label koestler trust. Show all posts
Showing posts with label koestler trust. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 May 2018

Private View: First Impressions - Portraits from Prison










Yesterday we hosted the Private View of First Impressions - Portraits from Prison at St Martin-in-the-Fields. I welcomed guests with the following:

This exhibition has been curated by the Koestler Trust at the invitation of the Prisons Mission of Churches Together in Westminster. The exhibition has been at St James Piccadilly and Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church prior to coming here and we are all thrilled to have the opportunity to show artworks by prisoners that demonstrate both the remarkable capabilities of the artists and the restorative power of art.

As a member of Churches Together in Westminster and as supporters of the Prison Mission we are, therefore, very pleased to host this exhibition and contribute to its awareness raising role - awareness of the organisations involved and the significant work they do plus awareness of the experiences of those in prison and of issues faced within our prisons. The speeches we will hear shortly will assist in furthering our awareness of these issues.

‘First Impressions’ features a range of portraits using diverse approaches to portraiture and showing viewers the potential of those in the criminal justice system. Most of the portraits have been created in prisons, with some created in other settings, such as secure forensic hospitals and by people on probation.

Here at St Martin's we often ask ourselves wondering questions and I suggest that asking such questions of this exhibition will be of real help in responding to it, particularly to ask, ‘I wonder why that person is of significance or importance to that artist?’ It is a truism, but portraits flag up to us the importance of people and that importance is perhaps never more significant than when we are cut off from those we love or when we are locked up with those we have not chosen as our companions.

These portraits are not academic exercises in life drawing. Instead, these are portraits which are alive with meaning and significance because of the connection which the artist senses with their subject. I encourage you to reflect on the significance of those relationships as you view this exhibition, to allow this exhibition to simply remind you of the significant people in your own life, as well as the vital importance of connecting with those in confinement so they do not lose touch with our wider society and have the relationships they need to integrate back into society once their sentence has been served. Prisoners are out of sight. They must not also be out of mind.

The Private View included talks from prisons experts and audience questions to the panel. Juliet Lyon CBE, Chair of the Independent Advisory Panel on Deaths in Custody, addressed the question 'Can Prisons Work - for offenders, for victims, for taxpayers?', alongside Professor Nick Hardwick (former Chief Inspector of Prisons and former Chair of the Parole Board), and Dame Anne Owers (former Chief Inspector of Prisons and Chair of Trustees for the Koestler Trust).

Among many helpful and striking comments were the following:

  • We are asking too much of prisons. 
  • We should be promoting any other way of serving time, so that Prisons can be the institution of last resort. 
  • Prisons can scarcely function as overcrowded, neglected, least visible institutions. 
  • Prison takes away agency, we have to change the narrative.
  • "an unfaltering faith that there is a treasure, if you can only find it, in the heart of every man.” - quote from Winston Churchill
  • Chaplaincies have been a bright spark in every prison visited.
  • Great examples exist of churches involved in resettlement.
  • Many reformers are people of faith.

The Rt. Rev. Richard Moth, Bishop of Arundel & Brighton and Liaison Bishop for Prisons sent a message saying: 'The medium of Art often provides a most effective expression for the deepest of human thought and emotion. For many, it is a means to a renewed sense of value and self-worth and a significant step on the journey of life. The Koestler Trust and Churches Together in Westminster, merit congratulations on this high-profile exhibition. I am sure it will do much to bring raise awareness of the needs of all in prison and those who work with them.'

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Wings - Band On The Run.

Thursday, 3 May 2018

First Impressions - Portraits from Prison

On Tuesday 8th May, a landmark exhibition of art made in prison will mark its official opening at St Martin-in-the-Fields, delivered by London’s Prisons Mission in collaboration with the Koestler Trust, and bringing together leading voices in the UK prisons system as recent Ministry of Justice figures show the steady climb of violence in custody. The Prisons Mission is an initiative of Churches Together in Westminster (CiTW) which provides support and assistance identified and needed by the multi-faith Chaplaincy Teams in prisons.

First Impressions - Portraits from Prison is curated by prison arts charity the Koestler Trust, which encourages offenders to change their lives through taking part in the arts, and challenges negative preconceptions of what offenders are capable of. The Trust’s curation showcases a selection of portraiture and sculpture entered into the 2017 Koestler Awards from across the UK. The artwork displayed is selected to highlight the skills and talents of people in prisons and other secure settings.

The exhibition’s private view at St Martin-in-the-Fields will take place on Tuesday 8th May (18.30-20.30), presenting talks from prisons experts and audience questions to the panel. Rory Stewart MP, Minister of State for Prisons, and Juliet Lyon CBE, Chair of the Independent Advisory Panel on Deaths in Custody, will address the question 'Can Prisons Work - for offenders, for victims, for taxpayers?', alongside Professor Nick Hardwick (former Chief Inspector of Prisons and former Chair of the Parole Board), and Dame Anne Owens (former Chief Inspector of Prisons and Chair of Trustees for the Koestler Trust).

The event closely follows the publication of the Ministry of Justice’s quarterly report, which shows violence against prison staff and among inmates in England and Wales has reached record highs. Prisoner-on-prisoner assault rates increased by 11% from 2016 to 2017 (21,270 prisoner-on-prisoner assaults in the 12 months to December 2017), while assaults on staff in 2017 were up by 23% compared with the previous year (8,429 assaults on staff in 2017).

Professor Nick Hardwick, former Chief Inspector of Prisons and former Chair of the Parole Board said: “The issue of whether prison works needs to include whether it works for the most serious and high-risk offenders, and we should ask the question from the perspective of the victim as well as that of the prisoner.”

Juliet Lyon CBE, Chair of the Independent Advisory Panel on Deaths in Custody said: “The prison service is our least visible and most neglected public service. Prison can work as a place of last resort in the justice system for people whose offending is so serious or dangerous that they cannot serve their sentence in the community. Prison cannot, and does not, work as a capacious social service for people with unmet mental health needs, struggling with homelessness, debt, domestic violence or addiction.

“By overusing and overcrowding our prisons we do nothing to prevent the next victim.”

John Plummer, Coordinator of CTiW’s Prisons Mission said: “I am deeply ashamed of British prisons. A prison in which inmates are locked in a cell for 23 hours, day after day, is not contributing towards improved mental health, education, rehabilitation, restoration, or crime reduction.

“The Prisons Mission takes its learning from prisons back into churches to encourage informed discussion and drive progress: it's crucial that we share accurate information about life behind bars and the need for fundamental changes."

The Prisons Mission, an initiative of CTiW, provides support and assistance identified and needed by the multi-faith Chaplaincy Teams in prisons. It also aims to ensure that prisoners, while out of sight, are not out of mind.

The Koestler Trust is the UK’s best-known prison arts charity. It encourages ex-offenders to change their lives through taking part in the arts, and challenges negative preconceptions of what ex-offenders are capable of.

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Sarah McLachlan - In The Arms Of An Angel.

Tuesday, 20 March 2018

CHURCHES SHOW PRISONERS’ ART





First Impressions – Portraits from Prison, has been curated by the Koestler Trust, at the invitation of the Prisons Mission of Churches Together in Westminster. The exhibition was opened tonight at St James Piccadilly by prison reformist, Jonathan Aitken.

The Koestler Trust is the UK’s leading prison arts charity. It plays a vital part in the rehabilitation journey offered to prisoners and ex-prisoners to transform their lives through participation in arts.

The Prisons Mission is an initiative of Churches Together in Westminster (CTiW) which provides support and assistance identified and needed by the multi-faith Chaplaincy Teams in prisons. It also aims to ensure that prisoners while out of sight are not out of mind. 

The Prisons Mission has developed a very useful relationship with the Koestler Trust enabling the of this four Churches Show of Art by Prisoners. Artwork will be exhibited at St James’s Piccadilly, St Martin-in-the-Fields, Notre Dame de France and Bloomsbury Central Baptist Church. It is hoped that the artwork will be the focus for other prison related activities, discussions, lectures, displays and dramas, providing information about the prison and criminal justice system, not only to the regular congregations, but to a wider audience.

The exhibition showcases a selection of portraiture and sculpture entered into the Koestler Awards – an annual scheme run by the Koestler Trust that has been inspiring participation in the arts by people in the UK’s criminal justice system and secure sectors for over 55 years.

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Johnny Cash - San Quentin.