The Shed returns after ten years in hibernation to stage John Cage’s Indeterminacy with Stewart Lee at NCEM

Stewart Lee, left, Tania Caroline Chen and Steve Beresford: Presenting John Cage’s Indeterminacy at the National Centre for Early Music, York, on February 1

AVANT-GARDE North Yorkshire arts impresario Simon Thackray is bringing The Shed out of hibernation for the first time in a decade to stage an experimental gig in York on February 1.

Comedian Stewart Lee, already in the city for a five-night run of Stewart Lee Vs The Man-Wulf at York Theatre Royal that week, will be the narrator for the 3.30pm performance of John Cage’s cult 1959 work Indeterminacy at the National Centre for Early Music, St Margaret’s Church, Walmgate.

“Important note,” says Simon. “This is not a comedy gig. Stewart is keen that people know it is definitely not an extra Stewart Lee tour date.”

Lee will be joining forces with Tania Caroline Chen, piano, and Steve Beresford, piano and objects. Objects? “I don’t know what objects they will be!” admits Stewart.

Tania Caroline Chen: Flying in from San Francisco to play piano at The Shed’s presentation of John Cage’s Indeterminacy at the NCEM

Indeterminacy was a 1959 double LP on the Folkways label by John Cage and David Tudor, where Cage read 90 of his stories, each one, whether long or short, lasting one minute. Unheard by Cage, Tudor simultaneously played the piano and other things in another room.

One day, pianists Chen and Beresford were listening to the record and decided they should do their own version, hitting on Stewart Lee, a deadpan stand-up with a love of experimental music, to be “the voice”.

“It’s Tania and Steve’s show,” says Stewart, who stresses: “It’s not a comedy show, but it is quite funny in its way.

“We’ve been doing it for 15 years now, and there’s a recording we did that David Grubbs, the Cage scholar in America, reckons we really ‘got’ what Cage was seeking to do.

Mark Reynolds’ tour poster illustration for Stewart Lee Vs The Man-Wulf, playing York Theatre Royal from January 28 to February 1

“The piece is for improvising musicians, working with a voice that is not expressive. Cage wrote down these 90 stories of different lengths on cards that he does in a random order. You have to do each story in exactly a minute, whether it’s 50 words or 200 words, letting the words do the work, which is what Tania and Steve spotted I do in my stand-up. The juxtaposition of each story and the music creates different frissons and patterns.”

The trio’s version is usually 40 minutes in length, and unlike Cage and Tudor, the players are in the same room but still “do their best” to not hear Stewart’s reading – done with a stop-watch timer at his side – as they play music on and in a piano and use other small sound sources.

“The musicians are trying to support me and I’m trying to support them but not create a mood, though occasionally it oversteps that, and that’s what’s indeterminable about it. It seems that Cage created this character that doesn’t realise what he’s doing!”

Lee’s comedy has been described as being “characterised by repetition, internal reference and deadpan delivery”. “I think those three elements are there in Cage’s writing too,” says Stewart. “Deadpan is easy with Cage because he specifically says he does not want you to ‘perform’ or ‘interpret’ the story. You have to try not to sell it.”

The Shed’s earlier clash of words and music: Mrs Boyes’ Bingo featuring games of prize bingo to the accompaniment/distraction of Mark Sanders’ percussion ( world premiere 1999, event copyright Simon Thackray. All rights reserved.) Picture: Simon Thackray

Simon notes:: “It has elements of Mrs Boyes’ Bingo that we used to do with legendary Malton bingo caller Mrs Boyes and improvising percussionist Mark Sanders. It’s that collision of words and music, with the spoken word being unrelated to the musicians, who are performing unrelated to anything else that’s going on. You’re putting three people in a box, shaking it up, and seeing what comes out!”

Stewart is delighted to be working with Simon once more, having been a Shed regular, indeed having performed the last official Shed show in Brawby in 2015. “Originally I was going to do a Pump Disco at the Milton Rooms, asking Stewart if he would do a sewage protest gig in Malton,” recalls Simon.

“Simon said, ‘can you do this show?’ and I said ‘Not unless I can do it while I’m on tour’,” says Stewart. The York Theatre Royal run was put in place and, as it happened, the Saturday afternoon was availableat the NCEM. “Now Tania is coming over from San Francisco just to do the show,” he reveals.

The Shed impresario Simon Thackray: Self-portrait in beret in Condom-en-Armagnac, France

On the subject of The Shed, Stewart says: “I was always very grateful to make Simon’s venue a stop on the tour. I used to love his doing shows out on the moors and how he did that thing that the BBC doesn’t believe in any more: where, if you put on weird stuff, people will come because people are more broadminded than they’re given credit for”.

Simon, who staged multiple left-field gigs, innovative installations and surrealist arts events in his home village of Brawby, Hovingham, York and on BBC Radio 3 from 1992 to 2015, is a Malton town councillor and environmental campaigner these days.

 “The gig is being staged to ‘encourage’ Yorkshire Water to go the extra mile, in waders if necessary, and sort out the sewerage system in Malton and Norton, which is now spilling sewage into the River Derwent SSSI (Site of Special Scientific Interest) with gay abandon,” he says. “Take a look at visitmaltonsewer.co.uk for data on sewage spill.”

After 12 years of kicking up a stink, “the ‘Battle of Brawby Sewer’ has taken a positive turn,” says Simon, who points out the Derwent is also a designated European Special Area of Conservation. “Yorkshire Water is about to pour £1.5 million into the Brawby drainage system to cure the decades-old sewer flooding issue, and I’m now hoping to work with Yorkshire Water to sort out the sewerage system in Malton and Norton.”

Trombonist Alan Tomlinson RIP performing an improvised sewer gig in the Brawby discharge ditch in 2013 to highlight an ongoing dispute with Yorkshire Water about flooding and sewerage in the River Derwent. The Shed promoter Simon Thackray will display (or wear) the waders in tribute to Alan at the February 1 performance of Indeterminacy as “the spirit of The Shed comes to York”. Picture: Kippa Matthews RIP

The NCEM performance will be dedicated to the memory of Leeds College of Music-trained trombonist, improviser and The Shed alumnus Alan Tomlinson, who died on February 13 last year. “He famously performed an ‘awareness-raising’ 20-minute improvised trombone solo standing up to his knees in a thigh-high stream of sewage in the Brawby discharge ditch in 2013,” says Simon.

Stewart adds: “About ten years ago, we did Indeterminacy at the Royal Albert Hall, when Alan did a sequence of three pieces on trombone on the same bill and Harry Hill did Cage’s work Water Walk too.”

Simon  rejoins: “I’m hoping to show film of the piece that Harry Hill learned for that show – it’s very funny.”

The Shed presents Indeterminacy, National Centre for Early Music, York, February 1, 3.30pm. Box office: 01904 658338 or at ncem.co.uk. Stewart Lee Vs The Man-Wulf, York Theatre Royal, January 28 to February 1, 7.30pm. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.

Environmental campaigner Simon Thackray with the “Ryedale Flood Defence Machine” en route to County Bridge, Malton, to hold back the flooding of the River Derwent. “It works!” he says

Street artists Static give facelift treatment to derelict Malton bus shelter. Why?

Static at work on converting a derelict Malton bus shelter into a vibrant expression of public street art. Picture: Brenna Hebrink, Art Of Protest Projects project support manager

WHAT should be done with a disused bus shelter in Malton? Food for thought in Yorkshire’s self-annointed “Food Capital”.

Step forward York arts and media company Art of Protest Projects, Malton Town Council and Static, a London artist duo with deep Scarborough roots, to administer a “public street art transformation” next to Malton Community Primary School in Highfield Road.

Static’s ex-pat North Yorkshiremen, Craig Evans and Tom Jackson, are celebrating creating their nearest painting to home after taking a derelict bus shelter and turning it into “a bright, energetic and colourful visual that completely changes the vibe of the street”.

Once an eyesore of a disused bus shelter, now “an urban art gem”, in Highfield Road, Malton

As Jeff Clark, director of Art Of Protest Projects explains: “The goal of this vibrant transformation is to uplift and bring people’s attention to a structural space that was once an eyesore, but through imagination and creativity has been turned into an urban art gem.”

You wait ages for one bus shelter transformation in Malton, then along comes…? “It’s just the first of many more facelifts the town will receive in the coming year,” promises Jeff. “Street art has a captivating way to not only visually change a landscape, but also to draw people towards certain areas and start conversations about what colour, pattern and design mean and how they amplify a background.”

Whether a town or business wants to send a message, make a space feel safe or simply elevate and beautify an eyesore, urban art is the most effective vehicle of which to do so, Jeff contends.

Art Of Protest Projects director Jeff Clark at the Coppergate Centre unveiling of The Postman’s Guardians Of York installations. He has overseen Static’s transformation of a Malton bus shelter too. Picture: Dave J Hogan

“To be given the opportunity to convert a shelter on a street that was a country road seemed like a fun and exciting way to change a landscape,” he says. “The fact that there is a school next door is what really got me excited.

“What’s better than being able to spark imagination and creativity into young people? We are so amped by the reception this shelter makeover has already received and cannot wait to continue splashing colour around Malton.”

Suitably ecstatic Static artist Craig Evans says: “It was great to take on and transform this overlooked and unassuming piece of public architecture. Being no longer in use and seemingly belonging to no-one, we hope that our intervention here will inject some colour and creativity into the area and inspire the children from Malton Community Primary School and the people of Malton to see the potential in more public places and to take a fresh look at their surroundings.”

The finishing touches: Static ready the Malton bus shelter facelift for its April 14 unveiling

Councillor Paul Emberley, Malton’s town mayor, enthuses: “This is a fantastic transformation of a once-scruffy bus shelter and brings a little more cheer to our amazing town. People love it.”  

Malton town clerk Gail Cook concurs:The shelter is a few metres away from two of our schools and we wanted to create something really special that would inspire the children too – and these talented artists, Craig and Tom, have well and truly delivered!

Up the A64, Art Of Protest Projects have stationed a host of Guardians Of York on guard on the walls of York, combining street artworks of cultural heroes such as broadcaster and natural world activist Sir David Attenborough, newly crowned with mauve hair, on the riverside by Ouse Bridge with 11 murals to “honour and elevate pandemic key workers from York”.

York Hospital ICU anaesthetist Steve Wasowa mirrors his street art installation pose for The Postman’s Guardians Of York series. Picture: Dave J Hogan

In tandem with the York BID, Clark’s public art champions have worked with The Postman, the anonymous international street artist collective from Brighton, to create the ancient city’s first urban art installation.

The works, a kinetic fusion of the Pop Art palette and brash punk energy, celebrate the Guardians Of York, who helped to keep York moving when the city – and the world – came to a standstill during Covid-19 lockdowns.

Eleven essential workers, all of them York residents, were recorded by a professional film crew in the closed Debenhams store in Davygate, giving their account of the hardships of working through the upheaval created by the pandemic, and all had their portrait photographs taken.

Street artists The Postman with their Guardians Of York artwork of police officer Pauline Law. Picture: Dave J Hogan

Taking part were: Becky Arksy, primary school teacher; Pauline Law, police officer; Sally and Mark Waddington, York Rescue Boat; Martin Golton, street cleaner, and Steve Wasowa, ICU anaesthetist, York District Hospital.

So too were: Steve and Julia Holding, owners of the Pig and Pastry, in Bishopthorpe Road, and founders of the Supper Collective; Steven Ralph, postal worker; Gill Shaw, Boots retail worker, and Brenna Allsuch, ICU nurse, York District Hospital.

Their images have been transformed into murals by The Postman collective, whose favoured artistic medium is pop-culture paste-ups, rooted in punk iconography, wherein they express themselves in brightly coloured, edgy, urban portraits, varying from street artworks of Nelson Mandela in South Africa to pop stars in Los Angeles.

The Postman delivering a street art installation of The Pig And Pastry’s Julia Holding to Finkle Street

“As the Guardians project builds momentum, we realise more and more how important it is to tell the stories of the people behind the masks,” say the mystery duo with roots in graffiti culture. “The key workers that have carried us through the last year inspired us and made a difference to everybody’s lives.”

The Guardians Of York are on display on city-centre walls in a three-month installation from April 9 to July 9, in a show of gratitude to key workers timed to coincide with the relaxation of lockdown restrictions and the reopening of many of the city’s “non-essential” businesses from April 12.

Recalling the flour-based dissolving street art of York memorial artist Dexter, The Postman have applied their paper-based large-scale artworks to walls with wheat paste, their impermanent form of art fading and washing away over time, duly “creating a buzz as people seek them out before they disappear”.

The Postman sail their artwork of Sir David Attenborough aboard the York Rescue Boat at the Guardians Of York installation launch. Picture: Dave J Hogan

Mounting the Guardians Of York is a passion project for Jeff and The Postman.  “They like to do street art that makes a difference, and my partner is an NHS frontline worker, so I’ve seen every day how Covid has worn them down, sacrificing their own health. It’s no wonder that nurses have gone down, had to stop working, because they’re frazzled,” he says.

“They’ve had to go into a war-like atmosphere, where normally you’d do a tour and then be sent home, for a break, but that’s not been the case. That’s why my heart and soul has gone into this project.” To watch a video about the project, go to: https://youtu.be/7cUpnE1M-sw

Static artists Craig Evans and Tom Jackson with their latest work, the transformed Malton bus shelter. Picture: Brenna Hebrink

Who are Static?

STATIC is the combined creative output of Scarborough-bred Craig Evans and Tom Jackson, who collided in 2006 in a derelict block of flats with a sea view and have since worked with assorted international galleries and painted murals in the UK and as far away as Japan.

The Static duo have been based in London since 2008 and are founding members of Wood Street Walls, where they spent two months renovating a disused school building to create a shared workspace, Wood Street Studios, for its opening in 2017.

One of the largest community street art projects in Britain, Wood Street Walls uses street art to drive awareness and funding for community schemes and projects involving children and education.

Static’s poster for their Born & Raised exhibition at the Art Of Protest Gallery, York, in October 2018

Static’s studio work is created using a combination of screen-printed and stencil/spray-painted techniques, and they also produce layered glass artworks that play with space and how perceived 2D visuals can shift to reveal a 3D picture. Their works are collected by the Saudi Royal family and musicians Natalie Appleton, of All Saints, and Liam Howlett, of The Prodigy, among others.

In 2018, Static held their first solo exhibition in their home county, presenting Born & Raised at the Art Of Protest Gallery’s original premises in Little Stonegate, York, from, October 19 to 31.

During their York residency, Evans and Jackson painted a floor mural in the Art Of Protest Gallery and a wall mural at Brew York, Walmgate. For more information on Static, go to: welikestatic.com.

Arabella, by Static, from their Born & Raised exhibition in York