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Including Creativity in Education

Front Row to Front Bench

Release Date: 03/05/2021

TAMARA CINCIK in conversation with #22 GREAT BRITISH WOOL REVIVAL show art TAMARA CINCIK in conversation with #22 GREAT BRITISH WOOL REVIVAL

Front Row to Front Bench

For this episode of the Front Row to Front Bench podcast, speaks with , and , the team behind our collaboration with and for the , the . This October marks , which celebrates British Wool. This discussion includes the background into how the team got together and why there is a need for a Great British Wool Revival.

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TAMARA CINCIK in conversation with #21 WAYNE HEMINGWAY show art TAMARA CINCIK in conversation with #21 WAYNE HEMINGWAY

Front Row to Front Bench

For this episode of the Front Row to Front Bench podcast, speaks with designer about his bi-annual event the , which returns to Kings Cross, London on 27th & 28th April 2024. The weekend will give the public a last chance to see Paul McCartney's iconic before it is auctioned to find a new home as well as celebrating the 60th anniversary of the Ford Mustang. The popular festival also includes quality sustainable shopping, entertainment, street food and DJ’s. Wayne founded the hugely successful British fashion brand Red or Dead in the 80’s, which went on to win the British Fashion...

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TAMARA CINCIK in conversation with #20 CHARLIE PORTER show art TAMARA CINCIK in conversation with #20 CHARLIE PORTER

Front Row to Front Bench

For this episode of the Front Row to Front Bench podcast, speaks with writer, fashion critic and curator about his new book, ‘Bring No Clothes: Bloomsbury and the Philosophy of Fashion' published by .  Charlie is one of the most influential fashion journalists of his time, and has written for the likes of the Guardian and iD magazine, as well as co-running the London queer rave .  The book, rather wonderfully, uses clothing as a way to look at six iconic Bloomsbury figures, while seamlessly addressing the evolution of how we dress today. This leads on to the fact that clothing...

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MEG PIRIE in conversation with #19 VICTORIA JENKINS show art MEG PIRIE in conversation with #19 VICTORIA JENKINS

Front Row to Front Bench

 co-chairs our  and is a garment technologist with 14 years of experience in the fashion industry who became Disabled in her 20s. She is behind the sustainable adaptive fashion brand . The idea was born after a chance encounter with a woman with cancer that changed the course of her life. As she watched the woman during her own hospital stay, she realised that there were no adaptive clothes on the market and this is how Unhidden was born.  Now Victoria is listed as one of , redefining Britain and co-presents and designs on . A must-watch where inclusive...

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TAMARA CINCIK in conversation with #18 SIMON COSTIN show art TAMARA CINCIK in conversation with #18 SIMON COSTIN

Front Row to Front Bench

journey into fashion might be described as a happy accident – when a student at Central Saint Martins wanted to borrow some of his conceptual jewellery – little did Simon realise the designer would turn out to be the eponymous #AlexanderMcQueen and the start of a firm creative working friendship. Simon talks of other industry heavyweights he has collaborated with, from legendary artist and filmmaker #DerekJarman, to his work more recently with and and existing within this highly creative oxygen. As well as his work as a leading British fashion-set-designer, Simon runs two museums: the...

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TAMARA CINCIK in conversion with #17 ALDEN WICKER show art TAMARA CINCIK in conversion with #17 ALDEN WICKER

Front Row to Front Bench

In 2019, Alden Wicker was asked to comment on a lawsuit that was being filed by a Delta flight attendant against Lands’ End, because the newly introduced uniform had caused a myriad of health issues, such as skin rashes, shortness of breath, hair loss, anaphylaxis and in one instance death.   In her book, ‘’, award-winning journalist and sustainability expert, , decided to break the story of unregulated toxic chemicals in fashion and their impacts on health and wellbeing.   Historically, in The Victorian era, women garment workers dyed fabrics using arsenic green...

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TAMARA CINCIK in conversation with #16 PETER FOSTER show art TAMARA CINCIK in conversation with #16 PETER FOSTER

Front Row to Front Bench

An honest and thought-provoking conversation – Public Policy Editor of the Financial Times, speaks with Tamara Cincik about his book, ‘What Went Wrong With Brexit: And What We Can Do About It’.  Foster is one of the few editors who is tracking Brexit and the ever adjusting life after the single market. A fashion-centred conversation of what leaving has meant for business; the realities of the barriers to trade; the confrontational relationship which ‘Brexit at all costs’ has created between ministers, civil servants and industry; and the need for policymakers to make decisions...

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TAMARA CINCIK in conversation with #15 BAY GARNETT show art TAMARA CINCIK in conversation with #15 BAY GARNETT

Front Row to Front Bench

Not to be missed! As #SecondhandSeptember ramps up,  speaks with vintage queen . Drawing on their shared backgrounds as international stylists, they discuss how second-hand shopping allows for a more creative and dynamic experience to storytell through clothes – sustainably; the iconic Anita Pallenburg; Bay’s iconic ‘banana top’; getting to the source of iconic designer inspiration via vintage and charity shops; and of course Bay’s collaboration with Oxfam for #SecondhandSeptember and her concept to extrapolate the idea into a visual fashion campaign.  Website:  ...

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Meg Pirie in conversation with Ruth Rands, founder of Herd show art Meg Pirie in conversation with Ruth Rands, founder of Herd

Front Row to Front Bench

is in conversation with , founder of British knitwear brand .    They discuss Ruth’s mission to bring heritage and quality back to British wool, with provenance at its heart. Ruth talks honestly about what is possible here in the UK, sourcing everything within 150 miles; how Kate Moss just bought one of her knits; and her long-term vision for her aspirational label.         

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In Conversation With Daniel Carpenter, Executive Director Of Heritage Craft show art In Conversation With Daniel Carpenter, Executive Director Of Heritage Craft

Front Row to Front Bench

is in conversation with UK charity ’s Executive Director,   They discuss the Heritage Crafts ‘’, the importance of a STEAM curriculum and practical subjects being taught in schools and what it would take for the UK government to ratify the UNESCO .  As well as Heritage Craft’s latest campaign in partnership with Folksy, ‘BUY LESS, BUY BETTER, BUY HANDMADE’ and their hope of what this may achieve in supporting makers across the UK. Particularly in time for Christmas. An interesting conversation about heritage, crafts and the need for government support.

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Fashion Roundtable's Tamara Cincik is in conversation with Karen AlexanderZowie Broach, and Dr Rachel Payne - three of the most important names in creative education and research.

Karen Alexander is a London-based creative curator, writer and researcher. She is an associate lecturer at Central St Martins and, for over 15 years, has worked with and for BFI and the Royal College of Art. Alexander's research interests include artists' film and video, and the post-colonial visual politics of the African diaspora with specific reference to gender, race and representation.

Zowie Broach is the Head of Fashion at the Royal College of Art in London. Broach has previously served as a designer-in-residence and Senior Researcher in Creative Practice at London College of Fashion. Broach has also taught at Westminster University, Parsons The New School for Design in New York, SIAC in Chicago, Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, Jerusalem, before joining the Royal College of Art.

Tamara is also joined by Dr Rachel Payne, who teaches and researches visual methods, arts-based continuing professional development, art education policy and arts-based pedagogy. Payne is the subject co-ordinator for the Artist Teacher Practice MA in Education. This programme supports professionals working in visual arts education to examine their dual artist-teacher identity through participating in a community and reposition their professional practices as a result.

In this podcast, Alexander, Broach, Cincik and Payne talk about: 

  • The fundamental nature of art;
  • Creative education in the UK;
  • Access to the creative industries;
  • The closure of youth clubs thanks to austerity measures;
  • The importance of decolonising the curriculum.
With thanks to SHOWstudio for facilitating this important conversation.