Centre for Contemporary Arts explained

Centre for Contemporary Arts (CCA)
Established:1992
Location:350 Sauchiehall St, Glasgow, Scotland
Director:Francis McKee
Curator:Sabrina Henry

The Centre for Contemporary Arts (CCA) is an arts centre in Glasgow, Scotland. Its programme includes contemporary art exhibitions, cinema, live music, book launches, festivals, spoken word and performance. The CCA also commissions new work from artists.

History

The CCA began as the Third Eye Centre in 1974, founded as a multi-media arts centre by Tom McGrath.[1] Performers at the Third Eye Centre included Allen Ginsberg, Whoopi Goldberg, John Byrne, Billy Connolly, Edwin Morgan, Kathy Acker,[2] and Alan Davie.[3]

The Third Eye Centre included jazz and experimental music in its arts programming of the 1970s and '80s, seeing performances from Derek Bailey, Julius Eastman, Brotherhood of Breath and Keith Tippett.[4] The Guardian newspaper described the Third Eye Centre as "a shrine to the avant garde."[5] [6]

In the 1980s, the Third Eye Centre played an important role in the rise of the new Glasgow painters Steven Campbell, Ken Currie and Peter Howson. It also hosted shows by Susan Hiller, Sam Ainsley, Damien Hirst and Sophie Calle. The Third Eye Centre was also the home of the National Review of Live Art. A number of music albums were recorded there including Ivor Cutler's Life in a Scotch Sitting Room Vol II in 1978, and the centre also hosted the launch event for Alasdair Gray's Lanark in 1981.[7]

The CCA was established in 1992.[8] [7] [9]

The period of 1999-2001 saw the redevelopment of the building. The CCA took over a neighbouring villa and a building on Scott Street, doubling the size of the arts centre.[10]

In 2014, the CCA was temporarily closed after a ruinous fire at the nearby Glasgow School of Art but reopened in October 2018[11] [12] [13]

In 2023, the central Saramago café and social space closed after industrial action supported by Industrial Workers of the World.[14] [15]

A new "Third Eye Bar" opened on the upper floor in April 2024, featuring a room with murals by Fraser Taylor.[16] [17]

Location and Building

The CCA is situated on Sauchiehall Street and houses several cultural tenants,[18] [19] including the cafe space, independent shops Welcome Home and Aye-Aye Books,[20] [21] [22] and a flat for visiting artists.[23]

The CCA is housed in the Grecian Chambers, a category A listed building, designed by Alexander 'Greek' Thomson in 1867 to 1868 and renovated for its present use by Page & Park in 1998.[24]

Activities

The CCA operates an open-source programming policy where organizations and individuals are given space in the building to direct their own events. In 2019-20, the CCA had 256 programme partners across 1,304 events and 28 festivals.[25]

The CCA curates six contemporary art exhibitions per year in its gallery space. The building is also home to Intermedia Gallery to showcase emerging artists. The CCA offers a programme of artist residencies in the Creative Lab and internationally.[25]

In 2015, the CCA launched a public engagement programme.[26]

The CCA is home to several other arts and culture organizations including LUX Scotland and the Scottish Writers Centre.[25]

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2009-05-01 . Tom McGrath . The Herald . 2010-05-18.
  2. Web site: Head of Glasgow arts institution to leave amid troubled few months for venue. 10 July 2023. HeraldScotland.
  3. Web site: CCA at 40: a look back at the arts base that opened as the Third Eye Centre. 27 April 2015. Glasgow Times.
  4. Web site: Cafe OTO → Third Eye Live, Wednesday 25 January 2023, 8pm. www.cafeoto.co.uk.
  5. News: Tom McGrath. Mark. Fisher. 30 April 2009. The Guardian.
  6. News: Letters: Tom McGrath. 10 May 2009. The Guardian.
  7. Web site: Archive memories mark 40 years of Third Eye Centre. 1 May 2015. HeraldScotland.
  8. Web site: History. CCA Glasgow.
  9. Web site: Face to Face: Francis McKee, director of Centre for Contemporary Arts, Glasgow. 3 August 2015. HeraldScotland.
  10. Web site: The Third Eye Centre evolves into the CCA. 28 April 2015. Glasgow Times.
  11. Web site: Glasgow After the Fire: What Has Been the Impact on the Wider Arts Community?. Chris. Sharratt. 17 July 2018.
  12. News: Glasgow Centre for Contemporary Arts brought to brink by fire. Libby. Brooks. Libby Brooks Scotland. correspondent. 14 September 2018. The Guardian.
  13. Web site: CCA reopens after School of Art fire. Lewis. Paterson. 23 October 2018. The Glasgow Guardian.
  14. Web site: Glasgow arts centre restaurant closed amid bitter staff dispute. 23 March 2023. HeraldScotland.
  15. Web site: Scots art centre bar closes amid bitter trade union dispute and protests. 21 April 2023. The National.
  16. Web site: New bar to open in Glasgow arts centre next month . April 2024 .
  17. Web site: Third Eye .
  18. Web site: Planting seeds of change to push doors wide open. Bruce. Keith. 2009-07-10. The Herald. 2010-05-18.
  19. Web site: Cultural Tenants About CCA CCA. Glasgow. CCA. cca-glasgow.com. 2016-11-17.
  20. Web site: Literary fighters: Glasgow's last surviving independent book shops.
  21. News: 'Inspiring' King Charles biography prompts bookshop boycott. Craig. Simpson. The Telegraph . 11 April 2023. www.telegraph.co.uk.
  22. Web site: Tom's Glasgow Mag #10. Tom’s Glasgow Mag.
  23. Web site: CCA opens it doors to reach around the world. 29 April 2015. Glasgow Times.
  24. Web site: 2008 . DSA Building/Design Report: Grecian Buildings . Dictionary of Scottish Architects . 2010-05-18.
  25. Web site: What We Do. CCA Glasgow.
  26. Web site: Public Engagement. CCA Glasgow.