• Normal colour scheme
  • Dyslexia colour scheme
  • High visual colour scheme
Bill, Culture, Events and Education chief

Getting down and dirty

Bill, Culture, Events and Education chief, 22 Feb 2008

Moment of the week? No doubt about it – nothing else comes close – and it’s been quite a week, so this is saying something...

It happened amidst mountains of mud and dust. Double decker-sized trucks roaring past in all directions are groaning under the strain of thousands of tons of earth. As far as the eye can see, a wild moonscape of exposed, heaving ground.
 
We were bouncing around in the back of a 4x4 experiencing the Olympic and Paralympic future.

'You're on the 100 metres track right now,' said Lucy, our guide from the construction company, 'and we're just about to cross the Long Jump.'  This is the London 2012 Olympic Stadium in Stratford and carved out of the ground the bowl of the main arena is already clearly visible.

In a project that offers far more than it’s fair share of “tingle on the back of the neck” moments, this one ranks right up there. In four and a half years time, world records will be broken on this very quagmire of mud and ballast. The hopes and dreams of the world’s best athletes will be made or dashed on that pile of smashed bricks over there. Four billion TV viewers will watch our Opening Ceremony exactly where those yellow bulldozers are currently rearranging a few centuries of  earth. 

I’ve not been to the site for months and the transformation is extraordinary. We’re sharing the journey with a delegation from the Beijing  2008 Organising Committee – our opposite numbers in their Ceremonies team. They’re with us for meetings about our Handover Ceremony – but for them this a journey back in time to the early work on their vast Olympic Park in the northern suburbs of Beijing.  They seem genuinely impressed by the progress. My friend, the very jolly head of Ceremonies believes we’re well ahead of time – and coming from the Chinese, that sounds good! But with absolutely no responsibility for the construction work, its not the time or place for me to glow with pride – I’m happy to leave that to the team in the Olympic Delivery Authority.

So the rest of the week pales in to insignificance then? Well, almost. But we had a great meeting with International Olympic Committee in Lausanne. We presented some big plans for an international education programme which we hope to launch in 2010. We outlined our aspirations and IOC gave the thumbs up! Lots of work to do before we give the greenlight, but our Education Team are already busy on the next stage. When we won the games in Singapore, Seb said we’d use the power of 2012 to inspire the youth of the world – and we still mean it.

Add to that a fantastic youth theatre production of “Oliver” and  for some reason it was photographic week. VisitBritain, the national tourism body, hosted an exhibition of  glorious images of the UK coastline. VisitBritain and VisitLondon are key partners of ours and we’re already in talks about how they’ll promote the Cultural Olympiad.

Then off to the National Portrait Gallery for a celeb fest. When I was there most of the celebrities were hung on the walls in celluloid  for a celebration of the best pictures from Vanity Fair Magazine. One or two commentators have bitchily accused the show of pandering to the lowest form of celebrity culture. They opine that every glossy image of  a century of film stars, politicians, royals and sports people merely airbushes the already inflated egos of it’s subject. Yes of course, but that misses the point. This is still a hugely entertaining and insightful exhibition. The exploration is in seeing just how those stars want their image manicured and what we, therefore,  read into them.

Sandie Nairn, the Gallery’s Director, can be proud of a show that will bring in large crowds but also upholds the unique purpose of the Gallery. A portrait is far more than a faithful representation of reality – whether in oils, pastels or in this case in photography we admire the skills of the artist but we also dig far deeper into the persona of the subject.

The team at the NPG are also busy brewing a great project for the 2012 culture programme. Sandie (himself a distinguished rower) wants to commission a number of young photographers to capture all the preparations for the games and our athletes over the next four years. I hope we can help him to pull it off. 

Mental note to self; must invite Sandie to take the Stratford 4x4 experience...

Comments for this post:

  • 7 Mar 2008, 10:00AM, Ben Spiller said:

    Hi BillReally enjoying your blog. How's about some Shakespeare in non-traditional theatre spaces at London 2012...?

    It's what we do here at 1623 theatre company and we're very keen to participate in this event at some level.Perhaps as part of the opening ceremony, perhaps for the athletes in their village, perhaps a programme of learning events in schools, maybe even Shakespeare on the London Eye.

You must log in to comment.
July 2008
SMTWTFS
12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031

June 2008