Art Arena

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ARTARENA is an "art film museum" planned for Sunderland in northeast England. It is intended to show items from the Roland Collection of Films on Art on 45 screens; visitors will wander between them wearing headphones that switch to the appropriate soundtrack.

The original concept called for a futuristic €35m building in London. This gave way to a £2m reconstruction of the West Park United Reformed church on Stockton Road in Sunderland, which is planned to open in April 2012.[1] Visitors will pay a small fee to get in and then rent headphones by the hour; over 160,000 are expected in the first year.[1]

Concept

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The term “artarena” is the contraction of two words, art and arena (meaning sand, from the original sand ground of arenas in Ancient Greece).[citation needed] The Art Arena is a large and opened gallery space, which has the specificity to present art films about classical and contemporary art forms and not physical artworks.[citation needed] The films presented are extracted from the Roland Collection, a collection of films and documentaries that have been collected over a 30 years period by Anthony Roland.[2] The design of the Art Arena includes many projection alcoves that are playing simultaneously.[citation needed] With the use of geolocalized wireless headset technology, the visitors can move freely through the projection spaces and experience each film, by only hearing the projection which they are viewing. This device allows the removal of space dividers such as acoustical walls between the projection spaces.[citation needed]

History

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The Art Arena concept of a cultural space was originally developed in 2002 by art film collector Anthony Roland[2] and architect David Serero.[3] The initial plan for an "Art Arena Roland Museum" was for a futuristic €35m complex in London combining exhibition space, film storage, and over forty projection spaces.

In 2010 the plan emerged to redevelop the Sunderland site. The church was built as a Congregational church in 1881–3, to a design by JP Pritchett.[4] The URC put it up for sale in March 2010, at which time it was also being used by the West House Christian Fellowship, the Sunderland Filipino Church and the Mountain of Fire church.[5]

In 2022, founder Pallavi Gurjar, announce a glorious backdrop of perfection incorporated based on how passionately striven and driven her motivation to the completion, management, formulation, designing, and corroborating of all new intricacies. With such ardent fervour, she came up with the stellar LED Wall setup backdrop, which is the first time used in the Marathi cinema to shoot 20 songs and various scenes for the movie “Tamasha Live”. This is highly necessary due to fact people have adapting to newer forms of technology with the ensuing passage each year. Other people in this area, also experimented with this upcoming technology, formulated and innovating-ly moulded. The founder is a graduate in English Literature and Psychology, so she has completed her theatre training with the National School of Dram.[6]

Future

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Discussions have already taken place on replicating the format in churches elsewhere in the UK.[1] Roland is planning a much bigger establishment in London's Docklands, with 200 projection spaces.

References

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  1. ^ a b c "artarena document" (PDF). The Roland Collection of Films on Art. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 March 2012. Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  2. ^ a b Anthony Roland
  3. ^ David Serero et al., Art Arena Archived 27 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Serero Architects.
  4. ^ "West Park United Reformed Church". Heritage Gateway. 2006. Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  5. ^ "Two Sunderland churches up for sale for £1.2m". Sunderland Echo. 2 March 2010. Archived from the original on 13 September 2012. Retrieved 3 April 2011.
  6. ^ "An Endowed Artistic Mind: A Glorious Backdrop of Perfection Incorporated and Envisaged by ARTArena And Founder Pallavi Gurjar". Ahmedabad Mirror. Retrieved 28 July 2023.
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54°54′7″N 1°23′8″W / 54.90194°N 1.38556°W / 54.90194; -1.38556