All being well, the Shell's Wild Lie exhibition will be on show in tent in a very inspiring field for part of August. Then it's back tPlymouth for September...
The Camp for Climate Action, at Kingsnorth, Kent, 3rd to 11th AugustArt Not Oil - previous site "archive" - to 06th Oct 2013
This is the Barbican's response to questions about Shell being aunsuitable client; (Shell's video link to its AGM in The Hague was helthere on May 20th...
'Regarding your question about holding Royal Dutch Shell's AGat the Barbican Centre and if this might be in any way contradictory ta robust, wide-ranging and committed green and/or climate changpolicy, The Barbican Centre is an arts and conference centre and apart of our conference business we hire out our venues for corporatAGMs. This part of the conference and events mix is any important parof our economy (arts box office and commercial events provide 45% oour overall income). In 2007/8 we hired our venues out for 25corporate events, ranging from major corporate AGMs to small traininevents. The Royal Dutch Shell AGM is just one of these corporatevents. I am afraid that we are currently not in a position to pick anchose our commercial clients based on their level of corporatresponsibility.' You can send them a friendly word of advice by writing to nkenyon@barbican.org.uk, cc. info@barbican.org.uk
We have a new run of postcards available, on 100% recycled card courtesy of our lovely friends at Calverts in east London. On one side you have Twinkletoes' terrific (we think) image, and on the other a short blurb about Art Not Oil (asking for contributions to our online galleries), with plenty of room for you to ink in your poetic pontifications and send them to your nears, dears or oily institutions (see below), old-school style.
Send us an address and an amount, and we'll send 'em to you.
If you're feeling helpful, send an SAE to us at c/o LARC, 62 Fieldgate Street, London E1 1ES.
Thanks and keep creating to resist,
Art Not Oil - 'for creativity, climate justice and an end to oil industry sponsorship of the arts'
PS. Is your pen hovering over your new postcard, unsure who to write to?
Maybe get started by dropping a friendly line to one of the oily cultural institutions
listed below the diving albatross, to let them know how you feel about the oil industry
sponsorship that’s making their corridors a little too slippery for comfort…
Make sure you ask for a response to your concerns,
(and let us know - if you don’t mind - if you receive anything interesting).
OILY INSTITUTIONS WAITING EAGERLY TO HEAR YOUR OPINIONS:
National Portrait Gallery (Portrait Award sponsored by BP) Sandy Nairne, Director, NPG, St. Martin's Place, London WC2H 0HE
snairne@npg.org.uk
Tel: 020 7312 2463
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Tate Britain
(British Art Displays 1500-2008 sponsored by BP,
which also supports regular kids days at the gallery)
Nicholas Serota, Director, Tate Galleries, Millbank, London SW1P 4RG;
nicholas.serota@tate.org.uk
cc. to Dr Stephen Deuchar, Director, Tate Britain, Millbank, London SW1P 4RG;
stephen.deuchar@tate.org.uk
cc. visiting.britain@tate.org.uk
Tel: 020 7887 8888;
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Science Museum
(BP & Shell both currently major sponsors, as are
GlaxoSmithKline & HSBC [not exactly preferable to Big Oil!])
Prof. Chris Rapley, Director, SM, Exhibition Road, London SW7 2DD.
chris.rapley@nmsi.ac.uk, cc. enquiries@sciencemuseum.org.uk
Tel: 0870 870 4868
------------------
Barbican
(host of the London link-up to this year’s Shell AGM)
Sir Nicholas Kenyon, Managing Director, Barbican Centre, Silk Street ,London EC2Y 8DS
nkenyon@barbican.org.uk, cc. info@barbican.org.uk
Tel: 020 7638 4141
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Natural History Museum
(Shell is no longer sponsor of the Wildlife Photographer of the Year exhibition,
but it still donates over £25,000pa, as does BP.
Other supporters include British Airways & RioTinto. Current Prime
Minister-appointed NHM Trustees include Louise Charlton of Brunswick Group,
the public relations firm contracted in 2004 by Shell to carry out damage limitation
in the wake of its reserves-reporting scandal.
Sir William Castell, non-executive director of BP, retired as NHM Trustee early in 2008.)
Michael Dixon, Director, NHM, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD
m.dixon@nhm.ac.uk and/or email via here
Tel: 020 7942 5000
----------
Royal Opera House
(The upper echelon of ROH funders, known as the ‘Chairman's Circle’,
includes BP & Rio Tinto.
BP funds the ‘Summer Screens’ programme of video link-ups across the UK)
Tony Hall, Chief Executive, Bow Street, Covent Garden, London WC2E 9DD
tony.hall@roh.org.uk
Tel: 020 7240 1200
---------
British Museum
(BP is a current Global Partner, and sponsor of major exhibitions)
Neil MacGregor, Director, BM, Great Russell Street, London WC1B 3DG
directorate@thebritishmuseum.ac.uk, information@britishmuseum.org
Tel: 020 7323 8000/8299
---------------
National Gallery
(Shell is a regular sponsor of major exhibitions, and Trustee Lord Kerr
of Kinlochard is currently Deputy Chairman of Royal Dutch Shell and
Chairman of the Court and Council of Imperial College, which supplies
more graduates to the oil industry than almost any other college.
Exxon is also a recent sponsor.)
Dr. Nicholas Penny, Director, NG, Trafalgar Square, London WC2N 5DN
nicholas.penny@nationalgallery.co.uk, cc. information@ng-london.org.uk
Tel: 020 7747 2885
-------------
National Maritime Museum
(Supported by BP Shipping Ltd and Shell International Trading and Shipping.
NMM Trustee Jan Kopernicki is Vice-President of Shipping for the
Shell International Trading and Shipping Company. )
Kevin Fewster, Director, NMM, Greenwich, London SE10 9NF
kfewster@nmm.ac.uk, press@nmm.ac.uk
Tel: 020 8858 4422
-----------
National Theatre
(As a ‘Premiere Partner’, Shell UK Ltd gets anonymity about its perks.
As a Premium Member, BP gets this: ‘Our most prestigious and flexible
membership level, offering a generous range of entertaining opportunities.
The key benefit is a 100-person evening sponsorship event, offering
branding to reach both your guests and the wider NT audience.
Other benefits include an invitation to our annual Chairman's Dinner,
a 40-person private event, two opportunities for complimentary
NT space hire and an allocation of tickets, backstage tours and
Platform performances.’
As a Platinum Member, American Airlines get this:
‘This highly flexible membership level focuses on private hospitality,
offering 40 best tickets with private dining. Other benefits include an
exclusive event for 30 guests, two special Platinum evenings with a
chance to meet the cast, an invitation to our annual Chairman's Dinner,
an opportunity for complimentary NT space hire and an allocation
of tickets, backstage tours and Platform performances.’
As a Team Builder Member, The Royal Bank of Scotland plc
(known as ‘the Oil Bank of Scotland’ for its peerlessly energetic
sourcing of funds for new oil and gas projects;
http://www.royalbankofscotland.com) gets this:
‘This is a flexible, innovative corporate membership package
focusing entirely on benefits that can be offered to employees,
including a private party, an allocation of free tickets, backstage tours,
Platform performances and a discount on our actor-led training courses.’
Gold Member Tesco plc gets this: ‘Six exclusive Gold members' evenings
per year are the key benefit of this level. Each evening includes tickets,
drinks and a supper reception, as well as the chance to meet the cast
after the play. Other benefits include an allocation of free tickets, private
dining packages, backstage tours and Platform performances.’)
Nicholas Hytner, NT, South Bank, London SE1 9PX
nhytner@nationaltheatre.org.uk, cc. feedback@nationaltheatre.org.uk
Tel: 020 7452 3400
-----------------------
So there you have it. More information that you probably ever needed,
but possibly a revealing snapshot of a cultural sector that has yet to
walk the talk when it comes to climate change and sustainability. It may
be a victim to some degree of the privatisation of public art and the
diversion of government revenues into catastrophic wars for the
control of dwindling energy resources, but might it be past time
expect even a whimper of protest from these institutions? Or are
they too deeply embedded in a status quo that is unable to
countenance the possibility of the loss of its own privilege?
Hmm, answers on a postcard please…
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdJ9W39HdDU
Atossa SoltaniHere's Pravda slightly missing the twinkle in the eye of Fossil Fool's Day, and namechecking Art Not Oil in passing:
---------------Environmentaactivists urge to rename April Fools Day04/01/2008 Environmental activists want tturn April Fools Day into Fossil Fools Day. They claim that there isn’much to laugh at. Rising Tide UK, a grassrootnetwork dedicated to building a movement for climate justice, is tryinto attract more attention to the problem of root causes of climatchange by renaming the day of laughter.http://english.pravda.ru/news/science/01-04-2008/104748-Aprilˍday-0
For a complete round-up, see www.fossilfoolsday.org 
Circle Community Projects and Project 142 Present The Climate oChange Exhibition At The Old Mercedes Showroom 341 Finchley RdOpposite The Camden Arts Centre.5 Mins from Finchley Rd. Tube oFinchley Rd and Frognal overground.
CLIMATE 4 CHANGE is the second open submission platform foartists/artivists in all media. The intervention of 'CLIMATE OF CHANGElast year, at a space in Union St was spoken of by the critic/curatoDean Keening, in a special essay on Eco Art, as one of the moschallenging examples in today's contemporary London Art Scene:
You are invited to the opening of:
Art Not OiI contributor,artist Michael Dickinson faces up to 2 year in sjail for 'insulting the Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan' with a couple of his collages.
A petition in his support has been organized by Mungbeing, the onlinmagazine, calling for the abolition of Article 301 in the Turkish Penal Code, which hacriminalized the freedom of expression of many Turkish writers anartists. http://www.mungbeing.com/petition.htm A court date has been set for 24th March 2008. Please sign the petition....IN THE FACE OF WIDESPREAD PROTEST
January 2008
BBC Wildlife Magazine HQ, Bristol, December 2007
Bristol Museum, December 2007
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The 2008 online Art Not Oil gallery is up and running (as o26.1.08), so please send us a small-ish photo or two of your piecewhatever shape or size or medium it is. (The address iinfo@artnotoil.org.uk). We'll let you know pretty soon whether it'll bgoing in.
Please also send any web or other info you'd like to have displayed beneath your piece. ThShell's Wild Lie exhibition will continue online and on tour throug2008, so send work you think might be appropriate for that.We look forward to seeing what you come up with...Thanks and take care, The Art Not Oil crew 12tJanuary 2008 - Around 30 penguins today 'reclaimed the ice' at the NaturaHistory Museum's ice rink in protest at British Airways sponsorship of thmuseum's annual winter festivities.http://www.planestupid.com/?q=content/march-penguins-climate-activists-…
The protestors, from the climate action group Plane Stupiddressed as penguins to highlight the irony of an airline creating aice rink in central London, whilst its business activities are a majocause of global warming, which is melting the polar ice caps ancausing dangerous climate change. The loss of the polar ice wilimperil wildlife such as penguins and polar bears and is believed to ba major 'tipping point' which will speed up climate change.
Climate activists splatter oil across photo exhibition in outrage at Shelgreenwash tactic
And While London Burns
Sign the petition to stop Shell sponsoring the Wildlfe Photographer of The Year competiton.
The 2008 online Art Not Oil gallery is up and running (as o26.1.08), so please send us a small-ish
Please also send any web or other info you'd like to have displayed beneath your piece.
ThShell's Wild Lie exhibition will continue online and on tour throug2008, so send work you
We look forward to seeing what you come up with...
Thanks and take care,
The Art Not Oil crew