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QueenSpark books publish ‘Daring Hearts’ in ebook format

Daring HeartsQueenSpark Books, the Brighton & Hove based non-profit community publishing and writing organisation, have launched a series of ebooks of some of their most popular and out-of-print titles.

Titles include Daring Hearts, a collection of LGBT life stories from the 1950s and 1960s.

Originally published in collaboration with Brighton Ourstory, Daring Hearts – Lesbian and Gay Lives of 50s and 60s Brighton has been long out-of-print and is a searing and informative collection of life stories based on taped interviews with 40 lesbian and gay men who spoke openly about their lives in and around Brighton.

As well as Daring Hearts, readers will also have the opportunity to read five other best-selling titles: Poverty – Hardship but Happiness; The Town Beehive – A Young Girl’s Lot in Brighton, 1910-34; Brighton Behind the Front; Blighty Brighton; and Brighton – The Graphic Novel.

Readers can buy these books using Amazon Kindle, Google Play, the Apple store, and other Android outlets – just go to your chosen website and search by title.

For more information about QueenSpark Books, click here:

 

REVIEW: Celts: Art & identity: British Museum

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Celts: Art & Identity

British Museum

The exhibition is at the Sainsbury Exhibition Gallery, some rather dim and soulless spaces at the back of the museum, it’s billed as the first major exhibition of the Celtic culture in the British Isles in over 40 years.

The name ‘Celts’ does not refer to a single people who can be traced through time, first used by the ancient Greeks as a way to label outsiders, the word ‘Celtic’ was proudly embraced to express a sense of shared ancestry and heritage and has been appropriated over the last 300 years to reflect modern identities in Britain & Ireland and beyond.

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The exhibition tells the story of the different peoples who have used or been given the name ‘Celts’ through the stunning art objects that they made. There are displays of intricately decorated jewellery, delicate and personal and evocative of status and style. A collection of highly stylised objects of religious devotion that had often been taken by the Viking raiders and remodel or marked with their owners names, and the romantic decorative arts of the late 19th century which were inspired by the past or modern constructed mythologies.

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There is little digital interaction and only two projections of video timelines to flesh out the wider picture but some soundscapes of reconstructed Celtic instruments were of great interest and a collection of resin casts of huge Celtic crosses dominated the second space to great effect. The Gundestrup cauldron, Iron Age, c. 100 BC–AD is breathtakingly perfect, huge, strange, full of history and simply shown in all its beauty. It’s worth the entry fee alone. It is the largest known example of European Iron Age silverwork and the design, mythologies and animals, plants and pagan deities and other compelling beings depicted on the delicate silver is purely spectacular.

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A stunning example in the exhibition is a hoard of gold torcs found at Blair Drummond in Stirling in 2009 by a metal detectorist on his very first outing. Four torcs made between 300–100 BC show widespread connections across Iron Age Europe. Two are made from spiralling gold ribbons, a style characteristic of Scotland and Ireland. Another is a style found in south-western France although analysis of the gold suggests it was made locally based on French styles. The final torc is a mixture of Iron Age details with embellishments on the terminals typical of Mediterranean workshops. It shows technological skill, a familiarity with exotic styles, and connections to a craft worker or workshop with the expertise to make such an object. The Blair Drummond find brings together the local and the highly exotic in one hoard. The massive Snettisham hoard is also on display, you could spend all day just checking out the wide variety of Torcs and wondering about the original owners of these phenomenal and often huge pieces of very personal jewellery.

Celtic art continued in Roman Britain, transforming and taking on new influences. The exhibition shows this development and displays objects made using typically Roman forms and technologies, such as multi-coloured enamelling, but decorated in characteristic Celtic motifs. Local people, invaders and settlers coming to Britain from around the Roman Empire used these older abstract designs on new types of objects to express Romano-British identities.

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Overall, I felt that although there are some very interesting pieces that the promise of the exhibitions is not met. I learned some things but didn’t really feel that I had experienced much of early Celtic culture. There were plenty of Celtic Christian objects, some with great spiritual resonance and some interesting pretty hotch potch about the generation of the Celtic mythologies in the last few hundred years- but I can see that in a design museum. I felt it completely overlooked Welsh Celtic expression and this may be because the exhibition has been produced in cooperation with the National Museums Scotland but it leaves an odd feeling of something missing as there’s plenty of Irish objects on display.

After leaving the soft and all pervasive Enyaesque sound track being piped evocatively all over the gallery I tripped over to the free Early British Galleries and feasted on the many treasures on display to all and sundry.

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It’s never a dull afternoon at the British Museum, the crowds are fascinating, and the space of the Great Court exciting and the shops have some of the silliest merchandise you can imagine. There are a collection of events running alongside Celts, for young people and families and more in-depth analysis of the Celtic culture, you can see and book tickets for them here.


On until January 31 2016

British Museum

Great Russell Street, London WC1B 3DG

Opening times
Monday–Thursday 10.00–17.30pm
Friday 10.00–20.30pm
Saturday–Sunday 09.00–17.30pm
Last entry 80 minutes before closing time

For more information or to book tickets, click here:

IBM tops list again as ‘World’s Most Gay-friendly Company’

Workplace Pride publishes 2015 Global Benchmark results.

WEB.600For the second year in a row, IBM has been named the world’s most LGBT-inclusive (Lesbian, Gay Bisexual and Transgender) employer by Amsterdam-based Workplace Pride Foundation.

The announcement is the result of the Foundation’s 2015 Global Benchmark survey in which twenty-one major employers were scored for their LGBT workplace inclusion policies and practices around the world.

Together, these organisations represent 2.4 million employees in over 100 countries worldwide.

Top 10 employers as scored against the 100% of the Global Benchmark include:

1. IBM: (US)                      87.22%

2. BNP Paribas: (FR)   85.34%

3. Shell: (NL)                  84.95%

4. Dow: (US)                   80.76%

5. Cisco: (US)                 70.32%

6. Daimler: (DE)          66.10%

7. KPN: (NL)                  63.44%

8. ING: (NL)                  63.07%

9. Sodexo: (FR)           60.30%

10. PostNL: (NL)        59.15%

Harry van Dorenmalen, IBM Europe, General Manager BeNeLux, said: “In this time of growing awareness of LGBT topics around the world, IBM is proud to play a role in raising the bar for more inclusive workplaces” said “IBM and its peers taking part in the Global Benchmark want our employees to be able to be themselves, and enable them to thrive, not matter where they work”

Organisations taking part in the survey for the second year scored an average of 10.25% higher than last year with regard to creating LGBT-inclusive policies and practices.

Top 5 improved employers compared to the 2014 Benchmark:

1. Nautdutilh: (NL)     26.49%

2. Sodexo: (FR)           17.14%

3. ING: (NL)                12.42%

4. Shell: (NL)              12.27%

5. Randstad: (NL)       9.93%

The Global Benchmark was first published in 2014 as an annually recurring survey allowing participants to track their progress annually.

It has been developed under the leadership of Workplace Pride, with the support of the University of Leiden, and major employers from several different countries. The Benchmark represents the ideal of LGBT workplace inclusion around the world and is designed to provide management the data to measure, and improve, LGBT workplace inclusion in their organisations, wherever they are.

NGO partners for the Global Benchmark include: PrideInDiversity (Australia), ILGA Europe (EU), L’Autre Cercle (France), COC (Netherlands), PROUT at Work (Germany), EDGE (Italy), Parks (Italy), Sullivan (Kenya), The Rainbow Tick (New Zealand), Diversity Pro (Slovakia), Parea (Suriname).

Tonight: ‘Demons Are A Ghouls Best Friend’ Halloween comes to Kemptown ‘Actually!’

Dave Lynn teams up with Actually Gay Men’s Chorus for Demons Are A Ghouls Best Friend, a devilish evening of cabaret, song and fun with a distinctly mysterious feel, tonight, Saturday October 31 at The Latest Music Bar.

Actually Gay Men's Chorus

Special guests in the bewitching line up will be soprano Samantha Howard and members of the recently formed Isle Of Wight Gay Men’s Chorus (IOWGMC), who will be taking to the stage for their first public performance.

Matthew Bundy, co-founder of IOWGMC, said; “We are over the moon to be making our debut performance with the Actually GMC and Dave Lynn in Brighton, the boys have been working incredibly hard with a great repertoire and are very excited to be celebrating a rather spooky Halloween.”

With fiendish arrangements from Musical Director, Jason Pimblett, the evening will feature a thriller selection of music from stage and screen, including classics from shows as diverse as American Werewolf in London, The Omen and The Rocky Horror Picture Show.

Audiences are encouraged (though it is not essential) to enter into the spirit of the occasion and arrive dressed to thrill and there will be a prize for the best costume.

There are only 100 eerie tickets available for this intimate event, £20, £18 concessions.

The performance starts at 8pm and from 7.30pm guests can enjoy a welcome glass of fizz and canapes, with a professional tarot reader on hand to add to the occasion.

The event will be raising money for Inclusion For All an award-winning training strategy working across the UK to prevent homophobic, biphobic and transphobic bullying in schools.

For more information about Inclusion For All, click here:


Event: Demons Are A Ghouls Best Friend

Where: Latest Music Bar,  14-17 Manchester St, Brighton, East Sussex BN2 1TF

When: Saturday, October 31

Time: 8pm

Price: £20/£18 concessions

To book tickets online, click here:
Actually Gay Men's Chorus

PREVIEW: Madam Butterfly Returns

The son of Madam Butterfly comes to the US to meet his father for the first time.

Madam Butterfly Returns

However, unknown to him, he’s also bought the ghost of his mother. Meanwhile, his father, B.F. Pinkerton has become a politician and is in the middle of an election campaign. Find out what happens next in Puccini’s famous opera.

The show features 4 live musicians and a new score by leading contemporary composer Michael Finnissy. Libretto is by Andrew G Marshall and the production is directed and performed by Ignacio Jarquin.


Event: Madam Butterfly Returns 

Where: Landor Theatre, Clapham North, London SW9 9PH

When: November 4-22

Time: Wednesday – Friday @ 8pm: Saturday – Sunday @ 3pm & 6pm

Tickets: £12-£18

To book tickets online, click here:

London première at the Landor Theatre, Clapham North, London SW9 9PH

‘Hairy-oween’ raising funds for Rainbow Fund

Brighton Bear Weekend and Subline will be working together again for a third year throwing another night of spooky madness tonight.

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Hairy-oween takes place tonight, October 31, from 9pm at Subline.  Make an effort to dress up and you be rewarded with a £3 discounted door entry, otherwise entry is £5. Not only that, but if you are in costume you will have a chance to win a prize for best costume on the night.

All door money will be going to The Rainbow Fund which is a not for profit grant giving organisation that gives money to local LGBT organisations and charities who deliver effective front line services to LGBT people in Brighton and Hove.

DJ Screwpulous will be supplying the sounds that will make those bears twist, dance and go bump in the night.

Watch out for those ghoulies in the dark corners, a few surprises and maybe a trick or treat awaits you in the crypt where you can get the willies put up you.


Event: Hairy-oween

Where: Subline, 129 St James’s Street, Brighton

When: Saturday, October 31

Time: 9pm

Tickets: £5, £2 if in costumes

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