In 2013, funded by an Arts Council initiative, grants for the arts, Norden Farm commissioned an outdoor living sculpture by artist, Trevor Leat. His willow work, 'Family Circle' worked to the brief to 'delight and surprise' This uplifting work celebrates the power of the arts to bring people together and their capacity for joy. As the planted willow grows over the years the figures will look more and more as if they are growing out of the ground itself. As part of this commission, Trevor delivered workshops for local people and schools, sharing his willow weaving skills and hopefully inspiring more public art as a response.
Shakespeare on a Bike has been created by local sculptor Lydia Karpinska. She's the artist behind some of Maidenhead’s most iconic statues including Sir Nicholas Winton at Maidenhead train station and The Boy and the Boat at the end of the high street. Lydia encourages you to get up close to explore all of the beautiful details of Shakespeare's life and works that have been intricately woven in to his form.
Norden Farm is built on the site of an ancient Dairy Farm. The site includes two original, listed buildings; a Georgian Farmhouse and 18th Century Long Barn. The plan to have an arts centre in Maidenhead had been a long held dream. Lobbying for such a space had begun in the 1970's when a strong demand for an arts centre for Maidenhead began to emerge. Maidenhead Arts was set up in 1978 as an umbrella organisation of local arts groups committed to this vision.
The site had been received by the RBWM Council as planning gain for housing development on the farmland in 1992, and the first Norden Farm Board raised funds from the Foundation for Sport and the Arts to develop the buildings and build a small scale theatre (where the current studio lives today) starting work in 1994. Norden Farm Centre Trust applied to the Arts Council for lottery funding to complete Norden Farm.
Following an intensive and detailed design and public consultation phase, planning approval was granted in September 1997. The Arts Council carried out a full assessment during autumn 1997, prior to an announcement of support and approval for the finished scheme with a Lottery award of £5,295,000 in January 1998. The assessment changed the original vision for Norden Farm. In order to receive lottery funds, the design needed to change to a much larger arts centre plan that would serve the wider community and be able to present a larger range of professional touring work. This meant that a new theatre, now known as The Courtyard, with a 280 capacity, joined The Studio theatre, with a 100 capacity, together with other spaces.
The final design stage of the project was completed in late 1998 and Norden Farm Centre for the Arts finally opened its doors to the public on the 17 September 2000 with Director, David Hill at the helm. Annabel Turpin took over in 2003, followed by the current custodian, Jane Corry.
Today, Norden Farm presents a performance and participation programme of film, theatre, music, visual arts, comedy and classes. It is also a venue for conferences, seminars, meetings and social functions.
The new design for Norden Farm, had a radical plan to incorporate visual artists into the design team from the outset, ensuring that art was literally at the heart of the arts centre. At the same time, a poet in residence was also commissioned to articulate the process.
Five contemporary visual artists were commissioned by Norden Farm Centre for the Arts, Maidenhead to work as part of a multi-disciplinary Design Team on the redesign and extension of the Centre's buildings. Julia Manheim was appointed as Principal Consulting Artist (PCA) to work at the early concept stage with the Design Team, and four artists, Hans Peter Kuhn, Liza Gough Daniels, Anna Heinrich and Leon Palmer were subsequently recruited. The artists were invited to develop proposals for new works to be integrated within the interior or exterior of the newly designed and re-constructed arts centre. As a result of the design process, Manheim, Kuhn, Heinrich and Palmer created a collaborative piece, Deep Theatre, a multi-media installation incorporating live and recorded video and sound. Liza Gough Daniels contributed two major integrated and connected works: Curved Landscape, a series elliptical public meeting spaces which visually connect the outer courtyard with the interior foyer; and Poured Wall, a major wall painting in the Centre's foyer/bar area.
The collaborative work Deep Theatre focused on a particular site to which each of the four artists had been drawn; a void in the centre of the building, adjacent to the subterranean auditorium. The complex audio visual installation is sited within this space and is viewed through a narrow illuminated opening which runs at eye level along eight metres of the wall of the staircase leading down to the theatre. The viewing slot reveals a wide gauze screen, stretched across a white chalk wall, onto which five views of the building's interior and exterior are projected side-by-side as one seamless architectural panorama. A series of horizontal white lines - apparently scattered across the site - join to form a single horizon line spanning all five images when viewed through the slot. At regular intervals the video images fade down and fibre optic lighting fades up to reveal the wall of chalk excavated from the site during construction. The images are transmitted live from fixed viewpoint cameras and sequenced together with a mix of live sound collected from around the building, and pre-recorded ambient sound/music. The fusion of real-time and recorded elements, and the visual play that brings the sites together within one viewpoint, create a theatrical interpretation of the site, and reference theatre's requirement of the suspension of disbelief.
Abstract painter, Liza Gough Daniels, was appointed for her particular strength in use of colour. Although unable to attend all of the workshops, she worked within the offices of AftA, and worked closely with them on two major interventions. Curved Landscape encompasses a series of open spaces designed to create a visual flow from one area of the site to another, offering spaces for people to meet and to linger. The work's elliptical form pierces the exterior wall, connecting the outer courtyard and the inner foyer area; the new arts centre and the land of the earlier farm. In the courtyard an arcing retaining wall divides two floorscapes of coloured gravels on split levels, creating an informal seating space. Exterior slate paving adjacent to the building, continues uninterrupted into the foyer. A monumental 4 metre high curved concrete screen signals the entrance. Reminiscent of a theatre flat, the screen is painted in two horizontal bands of duck egg blue, introducing a sense of fluidity; a suggestion of sky, and/or of water, to the built environment. Poured Wall saturates with colour the long curving wall at the back of the cafe/bar from floor to ceiling. Four poured columns of intense milky white paint appear to float above an earthy red iron-oxide plaster ground. The painted columns echo the four Silver Birches of the courtyard and the columns of the portico of the original farmhouse.
During the construction of Norden Farm, a Poet in residence, Neil Rollinson, was appointed to document the process.
A pamphlet of his work was published. A poem about the last stages of the build, a six month schedule, is below.
November
A light bulb swings on a wire
in the derelict farm house. I wade
through a quagmire of mud, past huts
and dumper trucks. It’s almost dust.
A six month schedule.
December
A staircase goes nowhere. I stand
at the bottom watching the clouds drift
over the balcony. Fairy lights flash
from cranes all over Berkshire.
Seven months left.
January
Scissor-lifts rise and fall in the auditorium,
welding gear spits against a girder.
The new millennium. Nothing has changed
except the deadline. Eight months to go.
February
Brickies are giving way to chippies
and sparkies. It’s neck and neck now
with the Multiplex down the road.
Seven months and counting.
March
Daffodils bloom around the walnut tree,
as they have for a hundred years. Time is not
what it seems round here. We’ve come
full circle now, six months to go.
April
The smell of timber and fresh plaster.
New walls, floors going down. I’m beginning
to recognise the spaces now. We move
the office into the farmhouse. I take a seat
in the front bedroom. Five to go.
May
The trees arrive. The right species, but
the wrong coloured leaves. They’ll have to
go back. They’re laid in the car park like
storm damage. The Multiplex is nosing ahead.
June
The auditorium shrinks with each new
fitting. Will there be anything left when
it’s done? The balconies rise and fall
in unison. The builders are smiling.
Three short months to wait.
July
We hang the house curtain. It’s
the wrong colour! It’ll have to come down.
The doorways are too narrow, we’ve
had worse setbacks. Two to go.
August
They’ve put the bar in. Daylight glitters
in the bottles and optics. It’s hard to imagine
how far we’ve come. I never thought I’d be
walking on carpets. One month to go.
September
We take our seats in the auditorium.
sad to think it’s over now. Somebody
dreamed all this. The audience settles.
the lights fall. There are just moments
to go.