Rebuilding mac history

Do these old pictures mean anything to you? If you're in them, the Midland Arts Centre wants to hear from you.
Mac - currently in the middle of a massive refurbishment - is looking for people who helped to build the original arts centre as part of the United Nations International Work Camps of the 1960s.
Several of the Work Camps, which involved groups of young people from the city and abroad, took place in Birmingham during the decade.
Project 18, in July 1963, built the Boundary Water Feature in Cannon Hill Park, which was later removed, whilst Project 16 (June 1964) constructed mac's Arena Theatre and Project 10 (June 1965) worked on the famous Hexagon block. Camps also took place in Selly Oak and Ladywood.
The workers were housed in sheds in Cannon Hill Park, spent the days undertaking serious manual labour, cooked their own meals - and organised their own entertainment. Diaries from the 1964 camp tells us how one Scandinavian student slept under the stars in Cannon Hill Park, while another group snuck out after dark to go to a Beatles gig.
Forty years on, mac has joined forces with Coventry-based arts company Talking Birds, and together they are using the International Work Camps as inspiration for a new project.
Taking place in July 2009, Project 42 will bring together about thirty 18-25 year olds to re-enact some of the experiences from the original Work Camps. The group will work, eat and socialise together - but instead of hard labour, the 2009 group will explore and interpret the history and legacy of the camps through film and performance.
Half of the group will come from Finland to participate in the project, led by community arts and theatre company CulturaMobila.
Louisa Davies, mac Arts Programming Manager, said: "We plan to reconstruct the sheds that housed the original campers (although we won't be living in them!) in the vicinity of the Arena Theatre, and use the work camp diary as a starting point for our daily activities. At the end of the project we'll open the sheds to the public to share what has been created."
Nick Walker, Director of Talking Birds, said: "The Work Camp Diary from 1964 shows participants felt that being apart of the camps would prove to be an important time in their lives, a valuable learning experience. I'm keen to know what people feel about it forty years on. Was it as significant as it felt at the time? Has there been any legacy of it for you?"
So if you remember International Work Camps taking place at mac or in Birmingham more generally, or you participated in a camp and have a memory to share, get in touch.
Contact Alison Watson of Project 42 on 07855468719 or alijwat@hotmail.com












It is a pity I've found this too late! But I wonder if there are any archives of comments you received at the time or of photos from those years? I was on Project 16 in 1964, first with a group of locals and then on one of the following International Camps. Yes, it left a lasting impression on me which is probably why I did the search to find out about it now, in 2011!