Keep the Home Fires Burning

Keep the Home Fires Burning – short film

Part of Bute Street Short Film Festival on 16th March at 12.30pm

Book your tickets here: www.butestreetfilmfestival.com

Bute Street

Premiere of Short Film – Keep the Home Fires Burning at Bute Street Film Festival 2019

For ‘As You Change, So Do I’, artist Scott King has produced ‘Keep the Home Fires Burning’, an event that included performances by a lone violinist and local Bedfordshire musicians at central Luton railway station during the morning and evening rush hours on 29 September  to send off and subsequently welcome back commuters to London. Importantly, the artist worked alongside the renowned filmmaker Paul Kelly to create a document of the town’s commuter population on this day that resulted in a short, three-minute film that will operate in much the same way as a pop video.

As a celebration of Luton’s working community, the project aims to comment on Luton’s current sacrificial economic relationship with London, alongside a constellation of other facts that reveal the town’s connection with music and drama and the relationship between work, travel and politics. Historical moments range from the psychological effects of repetitious commuting to the emotive history of British soldiers being sent to fight in WW1, alongside the Situationist International’s ideas around freedom in the 1960s and its later effect on British punk in the 1970s (as a revolutionary political movement, one of the SI’s most famous slogans was Ne travaillez jamais, which translates to ‘never work’).

Other Articles:

Image of Henry Moore's 'Mother & Child' projected onto the culture wall at the launch of the public realm arts project.
‘As You Change, So Do I’ Launch
The launch of ‘As You Change, So Do I’ takes place on Thursday 29 September, with three new commissions: Mark Titchner’s ‘If You Can Dream It, You Must Do It’, Scott King’s ‘Keep the Home Fires Burning’ and ‘Mother and Child (Luton)’ and Susan A. Barnett’s ‘AWEARNESS Luton’
Arabic Translation
Can you translate ‘If you can dream it, you must do it’?
Can you translate the slogan 'If you can dream it, you must do it' into one of Luton’s 140 languages and dialects?
Share this on Twitter