AdminHistory | Founded in 1968 by John Fox and Sue Gill, Roger Coleman and others, Welfare State International was a loose association of freelance artists bought together by shared values and philosophy. WSI first became well known for large-scale outdoor spectacular events. When the company began, taking art out of theatres and galleries into the street was considered revolutionary. Under the Welfare State umbrella, a remarkable group of engineers, musicians, sculptors, performers, poets and pyrotechnicians invented and developed site-specific theatre in landscape, lantern processions, spectacular fireshows, community carnivals and participatory festivals.
From 1999 - 2006 its HQ was the striking RIBA Award-winning Lanternhouse, a £2.2m conversion of the former National School which opened in Ulverston town centre, with £1.6m of funding from the National Lottery through the Arts Council of England. As artist-clients WSI were able to drive the entire process, working collaboratively with architect Francis B Roberts. It included a theatre workshop, self-catering accommodation for four artists, a unique reference library and archive, sound technology, digital video and multimedia facilities, studios and workspaces including a warehouse/resource centre. On the 1st of April 2006 John Fox stepped down as artistic director of Lanternhouse. The final act of Welfare State International was the finale of Longline a Carnival Opera in a big top in Ulverston.
Indicative list of WSI projects 1998-2006. Much of the work falls into two main programmes: Milestones and Longline. These projects all took place in the years after the completion of Lanternhouse. They are mostly small scale projects that focus on the local and personal with much of the work based around Ulverston and Morecambe Bay. This list is in no way complete or definitive. 2006: Longline; The Carnival Opera 2005: Metamorphosis; Bay Tales; July Picnic; Mad March; Barebones 2004: Moons in the Mud; Cabin Fever 2003: One Rock 2002: Dead; A Child's Eye View 2001: Nativity of the Beasts; Ford 2000: Sitooterie; The Sky's The Limit 1999: 100 Days
Other Major WSI events: 1990: The biggest lantern festival in Europe (Glasgow City of Culture 1990) 1986: False Creek (Expo '86, Vancouver) 1983: The Raising of the Titanic (London International Festival of Theatre 1983)
In addition, Welfare State set up and ran Ulverston's Lantern procession, Comedy festival and Flag Festival. |