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Aerial shot of peace camp tents glowing at dusk by the seafront
Peace Camp at Mussenden Temple and Downhill Beach, Borough of Coleraine, July 2012. Peace Camp is created by Deborah Warner in collaboration with Fiona Shaw. Soundscape by Mel Mercier. Sound design by John Del' Nero. Produced by Artichoke. Photo by Chris Hill.

A coastal installation celebrating love, poetry and landscape.

Part of the London 2012 Festival.

Peace Camp at Cuckmere Haven, East Sussex, England

Inspired by the Olympic Truce, renowned director Deborah Warner was commissioned to create Peace Camp in collaboration with actor Fiona Shaw.

During the summer of London 2012, something extraordinary happened

Eight murmuring, glowing encampments appeared simultaneously at some of the UK’s most beautiful and remote coastal locations, from County Antrim to the tip of Cornwall, from the Isle of Lewis to the Sussex cliffs. Designed to be visited between dusk and dawn, Peace Camp was a poignant exploration of love poetry and a celebration of the extraordinary variety and beauty of our coastline.

Alongside the live installations, the project also painted an oral portrait of the nation online. The people of the UK were asked to nominate and record their favourite love poems and submit their own messages. The collection was archived with the British Library, an anthology that celebrates our languages, dialects and accents as well as our rich poetic tradition. 

Peace Camp was co-commissioned by London 2012 Festival and Derry~Londonderry City of Culture 2013.

Audience icon

12,052

Audience

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4

UK nations

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1,989

Total number of tents

Award winner icon

Best Overall Event

Journal Culture Awards 2012

Boy standing in front of glowing tent in the dark
Peace Camp Test Site, June 2012, Glamorgan, Wales. Photo by Matthew Andrews. Peace Camp is created by Deborah Warner in collaboration with Fiona Shaw. Soundscape by Mel Mercier. Sound design by John Del' Nero. Produced by Artichoke.

Seen from afar, the glowing tents looked like a refugee camp in heaven; minus noise, trash, discord, people and alive with words of love

~ Roslyn Sulcas, The New York Times, July 2012 ~

Listen to composer Mel Mercier talk about how the project began

Peace Camp took place at eight beautiful locations in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland

Peace Camp at Cliff Beach, Valtos, Isle of Lewis at night, silhouette of a person in front of one of the tents
Peace Camp at Cliff Beach, Valtos, Isle of Lewis, July 2012. Peace Camp is created by Deborah Warner in collaboration with Fiona Shaw. Soundscape by Mel Mercier. Sound design by John Del' Nero. Produced by Artichoke. Photo by 58° North Photography.

 

  • Cemaes Bay, Anglesey, Wales
  • Cuckmere Haven, Seven Sisters, East Sussex, England
  • Cliff Beach, Valtos, Isle of Lewis, Scotland
  • Dunstanburgh Castle, Craster, Northumberland, England
  • Fort Fiddes, Cullykhan Bay, Aberdeenshire, Scotland
  • Godrevy, Cornwall, England
  • Mussenden Temple and Downhill Beach, Borough of Coleraine, Northern Ireland
  • White Park Bay, on the North Antrim Coast, Northern Ireland

Listen to composer Mel Mercier talk about battling the elements on the coast to create the Peace Camp soundscape

Peace Camp at Cemaes Bay, Angeley, Wales

Artists

Side profile head shot of Deborah Warner
Artist Profile

Deborah Warner

Deborah Warner is one of the UK’s leading theatre and opera directors. Her work has been seen all over the world.

Her previous site-specific installations include The St Pancras Projectand The Tower Project (London) and The Angel Project (Perth and New York). Her and Fiona Shaw’s hugely successful production of T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land played in unusual and found spaces across the world. In London it was the first live theatre event to take place at Wilton’s Music Hall since the nineteenth century. Her boundary-pushing theatre work includes Mother Courage and Her Children, Richard II, Hedda Gabler, Electra and Happy Days. Deborah has worked with some of the world’s most prestigious Opera companies including the Royal Opera House, ENO, Glyndebourne and La Scala. She has won Olivier, Evening Standard and South Bank Show awards for Direction and Production.

Deborah was awarded the Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Government in 1992, L’Officier des Arts et des Lettres in 2000 and was made a CBE in the 2006 Queen’s 80thBirthday Honours.

Website Link

Headshot of Fiona Shaw, she is looking slightly off camera to the right
Artist Profile

Fiona Shaw

Fiona Shaw is one of the Ireland’s best known actors. Her stage credits include: London AssuranceMother CourageHappy Days and Richard II at the National Theatre; Medea in the West End and on Broadway; Electra at the Barbican; Hedda Gabler; and Readings, a poetry show in Paris. Fiona Shaw has received many Olivier and Evening Standard awards for Best Actress including for Machinal at the National Theatre and As You Like It at the Old Vic.

Her extensive film work includes the Harry Potter films, The Tree of LifeMy Left FootThe Butcher BoyThe Black Dahlia and Three Men and a Little Lady. Her television work includes the popular series True Blood.

Fiona has directed opera and theatre including The Marriage of FigaroElegy for Young Lovers, and Riders to the Sea, all for ENO.

She holds honorary doctorates from Trinity College Dublin and the National University of Ireland and was awarded a CBE in 2001.

Website Link

Portrait of Mel Mercier sitting on a red armchair
Artist Profile

Mel Mercier

Mel is a composer, performer and teacher. He is the Chair of Performing Arts at the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance, the director of the FUAIM Music at UCC event series and a co-founder of the Cork-based, intercultural music ensemble TRASNA. He is the Director of the UCC Javanese gamelan Nyai Sekar Madu Sari and the project leader on the Henebry/O’Neill wax cylinder digitisation project at UCC.

As a performer, Mel has collaborated with pianist and composer Mícheál Ó Súilleabháin, with John Cage, and with the Merce Cunningham Dance Company (Roaratorio, Inlets, Duets). As a composer he works regularly with Deborah Warner and Fiona Shaw. Mel’s installation work includes From the Sources (2010) at the Glucksman Gallery, University College Cork, which featured simultaneous projections of film footage featuring performances by 100 Irish folk musicians of almost one thousand 17th and 18th century traditional tunes. 

Website Link

John recording sounds of the sea
Artist Profile

John Del’Nero

John began his career in London’s West End on productions such as Jesus Christ Superstar, Billy Liar and Jeeves.

He designed the sound for the original Rocky Horror Show and has been Sound Designer for the Royal Edinburgh Military Tattoo for the past 20 years. He has worked for Royal Families in the UK and abroad including Jordan and Saudi Arabia.

John has worked with Artichoke on Ready to Drop in collaboration with Orlando Gough, Hilary Westlake’s Dining with Alice and Deborah Warner and Fiona Shaw’s Peace Camp.

Website Link

Peace camp at Dunstanburgh Castle, Craster, Northumberland. Behind the glowing tents at dusk is the seafront
Dunstanburgh Castle, Craster, Northumberland. Peace Camp, Deborah Warner in collaboration with Fiona Shaw, 2012. Soundscape by Mel Mercier. Sound Design by John Del' Nero. Produced by Artichoke. Photo by Matthew Andrews

While the poems were originally recorded separately as solo renditions, at different times and in different locations, in this composition two or more poems, or fragments of poems, are woven together to create a duet or a trio.

~ Composer, Mel Mercier ~

Listen to Mel Mercier talk about making the poetry "sing"

Learning and Participation: InTents

Red material within a tent
InTents, schools' Peace Camp at Haverstock School, London. Artist: Lara Hailey, Poet: Laura Dockrill. Students at Acland Burghley School, London. Peace Camp is created by Deborah Warner in collaboration with Fiona Shaw. Soundscape by Mel Mercier. Sound design by John Del' Nero. Produced by Artichoke.

The Peace Camp InTents education project worked with over 400 children and young people from across the UK.

Each school was sent a bell tent and small display of books of love poetry, textiles and installation art – part sponsored by Faber and Faber and Penguin, and chosen by artists and writers working on the project – to inspire students and teachers and to keep as valuable additions to their libraries.

Inspired by the themes of love, language and landscape, the children and young people produced a series of highly original poems and individual artworks to be displayed in their bell tents. From love poems embroidered and cross-stitched onto placards in the style of demonstration banners to glass bottles collaged with love messages accompanied by a lost at sea soundscape, the work produced represents a fascinating portrait of the lives and loves of young people across the UK in 2012.

The schools’ Peace Camp tents went on public exhibition in venues and festivals local to the schools throughout the summer. All the tents then travelled to the South Bank in London where they were displayed together along the riverside as part of National Poetry Day celebrations.

Listen to Mel Mercier talk about composing by day, listening by night

Peace Camp at Dunstanburgh Castle, Northumberland, England

Peace Camp at Cemaes Bay, Anglesey at dusk
Peace Camp at Cemaes Bay, Anglesey, July 2012. Peace Camp is created by Deborah Warner in collaboration with Fiona Shaw. Soundscape by Mel Mercier. Sound design by John Del' Nero. Produced by Artichoke. Photo by Pete Carr.

A bravely romantic 2012 celebratory artwork.

~ The Times, July 2012 ~
Peace Camp at Dunstanburgh Castle. Two silhouettes of people in front of one of the tents
Peace Camp at Dunstanburgh Castle, Northumberland, July 2012. Peace Camp is created by Deborah Warner in collaboration with Fiona Shaw. Soundscape by Mel Mercier. Sound design by John Del' Nero. Produced by Artichoke. Photo by Matthew Andrews.

Full soundscape credits: 

Deborah Warner in collaboration with Fiona Shaw, for London 2012. Soundscape composed and re-edited for broadcast by Mel Mercier. Sound design by John Del’Nero. Produced by Artichoke

Peace Camp was a coastal installation commissioned by the London 2012 festival and Derry~Londonderry UK City of Culture 2013, 19-22 July 2012

 

Track Listing:

The Cap and Bells, William Butler Yeats, performed by Fiona Shaw

Sonnet 129, William Shakespeare, performed by Cliff Burnett

Adam’s Curse, William Butler Yeats, performed by Jonathan Pryce

The Bait, John Donne, performed by Cliff Burnett, Giles King

I Am No Good At Love, Noel Coward, performed by Angela Lansbury

© NC Aventales, with thanks to The Noel Coward Archive Trust – https://www.noelcoward.com

To His Mistress Going to Bed, John Donne, performed by Annie Freud, Cillian Murphy

The Canonization, John Donne, performed by Ioan Gruffudd

Dover Beach, Matthew Arnold, performed by Eileen Atkins

The Wave, Virginia Woolf, performed by Fiona Shaw

Lovers on Aran, Seamus Heaney, performed by Seamus Heaney 

Ar Lan y Môr, Traditional, performed by Ioan Gruffudd

A Mermaid, William Butler Yeats, performed by Giles King

The Good Morrow, John Donne, performed by Jonathan Pryce

She Moved Through the Fair, Traditional, performed by Robin Robertson

Scarborough Fair, Traditional, performed by Alun Armstrong

The Frog Prince, Stevie Smith. Extract taken from ‘The Frog Prince’, Copyright Stevie Smith, first appeared in Collected Poems and Drawings of Stevie Smith by Stevie Smith. Reproduced by permission of Faber & Faber Ltd. Performed by Fiona Shaw

Death is Smaller Than I Thought, Adrian Mitchell, performed by Jonathan Pryce

O Do Not Love Too Long, William Butler Yeats, performed by Giles King

She Tells Her Love While Half Asleep, Robert Graves, performed by Anne Marie Duff. Reproduced by kind permission of Carcanet Press Ltd., Manchester

Cosmology, Michael Symmons Roberts, performed by Michael Symmons Roberts

Anne Hathaway, Carol Ann Duffy. Anne Hathaway, Copywright © Carol Ann Duffy. Reproduced with permission of the Licensor through PLSclear. Performed by Harriet Walter

For Love (quote from Orlando), Virginia Woolf, performed by Fiona Shaw

Lovesong, Ted Hughes. Extract taken from ‘Lovesong’, Copyright Ted Hughes, first appeared in Crow by Ted Hughes. Reproduced by permission of Faber & Faber Ltd. Performed by Ted Hughes

Donal Og, Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory, performed by Fiona Shaw, Aine O Ceallaigh

Prayer, Carol Ann Duffy. ‘Prayer’ from Mean Time by Carol Ann Duffy. Published by Anvil Press, 1993. Copyright © Carol Ann Duffy. Reproduced by permission of the author c/o Rogers, Coleridge & White Ltd., 20 Powis Mews, London W11 1JN, Performed by Philippa Wilson

Holy Island, Andrew Motion. ‘Holy Island’ from THE CUSTOM HOUSE by Andrew Motion© Andrew Motion, 2012. All Rights Reserved. Performed by Andrew Motion

Sonnet 116, William Shakespeare, performed by Eileen Atkins

The Voice, Thomas Hardy, performed by Bill Paterson

Poem 4, Samuel Beckett, performed by Fiona Shaw

Counting the Beats, Robert Graves, performed by Fiona Shaw and Ioan Gruffudd. Reproduced by kind permission of Carcanet Press Ltd., Manchester

The Hug, Thom Gunn. Extract taken from ‘The Hug’, Copyright Thom Gunn, first appeared in The Man with Night Sweats by Thom Gunn. Reproduced by permission of Faber & Faber Ltd. Performed by Paddy O Kane

When You are Old and Grey, William Butler Yeats, performed by Fiona Shaw and Edna O Brien

Into My Arms, Nick Cave. Copyright © Nick Cave. Used by kind permission of the artist and Mute Song Ltd Antony Harwood. Performed by AL Kennedy, Stephen Coates

Dining With Alice

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